[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
company formation united states

Talk with Our Expert

Jonathon Richards

Global Law Experts

Lead Enquiries Qualification
Delete Article

How a Foreign Founder Forms a US Company Remotely Entity Choice, EIN, Registered Agent & Banking

By Jonathon Richards
– posted 1 hour ago

Non-residents can legally form and own a US business entity without holding a US visa, green card, or Social Security Number. That single fact drives tens of thousands of international founders toward company formation United States each year yet the process is riddled with practical traps around EIN applications, state selection, registered-agent obligations, banking KYC, and federal tax compliance. This page walks through every step a foreign founder needs to move from idea to operational US company, grounding each requirement in current IRS, state, and FinCEN guidance. By the end, you will know exactly which entity to form, where to form it, how to obtain your EIN, and what documents to prepare before opening a US bank account.

This page provides general legal information and does not create an attorney–client relationship. For tailored advice, speak to a US corporate attorney.

Quick Checklist The One-Page Startup Checklist for Company Formation United States

Before diving into the detailed sections below, use this high-level checklist to track every milestone on the path to a fully operational US entity. Each item links to the in-depth section that follows.

Formation Checklist for Non-Resident Founders

  • Choose your entity type: LLC (single-member or multi-member) vs. C-corporation. Your choice affects tax classification, investor compatibility, and ongoing compliance costs.
  • Select a formation state: Compare Delaware, Wyoming, Nevada, and the state where you will actually do business. See the comparison table below.
  • Appoint a registered agent: Every US state requires a registered agent with a physical in-state address to accept service of process on the entity’s behalf.
  • File formation documents: Articles of Organization (LLC) or Certificate of Incorporation (corporation) with the chosen state’s Secretary of State.
  • Apply for an EIN (Form SS-4): International applicants without an SSN or ITIN must use the phone, fax, or mail channel the IRS online EIN tool is not available to them.
  • Set your federal tax classification: Confirm the default classification or file Form 8832 to elect a different status.
  • Open a US bank account: Prepare EIN confirmation, passport, corporate documents, and proof of address for KYC review.
  • Assess FinCEN/BOI obligations: Determine whether a Beneficial Ownership Information report is required under the Corporate Transparency Act.

Downloadable SS-4 Checklist

A printable, line-by-line SS-4 checklist covering responsible-party entries, foreign-address formatting, and the phone/fax submission steps is available as a downloadable resource: Non-resident EIN checklist (download). Keep it beside you when you prepare your application.

Do Non-Residents Need to Be US Residents?

Short answer: No. There is no residency or citizenship requirement to form or own a US LLC or corporation. The IRS confirms that entities may be formed by persons who are not US residents and who do not hold Social Security Numbers, although the EIN application process differs for international applicants. Physical presence and residency do, however, affect three practical areas:

  • Tax exposure: Non-resident owners face different withholding, filing, and treaty obligations than US-resident owners.
  • Bank access: Some US banks require an in-person visit or additional KYC documentation from non-residents.
  • State filings: If you later establish physical operations in a second state, you may need to foreign-qualify the entity there.

None of these limitations prevents formation they simply shape the compliance steps that follow.

EIN for Non-Residents Step-by-Step SS-4 Process, Responsible-Party Rules, Timelines & Common Pitfalls

An Employer Identification Number is the federal tax ID for your new entity. Without it, you cannot open a bank account, file tax returns, or hire contractors. For non-resident founders, the EIN application is typically the most frustrating step but it is straightforward once you understand the available channels.

Which Application Channels Are Available?

The IRS restricts the online EIN assistant to applicants whose principal place of business is in the United States and whose responsible party has a valid SSN or ITIN. International applicants who lack both must use one of three alternative channels:

  • Phone: Call the IRS international line at 267-941-1099 (not toll-free) during business hours (6:00 a.m.–11:00 p.m. Eastern, Monday–Friday). The agent will process Form SS-4 and issue the EIN during the call.
  • Fax: Complete Form SS-4, fax it to the designated IRS fax number, and expect a return fax with your EIN within approximately four business days.
  • Mail: Mail the completed SS-4 to the IRS and allow four to six weeks for processing.

