A limited liability company is wholly owned by a natural person.

Usually, the shareholders of a limited liability company or the sole natural person shareholder bear limited liability for the company's debts, but when the sole natural person shareholder can't prove that he is independent of the company's property, or the shareholders of a limited liability company abuse the independent status of the company as a legal person to harm the interests of creditors, they need to bear joint liability for the company's debts.

The natural person sole proprietorship of a limited liability company belongs to a privately-owned enterprise.

A limited liability company wholly owned by a natural person belongs to the type of limited liability enterprise and is a one-person limited liability company.

According to relevant laws and regulations, a one-person limited liability company refers to a natural person shareholder or a limited liability company among legal person shareholders.

And a natural person can only invest to set up a one-person limited liability company.

What are the investment methods of limited liability companies?

According to the Company Law, the mode of capital contribution of a limited liability company includes monetary capital contribution or non-monetary property such as physical objects and intellectual property rights.

Article 27 of the Company Law: Shareholders may make capital contributions in cash, or in kind, intellectual property rights, land use rights and other non-monetary property that can be valued in money and transferred according to law. However, except for the property that cannot be used as capital contribution as stipulated by laws and administrative regulations.

Non-monetary property as capital contribution shall be evaluated and verified, and its value shall not be overestimated or underestimated. Where there are provisions in laws and administrative regulations on evaluation and pricing, those provisions shall prevail.

I hope the above content can help you. If in doubt, please consult a professional lawyer.

Legal basis:

Article 63 of the Company Law If the shareholders of a one-person limited liability company cannot prove that the company's property is independent of the shareholders' own property, they shall be jointly and severally liable for the company's debts.

Article 20 of the Company Law: Shareholders of a company shall abide by laws, administrative regulations and articles of association, exercise their rights according to law, and shall not abuse their rights to harm the interests of the company or other shareholders; The company's independent legal person status and the limited liability of shareholders shall not be abused to harm the interests of the company's creditors.

Shareholders of a company who abuse their rights and cause losses to the company or other shareholders shall be liable for compensation according to law.

Shareholders of a company who abuse the independent status of a company as a legal person and the limited liability of shareholders to evade debts and seriously damage the interests of creditors of the company shall be jointly and severally liable for the debts of the company.