Cut through the myths. Get the real answer for your specific business situation with our interactive decision tools and comprehensive state-by-state analysis.
If you Google "best state to incorporate," you'll see Delaware, Wyoming, and Nevada everywhere. For most founders, the real question is simpler: Where do you actually live and operate, and do you really need investor-grade Delaware infrastructure?
The #1 Myth That Costs Founders Money:
"I'll incorporate in Wyoming/Delaware to save on taxes and stay anonymous, even though I live and work in California/New York/Florida."
Reality: If you have nexus in a state (office, employees, substantial activity), you must register there as a "foreign entity" regardless of where you incorporated. Now you're paying fees in two states, not zero.
Nexus means a sufficient connection to a state that triggers legal obligations—registration, taxes, compliance. You typically have nexus if you:
⚠️ Critical Point:
A California therapist who forms a Wyoming LLC to "avoid California taxes" still owes California's $800 annual LLC tax if they practice in California. They've just added Wyoming's fees on top.
The right state depends heavily on your business model. Here are the core archetypes:
Brick-and-mortar or service firm with operations in one main state (therapist, contractor, restaurant, retail shop)
→ Usually form in home state
SaaS, content, ecommerce, agency with no fixed US office, 100% remote workforce, scattered customers
→ Wyoming/Delaware or home state
Realistic path to venture capital, accelerators, complex cap table, potential exit
→ Delaware C-Corp (non-negotiable)
Holding IP, securities, real estate; often part of multi-entity structures for asset protection
→ Wyoming LLC or Delaware
Founder lives outside US, wants US entity for credibility, banking, or US customers/investors
→ Delaware C-Corp or Wyoming LLC
Doctors, lawyers, accountants subject to corporate practice restrictions and professional licensing
→ Home state (often mandatory)
Delaware is home to 66% of Fortune 500 companies and the majority of US venture-backed startups. There are real reasons for this—but also real costs and real alternatives emerging.
💡 Franchise Tax Reality Check:
Delaware's franchise tax uses the lower of two calculation methods:
Most Delaware formation services default to the simpler authorized shares method, which can cost $5K-25K+ annually for VC-ready cap tables. Smart structuring or using the alternative calculation can reduce this to $400-$1,500 for most startups in early stages.
In early 2024, a Delaware Court of Chancery decision voided Elon Musk's $56 billion Tesla pay package. Musk responded by moving Tesla and SpaceX incorporations to Texas, sparking conversation about a corporate "Dexit" (Delaware exit).
🎯 Bottom Line for Your Business:
Delaware is still the gold standard for:
Delaware is likely overkill for:
| Item | LLC | Corporation |
|---|---|---|
| Formation (State Filing Fee) | $90 | $89 |
| Registered Agent (Annual) | $50-$300 | $50-$300 |
| Annual Franchise Tax | $300 | $175-$25,000+ (depends on shares) |
| Foreign Qualification in Operating State | $100-$800+ (CA = $70, NY = $250, TX = $750) |
|
| Year 1 Total (DE only) | ~$440 | ~$314-$25,000+ |
| Year 1 Total (DE + CA foreign qual.) | ~$510 + $800 CA tax | ~$384 + $800 CA tax |
⚠️ The Double-Registration Trap:
If you incorporate in Delaware but operate in California, you pay:
For a CA-based business with no VC plans, Delaware adds $500-$1,200+/year in unnecessary costs.
You should strongly consider Delaware if:
Delaware is probably overkill if:
Wyoming has become the internet's favorite state for LLC formation, and incorporations have more than tripled in five years. There are legitimate reasons—but also dangerous misconceptions about what Wyoming can and can't do for you.
🚨 The #1 Wyoming Myth That Costs People Money:
Myth: "I'll form a Wyoming LLC to avoid taxes and stay anonymous, even though I live and work in Florida/California/New York."
Reality: If you have nexus in another state (you live there, work there, have employees there, store inventory there, or derive substantial revenue there), you must register as a foreign LLC in that state—regardless of where you incorporated.
Result: You're now paying for Wyoming registration + your home state's foreign qualification fees + your home state's annual taxes. Wyoming didn't eliminate your obligations—it just added another layer.
