Whether you are a non‑US entrepreneur incorporating your first American entity or a venture‑backed founding team choosing the right domicile for a fundraising round, Delaware LLC formation remains one of the most searched and most misunderstood company‑formation topics in startup law. Delaware accounts for a disproportionate share of US business entities, and its statute‑driven flexibility, specialised Court of Chancery, and deep body of case law continue to make it the jurisdiction of choice for both bootstrapped founders and growth‑stage companies backed by institutional capital.
This guide is designed for two audiences. First, non‑US founders who need a reliable, step‑by‑step roadmap from choosing an entity type and filing a Certificate of Formation through obtaining an EIN, satisfying FinCEN Beneficial Ownership Information (BOI) reporting obligations, and opening a US bank account remotely. Second, VC‑backed startup teams evaluating whether a Delaware LLC or a Delaware C‑Corporation best fits their cap‑table structure, equity‑incentive plans, and investor expectations.
Every procedural and legal claim in this article is grounded in primary sources: the Delaware Limited Liability Company Act, the Delaware Division of Corporations, IRS guidance on EIN applications, and FinCEN’s BOI reporting rule. Where we address fundraising considerations, we reference the SEC’s small‑business framework.
The following ten steps walk you through every stage of Delaware LLC formation, from initial entity‑type decisions through post‑formation compliance. Each step includes the documents and actions required so you can build a reliable checklist before you file.
Before filing anything, clarify your business model and capital strategy. If you intend to raise venture capital through priced equity rounds, most investors will expect a Delaware C‑Corporation (see the comparison table below). If you are bootstrapping, consulting, holding IP or real estate, or raising only via revenue‑based financing, a Delaware LLC offers greater tax flexibility and simpler governance. The U.S. Small Business Administration’s entity‑choice guidance provides a useful high‑level framework. If you’re uncertain, structure the LLC with conversion provisions from day one the Delaware LLC Act expressly permits domestication and conversion.
Your LLC name must include “Limited Liability Company,” “LLC,” or “L.L.C.” and must be distinguishable from existing entities on the Delaware Division of Corporations’ records. Search the Division’s entity search tool to check availability. You may optionally reserve a name for 120 days by filing an application with the Division.
Delaware law requires every LLC to maintain a Delaware registered agent with a physical street address in the state. The agent receives service of process, legal notices, and statutory mail on behalf of your company. Your options include:
For non‑US founders, the registered agent’s address is often the only Delaware address on file make sure it satisfies your bank’s KYC requirements as well. More detail is available in our forthcoming guide on registered agent and virtual office options for non‑US founders.
The Certificate of Formation is the core formation document filed with the Delaware Division of Corporations. It must include the LLC’s name and the name and address of its registered agent. Filing can be done online, by mail, or by fax. Standard processing takes approximately one to two weeks; the Division offers expedited options including same‑day and 24‑hour processing for additional fees. The state filing fee for an LLC Certificate of Formation is $90.
Although Delaware does not require an Operating Agreement to be filed with the state, it is the single most important governance document for your LLC. Under Title 6, Chapter 18 of the Delaware Code, the Operating Agreement governs member rights, capital contributions, profit and loss allocations, management authority, transfer restrictions, and dissolution procedures. For VC‑adjacent companies, include provisions for:
An Employer Identification Number (EIN) is required to open a bank account, hire employees, and file US tax returns. The IRS issues EINs at no cost. US‑based applicants with a Social Security Number (SSN) or Individual Taxpayer Identification Number (ITIN) can apply online and receive the EIN immediately. Non‑US founders without an SSN or ITIN must apply by fax (Form SS‑4) or mail and should expect processing times of four to eight weeks. Engaging a US‑based authorised third‑party designee can streamline this process.
Under FinCEN’s Beneficial Ownership Information reporting rule, most newly formed LLCs must file a BOI report identifying each beneficial owner who directly or indirectly owns 25 % or more of the company, or who exercises substantial control. You will need to provide each beneficial owner’s full legal name, date of birth, residential address, and a government‑issued identification document (passport or driver’s licence) along with the document’s identifying number and issuing jurisdiction. File promptly after formation to avoid penalties and to satisfy downstream KYC requests from banks and investors.
US banks apply rigorous Know Your Customer (KYC) and anti‑money‑laundering (AML) procedures, including screening against OFAC sanctions lists. Non‑US founders should prepare:
Some banks require an in‑person visit; others accept remote account opening via video verification. Research each bank’s requirements early to avoid delays.
If your LLC conducts business or has employees in Delaware, register with the Delaware One Stop business portal for applicable state taxes (withholding, gross‑receipts tax). All Delaware LLCs must pay an annual franchise tax regardless of whether they operate in the state see the Franchise Tax section below.
If your Delaware LLC operates in another US state, for example, if your team or customers are based in California or New York, you must register as a foreign LLC in that state. This process is known as foreign qualification and typically involves filing an application, appointing a local registered agent, and paying additional fees. Domestically, maintain your annual franchise tax payment, keep your registered agent current, and update your BOI report within 30 days of any change in beneficial ownership.
