Complete 2025 guide to forming, operating, and maintaining a Delaware LLC as a foreign resident
Yes. Delaware does not require LLC members or managers to be U.S. citizens or residents. Anyone globally can form and own a Delaware LLC. The only Delaware requirement is a registered agent with a physical Delaware address.
However, "Can you?" and "Should you?" are very different questions. This guide covers:
This guide provides general educational information, not legal or tax advice. U.S. tax law for foreign-owned entities is complex and heavily fact-dependent. Every non-resident's situation is unique based on their country of residence, tax treaties, business activities, and revenue sources. Always consult with a U.S. CPA and/or international tax attorney before forming a U.S. LLC. Mistakes can result in $10,000+ penalties, frozen bank accounts, or unexpected U.S. tax obligations.
As of March 2025, FinCEN adopted an interim rule limiting Beneficial Ownership Information (BOI) reporting to foreign reporting companies only. Delaware-formed LLCs (domestic entities) are currently exempt from BOI filing under this interim rule. However, this is subject to future regulatory and legal changes. This guide will note "as of March 2025" where BOI status is discussed.
Delaware LLCs work well for specific non-resident scenarios:
Work with U.S. clients via Upwork, Toptal, or direct contracts. Need USD banking, Stripe/PayPal, and liability protection. Services performed remotely from home country.
Building online software product, majority U.S. customers, plan to raise U.S. venture capital eventually. May flip to DE C-Corp later.
Selling on Amazon FBA, Shopify, Etsy with U.S. warehouses and customers. Need U.S. entity for merchant accounts and credibility.
Acquiring U.S. rental properties or real estate investments. LLC provides liability protection and may offer tax benefits (subject to FIRPTA rules).
Holding U.S. startup equity, securities, or intellectual property. Need U.S. entity for investment agreements or licensing structures.
YouTube, courses, digital products with U.S. audience. Need U.S. entity for AdSense, Stripe, and sponsor contracts.
If you have no U.S. customers, no U.S. income, no U.S. bank account, and no plans to raise U.S. capital, a Delaware LLC adds compliance burden (annual $300 tax, possible IRS filings) with minimal benefit. Consider a home-country entity or Wyoming/New Mexico LLC (lower costs) instead. Delaware's advantages mainly apply when you have meaningful U.S. connections or sophisticated counterparties (investors, large clients).
| Item | Cost | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Delaware Formation Fee | $90 | One-time |
| Registered Agent | $50-300 | Annual |
| Delaware Annual Franchise Tax | $300 | Annual (due June 1) |
| EIN Application | FREE | One-time |
| Operating Agreement | $0-500 | One-time (varies by complexity) |
First-year minimum: ~$440 (state fees + registered agent). Annual recurring: ~$350-600 (franchise tax + registered agent + any CPA/compliance fees).
This is where most non-residents get confusedβand where mistakes are expensive.
Single-member LLC (one foreign owner):
Multi-member LLC (2+ foreign owners):
U.S. tax consequences hinge on whether your LLC is "engaged in a U.S. trade or business" (USTB). This determines:
The IRS uses a facts and circumstances test. Generally, you're engaged in USTB if you have:
β U.S. employees or independent contractors performing work in the U.S.
β U.S. office, warehouse, or other fixed place of business
β Regular, continuous business activities conducted in the U.S.
Gray areas:
β’ Selling to U.S. customers from abroad (usually NOT USTB by itself)
β’ Using U.S. payment processors (Stripe, PayPal) β mixed guidance
β’ U.S. servers/cloud hosting β generally NOT USTB
β’ Amazon FBA with U.S. warehouses β often considered USTB
No bright-line test exists. Consult a U.S. CPA familiar with nonresident taxation.
If you own a single-member Delaware LLC as a non-U.S. resident, you likely must file:
β’ Form 5472 (Information Return of a 25% Foreign-Owned U.S. Corporation or Foreign Corporation Engaged in a U.S. Trade or Business)
β’ Pro forma Form 1120 (even though the LLC is disregarded for tax)
Due date: March 15 (or 15th day of 3rd month after year-end)
Penalty for failure to file: $25,000 per year (historically; verify current penalty with CPA)
This requirement applies even if you have zero U.S.-source income and owe zero tax. It's an information reporting obligation, not a tax return. Many non-residents are unaware of this until they get an IRS notice years later.