Example: A Florida resident forms a Wyoming LLC for "privacy and tax savings." But if they operate the business from Florida (home office, Florida customers, Florida bank account), Florida considers them "doing business" in Florida. Now they owe:
Wyoming lawyers and Florida practitioners explicitly warn about this: Florida residents using Wyoming LLCs for Florida-based operations must still comply with Florida law and registration requirements.
Wyoming is a smart choice if:
Wyoming will NOT help you if:
| Item | LLC Cost |
|---|---|
| Formation (State Filing Fee) | $100 |
| Registered Agent (Annual) | $50-$150 |
| Annual Report Fee | $60 or $0.0002 per $ of WY assets (whichever is greater) |
| State Income Tax | $0 |
| Franchise Tax | $0 |
| Year 1 Total (WY only) | ~$210-$310 |
| Year 1 Total (WY + CA foreign qual.) | ~$280 + $800 CA tax = $1,080 |
⚠️ Notice: If you operate in California, the total cost is $1,080/year (WY + CA), which is more expensive than just forming in California ($800-900/year). Wyoming doesn't save you money if you have nexus elsewhere—it costs you more.
Wyoming's "anonymous LLC" feature is real—but it has limits:
💡 Asset Protection Use Case:
Wyoming's charging order protection is among the strongest in the US. If a creditor sues you personally and wins a judgment, they generally cannot seize LLC assets or force distributions. They can only get a "charging order" to receive distributions if and when the LLC makes them.
This makes Wyoming LLCs popular for:
But: this only works if the LLC is properly structured and you're not commingling personal and business assets. Asset protection is complex—consult with an attorney before relying on it.
| Factor | Wyoming | Delaware |
|---|---|---|
| Formation Fee | $100 | $90 |
| Annual Tax/Report | $60+ | $300 |
| Privacy | ✅ Strong | ❌ Public |
| Asset Protection | ✅ Excellent | ✅ Good |
| Investor Preference (for LLCs) | Neutral | Neutral |
| Best For | Privacy, asset protection, low-cost holding companies | Investor familiarity, complex structures, eventual conversion to C-corp |
💡 Note: For corporations, Delaware is still the clear winner due to the Court of Chancery and DGCL. Wyoming's advantages are primarily for LLCs.
California has a reputation as an expensive, hostile state for business. The $800 annual minimum franchise tax is real—but for many California-based businesses, it's unavoidable. The question isn't "Can I avoid it?" but "Should I add Delaware on top of it?"
🚨 California Tax Reality:
You're "doing business" in California (and owe the $800) if you meet any of these:
⚠️ Translation: If you live in California, work from home in California, or have employees/office space in California, you're doing business there—even if you incorporate in Wyoming or Delaware.
Form directly in California if:
💡 Why: You're going to pay California's $800 regardless. Forming in CA costs ~$70-$75 and avoids the hassle and expense of dual registration (DE/WY formation + CA foreign qualification).
Use Delaware C-Corp + CA foreign qualification if:
💡 Reality: VC-backed startups almost always use Delaware C-Corp + CA foreign qualification. Yes, you pay both states—but investor requirements trump cost savings.
| Item | LLC | Corporation |
|---|---|---|
| Formation (Direct in CA) | $70 | $100 |
| Foreign Qualification (if formed elsewhere) | $70 | |
| Statement of Information (Biennial for LLCs, Annual for Corps) | $20 (every 2 years) | $25 (annual) |
| Registered Agent (Annual) | $50-$300 | |
| Minimum Franchise Tax (Annual) | $800 | |
| Additional LLC Fee (if gross revenue > $250K) | $900 - $11,790 | N/A |
| Corporate Franchise Tax (if net income > $250K) | N/A | 8.84% of net income (min $800) |
| Year 1 Total (CA only, <$250K revenue/income) | ~$920 | ~$975 |
| Year 1 Total (DE + CA foreign qual., <$250K) | ~$1,510 | ~$1,559 |
⚠️ The Math: Dual registration (DE + CA) costs ~$590-$635 more per year than just forming in California. You're paying for Delaware's governance benefits and investor preference—not for tax savings (there are none).