Choosing between a Delaware LLC and a Delaware C‑Corporation is one of the most consequential decisions a founder makes at formation. The comparison below distils the key differences that matter for Delaware startup incorporation and fundraising readiness.
| Feature | Delaware LLC | Delaware C‑Corp | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tax treatment | Pass‑through (default); can elect corporate taxation | Double taxation (entity + shareholder level) | Pass‑through may benefit early‑stage, loss‑generating companies |
| Investor preference (VCs) | Generally disfavoured by institutional VCs | Strongly preferred by most VC funds | VC fund LPAs often prohibit or limit pass‑through investments |
| Equity instruments | Membership interests; flexible profit‑sharing units | Common & preferred stock; SAFEs; convertible notes; stock options | C‑Corp structure enables standard SAFE/option mechanics per SEC guidance |
| Cap table & dilution | Complex; requires bespoke Operating Agreement provisions | Standard; well‑understood waterfall and dilution mechanics | C‑Corp cap tables are universally modelled by VC counsel |
| Administrative complexity | Lower (no board required; flexible governance) | Higher (board of directors, annual meetings, bylaws) | LLC simplicity is an advantage for small teams |
| Conversion/exit | Convertible to C‑Corp under Delaware statute; tax and legal costs apply | IPO‑ready structure; standard M&A mechanics | Conversion typically required before Series A or later |
| Typical use case | Bootstrapped, consulting, real estate, non‑US holding, pre‑revenue | VC‑backed growth‑stage, SaaS, deep‑tech | Many founders start as an LLC and convert when raising a priced round |
If your roadmap includes a priced equity round (Series Seed or Series A) with an institutional VC fund, form a Delaware C‑Corporation from day one or build explicit conversion provisions into your LLC Operating Agreement. VCs require standardised preferred‑stock instruments, board governance, and 409A‑valued option plans that map cleanly onto a corporate structure. The cost to form a Delaware LLC and later convert is real: expect legal fees, potential tax consequences, and a two‑to‑four‑week conversion timeline.
Most VC term sheets require conversion to a C‑Corp as a closing condition. Industry observers expect this requirement to remain universal through 2026 and beyond. Plan for conversion at least 60 days before your target close date. Conversion costs include Delaware Division of Corporations filing fees, updated registered‑agent documentation, legal drafting of a certificate of incorporation and bylaws, and critical tax advice on the conversion’s impact on each member’s basis and any gain recognition.
The cost to form a Delaware LLC is modest at the state level but varies significantly once legal and compliance services are included.
Plan for annual registered‑agent fees, franchise tax, accounting, and if applicable, foreign‑qualification fees in each state where you operate.
| Item | Typical 2026 Cost Range | Timing |
|---|---|---|
| DE Certificate of Formation filing fee | $90 (state fee) | Standard: 1–2 weeks; expedited available |
| Registered agent annual fee | $50 – $300+ | Due annually on the agent’s renewal date |
| Operating Agreement drafting (legal) | $500 – $3,000+ | Concurrent with the formation |
| EIN application | Free (IRS); agent‑assistance fee $50 – $200 | Immediate (online, US‑based) to 4–8 weeks (international fax/mail) |
| Annual franchise tax (LLC) | $300 flat fee | Due 1 June each year |
| Expedited state filing (same‑day / 24‑hr) | $50 – $1,000+ (varies by speed) | Same‑day to next business day |
Note: The IRS does not charge any fee to issue an EIN. Any costs for EIN assistance are third‑party service fees, not government charges.
A Delaware-registered agent accepts service of process, government correspondence, and legal notices on behalf of your LLC. The agent must have a physical street address in Delaware and be available during normal business hours.
Keep your registered‑agent agreement, a utility bill or lease for any business address, and your Certificate of Formation in a single compliance folder. Banks and VC counsel will request these documents during onboarding and due diligence, respectively.
Before filing, gather the following documentation to minimise delays with the IRS, FinCEN, banks, and investors:
Non‑US founders without an SSN or ITIN cannot use the IRS online application. File Form SS‑4 by fax (preferred for speed) or mail. Processing by fax typically takes four to six business days; mail applications may take four to eight weeks. An authorised third‑party designee located in the US can apply on your behalf and receive the EIN faster. Be aware that receiving US‑sourced income through your LLC may trigger withholding obligations; consult a cross‑border tax adviser before your first revenue event.
Every Delaware LLC, regardless of whether it conducts business in the state, must pay an annual franchise tax of $300. The tax is due by 1 June each year. Late payments incur a $200 penalty plus 1.5 % monthly interest on the unpaid balance. The Division of Corporations may void your LLC’s good standing for non‑payment, which can derail bank accounts, VC closings, and contract execution.
For detailed franchise‑tax calculations and mitigation strategies, particularly for C‑Corporations using the Authorised Shares or Assumed Par Value Capital methods, refer to our forthcoming guide on Delaware franchise tax and annual compliance.
Maintain a virtual data room from formation onward. Include formation documents, the Operating Agreement, cap table, BOI filing receipt, EIN confirmation, IP assignments, material contracts, and financial statements. VC counsel will request these within days of a term‑sheet signing; having them organised reduces closing friction by weeks.
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