Company Structure Selection
- LLC or C-Corp aligned with your goals
- tax burden analysis
- solution tailored for non-residents
We help non-residents register a US company without costly mistakes: choose between LLC and C-Corp, select the right state, obtain an EIN, and prepare the company for smooth operations after registration.
We don't just register your company — we help you make the key decisions before you submit any documents.
You can proceed directly to registration or first walk through your case with a specialist.
Best if you already know which company type and state works for you.
Best if you want to get everything right from the start.
The process is designed so you always know what happens next and never waste time on unnecessary steps.
On your own or together with our manager.
After that, we begin working on your case.
We file the documents and support the registration and EIN obtainment.
All documents and communication are stored in one place.
With a full document package and a clear understanding of next steps.
These articles help you understand the key questions in advance: which company type to choose, which state to register in, how to get an EIN, and how to open a bank account.
Find out which structure fits your business, tax model, and growth plans.
Read in our blog
Understand when Delaware, Wyoming, or Florida makes sense — and when to look at the state where you actually operate.
Read in our blog
What an EIN is and how timelines differ with and without an SSN for a non-resident.
View the service
What you need after registration and the EIN to open an account and accept payments.
Read in our blogQuick answers to the questions that come up most often before submitting documents.
Yes. A non-resident can register a US company remotely. But it's important to understand the structure, state, EIN, banking, and reporting requirements in advance.
Yes, for many non-residents remote registration is possible if the documents are properly prepared and the structure, state, and banking setup are thought through in advance.
It depends on your income model, ownership structure, investment plans, and tax burden. There is no universal answer.
Read in our blogNo. A popular state is not necessarily the right state. You need to consider where your business actually operates and where nexus may arise.
Read in our blogYes, an EIN is required for the company's tax identification and is typically needed to open a bank account and operate normally.
In many cases, yes. Even with zero activity, a company may still have obligations to file forms and annual reports.
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