📋 Corporate Practice Restrictions:
California prohibits certain licensed professionals from forming standard LLCs or corporations. Instead, they must use:
These entities must be formed in California and all owners must hold active California professional licenses. Delaware or Wyoming entities are not viable alternatives for CA-licensed professionals practicing in California.
Best for:
💰 Cost: ~$920/year (LLC) or ~$975/year (Corp)
Best for:
💰 Cost: ~$1,510/year (LLC) or ~$1,559/year (Corp)
🎯 Bottom Line:
For California-based businesses, the question is not "Can I avoid the $800?" (you can't). The question is: "Is Delaware's governance infrastructure worth an extra $590-$635/year?"
If you're building a high-growth company with investor ambitions, the answer is yes. If you're running a local or lifestyle business, the answer is no—just form in California and save the complexity.
Modern small-business guidance from SCORE, the SBA, and mainstream advisors is remarkably consistent: for most local businesses, form your LLC or corporation in the state where you actually operate.
✅ The Home State Rule of Thumb:
If your business has a physical presence (office, warehouse, employees, or retail location) in a state, form there. You'll avoid the cost and complexity of dual registration, and you'll be compliant with state laws that apply to you anyway.
Consider an alternative state if:
Low fees, simple compliance:
If you live/operate in one of these states, forming there is usually a no-brainer.
More expensive, but often still necessary:
If you live/work here with real nexus, forming elsewhere doesn't save money—it adds cost.
💡 Pro Tip: Check Your State's Entity Search First
Before forming anywhere, search your home state's business entity database to see:
For most states, total first-year cost is $200-$600 for an LLC, including formation, registered agent, and first annual report. Compare that to Delaware ($440) or Wyoming ($210-$310) before adding foreign qualification in your operating state.
After the 2024 "Dexit" drama, several states launched initiatives to compete with Delaware's corporate dominance. Here's what you need to know about the emerging alternatives.
What Texas Offers:
Who Should Consider Texas:
⚠️ Reality Check:
Texas business courts are brand new. Delaware has 200+ years of corporate case law and precedent. VCs and investors still overwhelmingly prefer Delaware for predictability. Texas is a valid alternative for Texas-based companies, but it's not yet a Delaware replacement for venture-backed startups.
Nevada's Selling Points:
Who Should Consider Nevada:
💡 Notable: Tripadvisor successfully re-domiciled from Delaware to Nevada in 2024. But Nevada still lacks Delaware's depth of corporate case law and investor familiarity. It's a viable choice for certain use cases, not a universal Delaware replacement.
Oklahoma also launched business courts in 2024 to compete for incorporations. Other states (Utah, Arizona, Georgia) periodically make reforms to attract businesses. Here's the reality:
📊 The Competitive Landscape:
The State Incorporation Decision Tree:
1. Are you raising venture capital or joining a top accelerator?
→ Delaware C-Corp (non-negotiable for serious VC)
2. Do you have a physical presence (office, employees, warehouse) in a specific state?
→ Form in that state (you'll register there anyway)
3. Are you 100% remote/online with no dominant state presence?
→ Wyoming LLC (low cost, privacy) or Delaware (if eventual VC possible)
4. Are you in Texas/Nevada/Florida with purely local operations?
→ Form in your home state (leverage local advantages)
5. Everything else?
→ Home state unless there's a specific, documented reason for Delaware/Wyoming
Answer a few questions about your business and get a personalized recommendation in under 2 minutes.
Select all that apply:
Compare the most popular incorporation states across key factors. Scroll horizontally on mobile to see all columns.