What triggers Form 5472?
Do I owe U.S. income tax?
If your LLC has 2+ foreign owners:
Recommendation: If you need multiple owners, seriously consider keeping it single-member or electing corporate treatment to simplify compliance. Or use your home-country entity to hold LLC interests.
If your home country has a tax treaty with the U.S., you may qualify for:
β’ Reduced withholding rates on FDAP income (often 15% vs. 30%)
β’ Exemption from U.S. tax if no "permanent establishment" in the U.S.
β’ Elimination of double taxation via foreign tax credits
Check the U.S.-[Your Country] Tax Treaty and consult a cross-border tax advisor. Treaty benefits require filing Form W-8BEN or Form W-8BEN-E with payers and claiming treaty benefits on tax returns.
Forming the LLC is easy. Opening a U.S. bank account remotely as a non-resident is hard.
Most traditional banks (Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo) require:
Verdict: Traditional banks are generally not an option for remote non-residents without SSN/ITIN.
Non-residents typically rely on fintech banks and payment platforms that accept foreign-owned LLCs:
| Platform | Non-Resident Friendly? | Key Requirements |
|---|---|---|
| Mercury | β Yes | DE LLC, EIN, passport, business description, online presence |
| Wise Business | β Yes | LLC docs, EIN, passport, proof of address, business verification |
| Relay | β Yes | DE/WY/other LLC, EIN, passport, website/business plan |
| Brex | β οΈ Sometimes | Venture-backed startups preferred; stricter underwriting |
| Payoneer | β Yes | LLC docs, EIN, passport; primarily for receiving payments, limited banking features |
| Stripe Atlas | β Yes (bundled) | Forms DE C-Corp + opens Silicon Valley Bank/Mercury; $500 fee |
Having a Delaware LLC does not guarantee a bank account. Banks and fintechs perform risk-based underwriting. You may be denied if:
β’ Your country is on OFAC sanctions lists or high-risk jurisdictions
β’ Business model is high-risk (crypto, gambling, adult content, forex, multi-level marketing)
β’ No demonstrable business activity (no website, no revenue, vague business description)
β’ Incomplete KYC documentation
Best practice: Have a functioning business (website, contracts, demo product) BEFORE forming the LLC. Banks want to see legitimate commercial activity, not shell companies.
Stripe: Accepts foreign-owned Delaware LLCs with U.S. bank account. Requires same KYC docs as banks.
PayPal Business: Accepts foreign-owned U.S. LLCs, but may have limits/holds based on country of beneficial owner.
Square: Similar to Stripe; requires U.S. bank account and EIN.
Bottom line: Most payment processors accept foreign-owned LLCs IF you have a U.S. business bank account. The bank account is the hard part.
The Corporate Transparency Act (CTA) aimed to require most U.S. small businesses to report Beneficial Ownership Information (BOI) to FinCEN. After legal challenges and regulatory changes:
As of March 2025, FinCEN's interim rule limits BOI reporting requirements to foreign reporting companies only. Delaware-formed LLCs (domestic entities) are currently EXEMPT from BOI filing obligations.
A foreign reporting company is an entity formed under foreign law and registered to do business in a U.S. state (e.g., UK Ltd registered in Delaware as a foreign entity).
This is an interim rule and may change through legislation, regulation, or court decisions. Monitor FinCEN's website or consult counsel for updates.
What this means for non-residents forming Delaware LLCs:
The CTA went through multiple legal challenges, injunctions, and Supreme Court rulings between 2024-2025. Originally, most small U.S. LLCs were expected to file BOI. After court challenges and FinCEN's March 2025 interim rule, the requirement now applies only to foreign reporting companies. This could change again through legislation or final rulemaking. Always check current status at FinCEN.gov or consult an attorney.
Why choose Delaware over other options?
| Factor | Delaware | Wyoming | New Mexico | Home Country Entity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Formation Cost | $90 | $100 | $50 | Varies widely |
| Annual Tax/Fee | $300 | $60 | $0 | Varies |
| Privacy | β Good (members not public) | β Excellent | β Excellent (no annual report) | Varies |
| Legal Precedent | β Strongest (Court of Chancery) | Good | Limited | N/A |
| VC/Investor Preference | β Strongly preferred | Accepted | Rare | Generally rejected |
| Future C-Corp Conversion | β Easy, same state | Requires reincorporation | Requires reincorporation | N/A |
| U.S. Tax Obligations | Same (federal rules apply) | Same | Same | None, but no U.S. presence |
| U.S. Banking Access | β Best acceptance | β Good | Good | β Very difficult |
FALSE. Your home country likely taxes your worldwide income regardless of where your business entity is registered. A Delaware LLC does NOT create tax-free status. You may owe tax in your home country AND potentially in the U.S. (if you have ECI). Consult both a U.S. CPA and a tax advisor in your home country.