Responsible Party Who Qualifies and How to Complete Lines 7a/7b

Every EIN application must name a “responsible party” the individual who controls, manages, or directs the entity and its funds. According to the Instructions for Form SS-4, the responsible party must be an individual (not an entity) for most new companies, and only one EIN may be assigned per responsible party per business day.

  • Line 7a: Enter the responsible party’s full legal name.
  • Line 7b: Enter the responsible party’s SSN or ITIN. If the responsible party has neither, enter the individual’s foreign passport number and country of issuance and write “Foreign” in the space provided. The SS-4 instructions (PDF) confirm this procedure.

Phone/Fax Timelines & Tips

Phone applications yield an EIN immediately during the call this is the fastest option. Fax applications typically return an EIN within four business days. Mail applications take four to six weeks. For most non-resident founders, the phone channel is the recommended route despite the international call cost.

Practical tips for a smooth call or fax submission:

  • Have formation documents ready: The IRS agent will ask for the entity name exactly as filed with the state, the formation date, and the state of organization.
  • Foreign address formatting: Use the dedicated international address fields on Form SS-4. Incorrectly formatted addresses are a common rejection reason.
  • Do not apply before filing: Your entity must already be formed (or your Articles of Organization filed) before you apply for an EIN.

Common Pitfalls Checklist

  • Duplicate EIN applications: Submitting more than one SS-4 per responsible party per day triggers a rejection.
  • Wrong responsible-party entry: Listing the registered agent company (rather than an individual) as the responsible party will cause the application to be returned.
  • Immediate banking use: Some banks cannot verify a brand-new EIN in IRS systems for 24–48 hours after issuance wait before attempting to open an account.
  • Missing entity name match: The entity name on the SS-4 must exactly match the name on file with the state Secretary of State, including punctuation.

Registered Agent Role, Responsible-Party Questions, and Using the Agent Address for Your EIN

Registered Agent Duties

A registered agent (sometimes called a statutory agent or resident agent) accepts service of process, state correspondence, and legal notices on behalf of your entity. Every US state requires one. The agent must maintain a physical street address in the state of formation P.O. boxes are not accepted. The Delaware Division of Corporations explicitly requires a registered agent located in Delaware before it will accept a certificate of incorporation or certificate of formation.

Can Your Registered Agent Be the Responsible Party on Form SS-4?

Technically, yes but only if the agent is an authorized individual (a natural person), not merely an entity. IRS guidance prefers listing the individual who actually controls or directs the company. In practice, many commercial registered-agent services should not be listed as the responsible party because doing so creates control-and-ownership ambiguity and may complicate future banking and tax filings. The preferred approach: list the foreign founder as the responsible party and use the agent only as the third-party designee if needed.

Should You Use the Registered Agent Address for Your EIN?

Form SS-4 asks for two addresses: the mailing address and the principal business address. You may use a registered agent’s address for mailing, but the principal business address should reflect where the entity is actually managed or operated. Using a commercial agent’s address as the principal business address can create friction during bank KYC banks may flag the address as a known agent address and request additional documentation.

State Choice Delaware vs Wyoming vs Nevada vs Home-State

Choosing a formation state is one of the highest-impact decisions for company formation United States. The comparison table below summarizes the key factors for non-resident founders.

Formation vs Doing-Business / Foreign-Qualification Triggers

Forming an entity in one state does not authorize it to “transact business” in another. If you have employees, an office, inventory, or regular sales activity in a second state, you must typically obtain a certificate of authority (foreign qualification) there. Nevada Revised Statutes Chapter 77, for example, defines when a foreign entity must register before transacting business. Every state has analogous provisions, and penalties for non-compliance range from fines to loss of access to state courts.

Factor Delaware Wyoming Nevada Typical Home-State
Formation cost Moderate filing fees; franchise taxes apply for corporations Low filing and annual fees Filing fee + state business license; higher ongoing fees Varies often lowest friction if you operate there
Privacy Good corporate privacy (records jurisdiction) Strong privacy for members Privacy features, but business-license requirements add disclosure Depends on state rules
Franchise / annual tax risk Delaware franchise tax (notable for corporations) Minimal state tax for LLCs Commerce license + annual list fees Potential local/state taxes; may avoid double-filing
Suitability for non-resident founders Popular for venture / C-corp setups and investor familiarity Popular for single-member LLCs and privacy Popular for privacy, but higher compliance costs Best where you have nexus avoids foreign-qualification costs
Foreign-qualification triggers Must foreign-qualify if transacting business in other states Certificate of authority required before transacting elsewhere Certificate of authority + business license required N/A domestic filing avoids foreign registration

Practical guidance: If you expect US investors or a later VC round, a Delaware C-corporation is often preferable for its well-developed corporate case law and investor familiarity. For a lean SaaS business with non-US owners and no immediate fundraising plans, a Wyoming or home-state LLC can reduce ongoing foreign-qualification overhead and annual fees.