| Factor | Delaware | Wyoming | California | Texas | Nevada | Your Home State |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LLC Formation Fee | $90 | $100 | $70 | $300 | $425 | $50-$500 |
| Corp Formation Fee | $89 | $100 | $100 | $300 | $725 | $50-$500 |
| Annual LLC Tax/Fee | $300 | $60+ | $800 +$900-$11,790 if >$250K revenue |
$0-$200 (based on revenue) |
$350 +commerce tax if >$4M revenue |
$0-$800+ |
| Annual Corp Franchise Tax | $175-$25,000+ (based on shares) |
$60+ | $800 +8.84% of net income |
$0-$200 (based on revenue) |
$650 | Varies widely |
| State Income Tax | ✅ None on out-of-state income | ✅ None | ❌ Yes 8.84% corporate rate |
✅ None | ✅ None | Varies |
| Specialized Business Court | ✅ Court of Chancery 200+ years, no juries |
❌ No | ❌ No | ✅ New (2024) Limited case law |
✅ Established Business courts exist |
Varies |
| Corporate Law Sophistication | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ DGCL is gold standard |
⭐⭐⭐ Good for LLCs |
⭐⭐⭐ Standard |
⭐⭐⭐⭐ New reforms |
⭐⭐⭐ Business-friendly |
Varies |
| VC/Investor Preference | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Expected for VC deals |
⭐ Not preferred |
⭐⭐ Rare for VC deals |
⭐⭐⭐ Emerging alternative |
⭐⭐ Limited preference |
⭐ Depends on state |
| Privacy / Anonymity | ❌ Public Names disclosed |
✅ Strong Names not required |
❌ Public Names disclosed |
❌ Public Names disclosed |
✅ Strong Names not required |
Varies |
| Asset Protection (LLCs) | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Good charging order protection |
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Best in US |
⭐⭐⭐ Standard protection |
⭐⭐⭐ Standard protection |
⭐⭐⭐⭐ Strong protection |
Varies |
| Best Use Cases |
• VC-backed startups • Complex cap tables • IPO/acquisition path • C-Corps needing investor credibility |
• Low-cost LLCs • Privacy needs • Asset holding • Truly remote businesses |
• CA-based operations • Local businesses • Professional practices • Unavoidable if CA nexus |
• TX-based operations • Post-revenue businesses • Local incorporation • New court alternative |
• Asset protection • Privacy • NV operations • Established courts |
• Local small businesses • Brick-and-mortar • Service providers • No investor plans |
💡 How to Use This Comparison:
Calculate the true cost of incorporating in different states, including foreign qualification if needed.
See how the incorporation decision plays out for six different business archetypes. Each case study includes the situation, recommendation, reasoning, and cost analysis.
Archetype: High-Growth / VC-Track Startup
Founders: Two technical co-founders (one in San Francisco, one in Austin)
Business: AI-powered developer tools (SaaS)
Stage: Pre-product, just accepted into Y Combinator
Needs: Clean cap table for SAFE notes, stock options for early hires, eventual Series A fundraising
Concern: "Should we incorporate in California (where CEO lives) or Delaware? What about Wyoming to save money?"
Why Delaware:
Why Not California-Only:
While they have operations in CA, investor preference for Delaware overwhelms the $590/year cost savings. Forming in CA would require a flip to Delaware before Series A, costing $15K-30K+ in legal fees.
| Delaware Formation + Year 1 | $89 filing + $175 franchise + $150 RA = $414 |
| CA Foreign Qualification + Year 1 | $70 filing + $800 tax + $150 RA = $1,020 |
| Total Year 1 | ~$1,434 |
Alternative (avoided): Forming in CA now, then flipping to DE before Series A = $15K-30K in legal fees + downtime
Archetype: Local Small Business
Owner: Solo contractor transitioning to hiring subcontractors
Business: Residential renovations in Miami-Dade County
Revenue: ~$300K/year, all from Florida customers
Needs: Liability protection, legitimacy with clients, ability to get bonded/insured as a business
Concern: "I've been told Wyoming is cheaper and has better asset protection. Should I incorporate there instead of Florida?"
Why Florida:
Why Not Wyoming:
Forming in WY would not eliminate Florida requirements. He'd still need to foreign-qualify in FL (cost: $125 + $138.75 annual report) plus pay Wyoming fees ($100 + $60/year). Total: $423/year vs. $264/year for FL-only. Wyoming costs more, not less.
| Florida LLC Only | $125 filing + $138.75 annual = $264/year |
| Wyoming + Florida Foreign Qual. | $100 WY + $60 WY annual + $125 FL foreign + $138.75 FL annual = $423/year |
| Wyoming "Savings" | -$159/year (costs MORE!) |
Decision: Formed Florida LLC. Saved $159/year + avoided compliance complexity.