DANGEROUS. Foreign-owned LLCs often have Form 5472 obligations even with zero U.S. tax owed. Penalties for non-filing: $25,000+/year. The IRS doesn't care if you didn't know about the requirement.
PARTIALLY TRUE. Delaware doesn't publicly disclose LLC members/managers. However:
β’ Banks/payment processors require full KYC on beneficial owners
β’ IRS knows ownership (via Form 5472, tax returns)
β’ Legal discovery can pierce anonymity
β’ BOI rules (if they return) may require disclosure to FinCEN
You have privacy from public searches, not anonymity from authorities.
FALSE. Bank account approval is discretionary. Many non-residents are denied even with valid LLCs. You need:
β’ Strong KYC documentation
β’ Legitimate business activity (website, contracts, customers)
β’ Country not on sanctions/high-risk lists
β’ Business model acceptable to bank's risk appetite
MISLEADING. Delaware has no state income tax on out-of-state earnings, but you still owe:
β’ U.S. federal tax (if you have ECI)
β’ Home country tax (usually on worldwide income)
β’ Delaware $300 annual franchise tax (not income-based)
"No Delaware income tax" β "no taxes."
FALSE. Foreign-owned disregarded entities (single-member LLCs) owned 25%+ by foreign persons MUST file Form 5472 + pro forma 1120. This surprises many non-residents who think LLCs have no federal filing requirements.
BACKWARDS. Understand your tax obligations BEFORE forming. Once the LLC exists, the clock starts on filing deadlines and annual fees. Dissolving an LLC retroactively doesn't erase past filing obligations.
Answer these questions honestly:
Delaware LLC is likely a good fit if:
β’ You have or expect significant U.S. revenue
β’ You can qualify for U.S. banking (Mercury, Wise, etc.)
β’ You understand and accept U.S. tax filing obligations
β’ You plan to scale the business (potentially raise capital or exit)
β’ You can afford professional tax/legal help ($1,500-5,000+/year)
Consider Wyoming/NM or home country entity if:
β’ Small lifestyle business (<$100K revenue/year)
β’ Primarily non-U.S. customers
β’ Budget-conscious (want to minimize annual costs)
β’ No plans for institutional funding or sophisticated counterparties
Skip the U.S. LLC if:
β’ You can't open a U.S. bank account (sanctions, high-risk country)
β’ No U.S. customers, income, or business connections
β’ Unwilling/unable to file U.S. tax forms or pay compliance costs
β’ Business model is crypto, forex, gambling, or other high-risk (banking near-impossible)
Attorney-guided formation with international compliance support. We handle Delaware filings, EIN application, and provide tax/banking guidance for foreign owners.
Delaware Certificate of Formation filing, registered agent service (1 year), EIN application assistance (mail/fax for non-SSN applicants), operating agreement customized for non-resident ownership, guidance on Form 5472 obligations, banking/KYC document prep checklist, and initial tax consultation to identify filing requirements.
For single non-resident owner with straightforward business structure. Includes EIN support and basic tax guidance.
Most popular. Includes comprehensive tax/treaty analysis, banking referrals, and ongoing compliance guidance.
For complex situations: multi-member, high-value transactions, or difficult banking jurisdictions. Full-service support.
Delaware annual franchise tax ($300), annual U.S. tax return preparation if required (CPA fees $500-5,000+ depending on complexity), home country tax advisor fees (varies), ITIN application if needed ($50-500), and accounting/bookkeeping services. These packages cover FORMATION and initial setup only.
Complete this confidential intake form. I'll review your situation and contact you within 24 hours to discuss your specific tax, banking, and compliance requirements.
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Sergei Tokmakov, Esq.
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All consultations are confidential and covered by attorney-client privilege. I work with non-resident clients globally and understand the unique challenges of cross-border business structures. Feel free to reach out via email at owner@terms.law or use the intake form. I respond within 24 hours.