US Tax Status & Compliance Federal Obligations, Withholding, and Form Overview

Federal Tax Classification

How the IRS taxes your US entity depends on its classification. Default rules apply automatically unless you elect otherwise:

  • Single-member LLC (foreign owner): Disregarded entity for income-tax purposes, but still must file Form 5472 (information return) and maintain records.
  • Multi-member LLC: Taxed as a partnership by default; files Form 1065.
  • Corporation: Taxed as a C-corporation; files Form 1120 (domestic) or Form 1120-F (foreign corporation with US-source income).

If the default classification is not suitable, you may file Form 8832 (Entity Classification Election) to change it. Note that S-corporation election (Form 2553) is generally unavailable to entities with non-resident alien shareholders.

Withholding Obligations and Non-Resident Owners

US-source payments to non-resident owners are generally subject to withholding typically at 30 percent, reduced by applicable tax treaties. The entity (or its withholding agent) must file Forms 1042 and 1042-S annually to report amounts withheld. Failure to withhold correctly exposes the entity to penalties and interest. IRS Publication 515 provides the detailed withholding tables and treaty rates.

When Non-Resident Owners Need ITINs

Non-resident individuals who have US tax filing obligations (including partners in a US partnership or owners of a disregarded entity with US-source income) generally need an Individual Taxpayer Identification Number. The Form W-7 instructions outline the application process and acceptable documentation. Timing matters: the W-7 can be submitted with a tax return during the filing season, but processing takes seven to eleven weeks, so plan accordingly.

Practical Compliance Checklist

  • Annual federal returns: File the appropriate form (1065, 1120, 5472, or 1120-F) by the entity’s due date, including extensions.
  • State franchise taxes: Pay any state-level annual taxes or franchise fees (e.g., Delaware franchise tax, California LLC fee).
  • Estimated tax payments: Corporations with expected tax liability must make quarterly estimated payments.
  • Withholding filings: Submit Forms 1042 and 1042-S by March 15 of the following year.

Banking & KYC Practical Options, Documents, and Realistic Expectations for Non-Residents

What Banks Typically Require

Opening a US bank account as a non-resident founder requires navigating stringent Know Your Customer (KYC) and Customer Due Diligence (CDD) procedures. Under the FinCEN CDD Final Rule, banks must identify and verify the identity of each beneficial owner who owns 25 percent or more of a legal entity and every individual with significant management responsibility. Banks also screen applicants against the OFAC sanctions lists. Typical documentation includes:

  • EIN confirmation letter or fax confirmation from the IRS
  • Certified formation documents (Articles of Organization or Certificate of Incorporation)
  • Passport copies for all beneficial owners
  • Proof of residential address (utility bill or bank statement from home country)
  • Operating agreement or bylaws

Practical Options

Non-resident founders generally have three pathways to a US bank account:

  • US branch of an international bank: If you already bank with an institution that has US branches (e.g., HSBC, Citibank), the internal referral process often simplifies KYC.
  • Regional US banks with international onboarding: Some community and mid-size banks accept remote applications with notarized documents and video verification.
  • Fintech providers: Platforms like Mercury, Relay, or Wise Business accept non-resident businesses, though they may limit wire transfers, ACH volumes, or lending products.

Red Flags That Increase KYC Friction

  • Sanctions exposure: Beneficial owners from OFAC-sanctioned jurisdictions face heightened scrutiny or outright denial.
  • Opaque beneficial ownership: Multi-layered holding structures without clear ultimate beneficial owners trigger enhanced due diligence.
  • Nominee services: Using nominee directors or members without transparent disclosure to the bank is likely to result in account closure.