Archetype: Remote/Online Business
Founder: Solo founder, digital nomad (no fixed US address)
Business: Email marketing automation tool (bootstrapped SaaS)
Revenue: $8K MRR ($96K/year), customers in 30+ countries
Needs: US entity for Stripe/payment processing, liability protection, minimal cost
Concern: "I have no office, no employees, no fixed location. Where should I incorporate to minimize costs and maximize privacy?"
Why Wyoming:
Why Not Delaware:
Delaware costs $440/year (LLC) with no real benefit for a bootstrapped SaaS with no investor plans. Wyoming saves $130-$230/year with identical functionality for this use case.
| Wyoming LLC Formation | $100 |
| Annual Report | $60 |
| Registered Agent | $50-$150 |
| Total Annual Cost | ~$210-$310 |
No foreign qualification needed (no nexus anywhere). If founder later establishes nexus in a state (e.g., rents office in Austin), would need to foreign-qualify there at that time.
Archetype: Foreign (Non-US) Founder
Founder: German citizen living in Berlin
Business: B2B payment processing for e-commerce (fintech SaaS)
Stage: MVP built, targeting US market, planning to raise from US VCs
Needs: US entity for credibility, US bank account, eventual US VC funding
Concern: "I don't live in the US. Do I need a Delaware C-corp or can I use Wyoming to save money?"
Why Delaware C-Corp:
Why Not Wyoming LLC:
LLCs create tax complexity for foreign founders (potential US tax residency issues). C-corps provide cleaner separation and are required by VCs anyway.
| Delaware C-Corp Formation | $89 |
| Annual Franchise Tax | $175-$400 (early stage) |
| Registered Agent | $150 |
| Total Annual Cost | ~$414-$639 |
No foreign qualification needed (no US operations yet). If later establishes US office/employees, would foreign-qualify in that state at that time.
Archetype: Professional Practice
Owner: Licensed clinical psychologist
Business: Private therapy practice in Los Angeles
Revenue: ~$150K/year, all from California patients
Needs: Liability protection, ability to accept insurance, professional legitimacy
Concern: "California's $800 franchise tax is brutal. Can I form in Wyoming to avoid it while still practicing in California?"
Why California is Unavoidable:
Reality: Forming in WY would cost more (WY fees + CA fees + CA $800 tax) without avoiding any CA obligations.
Form a California PC (Professional Corporation). Accept the $800 annual tax as unavoidable. Enjoy simplicity of single-state compliance.
| CA Professional Corp Only | ~$975/year |
| WY LLC + CA Foreign Qual. (if allowed) | ~$1,080/year |
| Attempted "Savings" | -$105/year (costs MORE + illegal!) |
⚠️ Important: CA Board of Psychology may not even accept a WY LLC for a licensed psychologist. Don't risk professional licensing issues to save $100/year.
Archetype: Asset-Holding Entity
Owner: Real estate investor with properties in 4 states
Business: Holding company for rental properties (AZ, TX, FL, GA)
Structure: Wants parent holding company + separate LLCs for each property
Needs: Asset protection, privacy, minimal ongoing costs
Concern: "Where should I form the parent holding company? I live in California but want to keep ownership private."
Why Wyoming for Parent Holding Company:
Structure:
• Wyoming Holding LLC (parent, owns all property LLCs)
• Arizona LLC (owns AZ property, registered in AZ)
• Texas LLC (owns TX property, registered in TX)
• Florida LLC (owns FL property, registered in FL)
• Georgia LLC (owns GA property, registered in GA)
Why This Works: Each property LLC is registered in its property's state (required). The WY parent owns them all but has no nexus anywhere (it's just a holding company with no operations).
| Wyoming Parent LLC | ~$260/year |
| AZ Property LLC | ~$50 formation, $0 annual |
| TX Property LLC | ~$450/year |
| FL Property LLC | ~$264/year |
| GA Property LLC | ~$75/year |
| Total Annual Cost | ~$1,099/year |
Benefit: Ownership privacy (WY LLC member names private) + layered asset protection (creditor must pierce 2 LLCs to reach property).
Stop guessing. Get personalized guidance on where to incorporate, complete formation services, and ongoing compliance support.
Sergei Tokmakov, Esq.