Costs, Timelines, and Sample Formation Checklist

Typical cost ranges and timelines for company formation United States as a non-resident founder:

  • State filing fee: $50–$500 depending on the state (Wyoming is among the lowest; Nevada and Delaware sit in the moderate range for LLCs).
  • Registered agent (annual): $50–$300 per year for a commercial agent.
  • EIN processing: Immediate by phone; approximately four business days by fax; four to six weeks by mail. The Taxpayer Advocate Service confirms these ranges.
  • Bank account setup: One to four weeks depending on the bank’s remote-onboarding process and KYC review depth.
  • Annual compliance: State franchise taxes, annual reports, federal tax return preparation, and registered agent renewal budget $500–$3,000+ annually depending on complexity.

Ideal-case timeline: File formation documents online (1–3 business days), obtain EIN by phone the same week, begin bank onboarding immediately fully operational in two to three weeks. Slower scenario: Mail-based SS-4 and manual bank onboarding can extend the process to eight weeks or more.

Next Steps How Global Law Experts Helps

Forming a US company as a non-resident is achievable, but the interplay between state selection, EIN channels, tax classification, and bank KYC means that missteps cost time and money. The recommended action path is:

  1. Download the SS-4 checklist to prepare your responsible-party details, foreign address formatting, and supporting documents before you apply.
  2. Gather core documents: Passport copies for all beneficial owners, proof of residential address, and a draft operating agreement or bylaws.
  3. Book a consultation with a US corporate & tax attorney to confirm entity type, state selection, and tax elections based on your specific business model and country of residence.

A 15-minute initial consultation is typically sufficient to identify the right entity structure, flag treaty-based tax planning opportunities, and set the formation timeline. Arrive prepared with the documents above, and your attorney can move directly to execution.

Sources

FAQs

Can a registered agent apply for an EIN?
Sometimes. A registered agent can apply for an EIN only if an authorized individual — a natural person — completes and signs the SS-4 as the responsible party or third-party designee. The SS-4 instructions make clear that the IRS prefers an individual who controls the entity. Listing an agent company as the responsible party will result in rejection. Where possible, the foreign founder should serve as the responsible party and designate the agent only as an authorized contact.
It depends on your business model and goals. Delaware is investor-friendly for C-corporations and offers well-developed corporate case law. Wyoming is popular for single-member LLCs due to low fees and strong member privacy. Nevada offers privacy features but imposes higher ongoing costs including a state business license. If you will physically operate in one US state, forming there often avoids the added expense of foreign qualification. Use the comparison table above to evaluate each option against your specific needs.
You may use a registered agent address as your mailing address on Form SS-4, but the form also asks for the entity’s principal business address. If the agent address is a commercial service address rather than your actual place of business, using it as the principal address can create complications during bank KYC — financial institutions often flag known agent addresses. Use your true principal place of business for the business-address field where possible.
Non-residents who lack both an SSN and an ITIN cannot use the IRS online EIN tool. They must apply by phone (267-941-1099, international), fax, or mail using Form SS-4. On Line 7b, enter the responsible party’s foreign passport number, country of issuance, and write “Foreign.” Phone applications yield an EIN immediately; fax applications typically return a response within four business days; mail applications take four to six weeks.
Follow these steps: (1) choose an entity type — LLC or C-corporation; (2) select a formation state based on cost, privacy, and tax factors; (3) file formation documents (Articles of Organization or Certificate of Incorporation) with the state’s Secretary of State; (4) appoint a registered agent with a physical in-state address; (5) apply for an EIN using Form SS-4 via phone, fax, or mail; (6) confirm or elect your federal tax classification; (7) open a US bank account with KYC-compliant documents; and (8) assess whether foreign qualification is needed in any state where you will transact business.
The Corporate Transparency Act introduced Beneficial Ownership Information reporting requirements that first took effect in 2024. Reporting obligations and deadlines have been subject to rulemaking changes and judicial developments. Many new entities are required to file a BOI report with FinCEN, and banks may request a FinCEN identifier as part of their onboarding process. Check the latest FinCEN guidance for current filing deadlines, exemptions, and any interim relief before submitting your report.

Our Expert

Jonathon Richards

Global Law Experts

citizenship by investment st lucia
By Jonathon Richards

posted 17 hours ago

when to hire a family lawyer UAE
By Global Law Experts

posted 19 hours ago

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

How a Foreign Founder Forms a US Company Remotely Entity Choice, EIN, Registered Agent & Banking

Send welcome message

Custom Message