Before You Pay

The price is for setup execution, not a random filing receipt.

You are paying for the route, the filing, the EIN path, the document stack, the handoff, and the prep that helps the company make sense after formation.

Scope first You know what is included before the file moves.
State fee visible State filing fees are separate and shown clearly.
Direct handling No reseller layer between you and the work.
Clean delivery Documents and next steps are organized.
Package Difference

Choose by how much help you want after formation.

All packages move the company setup forward. The difference is how much preparation you want around banking, payments, and review risk.

LLC Formation + EIN
$349 + state fee
For founders who need the company formed, EIN path handled, and core documents delivered cleanly.
Best for Formation + EIN only
Full Setup
$499 + state fee
For founders who want the company file prepared for banking and payment setup, not just formed and left alone.
Best for Most non-US founders
Full Setup Black
$799 + state fee
For cases where the file needs deeper review before applying anywhere important: banking, payments, address match, identity match, and profile cleanup.
Best for Higher-control setup
Plain English

What can be controlled, and what cannot.

A clean setup matters. But nobody should pretend they control banks, IRS timing, or payment processor decisions.

Controlled here

Company setup, owner details, document order, EIN preparation, state route, and the file quality going into review.

Improved here

Banking and payment readiness through cleaner documents, better sequencing, and fewer loose details.

!

Not guaranteed

Bank approval, Stripe approval, PayPal approval, IRS timing, tax outcome, or third-party platform decisions.

Fixed if it is on my side

If a mistake comes from my part of the work, it gets corrected without extra charge.

How Payment Moves

Clean order. No guessing.

The file moves only after the path, total, and payment route are clear.

01

Pick package

Choose the setup level that fits your case.

02

Submit intake

Send company and owner details once.

03

Total confirmed

Package, state fee, and add-ons are visible.

04

Payment

Stripe or approved alternative route.

05

Setup starts

The file moves into execution.

Full FAQ

Everything people ask before starting.

Formation, no SSN, EIN, documents, banking, payments, taxes, BOI, and what is not guaranteed.

Formation

The setup questions that come first.

Before EIN, banking, or payments, the company path needs to make sense.

Most non-US founders who want a simple operating company usually start by looking at an LLC. A C Corp usually makes more sense when you are building for venture funding, stock issuance, investor expectations, or a startup structure that needs corporate shares.

The right choice depends on how you will use the company, not just what sounds more official.

For many non-US founders with no physical U.S. presence, Wyoming and New Mexico are common first looks. Delaware usually makes more sense when the goal is venture structure, not just a simple operating LLC.

The right state depends on what you sell, who you apply with later, renewal costs, privacy needs, and how the file needs to read.

Yes. A non-US founder can form and own a U.S. LLC. The harder part is not the state filing. The harder part is building a clean enough file for EIN, banking, payment processors, tax records, and later verification.

No for the formation itself. The state filing and core setup can be handled remotely. Travel questions usually come later around specific bank policies, identity checks, or edge-case compliance reviews.

SSN / Immigration

No SSN does not mean no path.

Formation, tax ID, immigration status, work authorization, and banking are separate questions.

Yes. No SSN does not automatically block company formation. The SSN issue usually matters more around EIN method, banking onboarding, payment processors, tax records, and identity checks.

Often, yes, but the setup should be reviewed carefully. Being physically in the U.S. without an SSN can affect the best EIN route, address logic, banking path, tax treatment, and what questions you should ask a legal or tax professional.

Company formation is not immigration advice and does not create work authorization by itself.

Owning a company and being authorized to work in the U.S. are not the same question. A setup review can help with the company path, but immigration-status and work-authorization questions should be handled by a qualified immigration professional.

Yes. Company formation may be possible, but banks and payment processors can still screen country of residence, citizenship, business activity, sanctions risk, source of funds, and operating footprint. That is why approval is never automatic.

EIN

The part most services keep vague.

The EIN gets messy when the route, responsible party, or entity details are wrong.

Yes. International applicants can apply without an SSN. If the applicant has no legal residence, principal place of business, principal office, or agency in the U.S. or U.S. territories, the IRS says the online EIN application cannot be used and other methods should be used.

No. An EIN and an ITIN are not the same thing. An EIN identifies the business. An ITIN is a personal tax identification number. Many founders confuse the two and delay the setup for no reason.

Timing depends on the route, IRS workload, and file quality. Phone, fax, and mail are different paths. The practical goal is to avoid bad sequencing, duplicate submissions, and inconsistent entity details.

Wrong entity details, weak responsible-party details, address mismatch, duplicate submissions, or poor sequence. Many EIN delays are file-quality problems before they become IRS problems.

Documents

What you actually receive.

The company needs a clean file, not scattered PDFs with no order.

Depending on the package and state, you may receive formation proof, state filing documents, registered-agent details, operating agreement or internal company document, EIN details when completed, and a clean handoff for banking or payment preparation.

No. A registered agent receives official state/legal mail in the formation state. A business address is used for operational identity, banking, payment processors, invoices, websites, and records. Mixing them badly can create problems later.

Banks and processors often compare the company file, website, application, invoices, owner records, and business profile. If the address trail looks random, the file can look weaker than it should.

Often, yes. Cleanup may include reviewing entity details, EIN records, address use, document gaps, banking/payment application friction, and what needs to be corrected before the next attempt.

Banking

Where clean structure starts to matter.

The LLC is only the start. The bank reads the full file.

Sometimes yes. It depends on the institution and the strength of the file. Some fintech-first options support remote onboarding more easily than traditional banks, but remote does not mean automatic.

Usually formation documents, EIN, ownership clarity, signer authority, owner identity, address details, and a business profile that makes operational sense. Exact requirements change by institution.

Common reasons include weak business activity explanation, address trails that do not align, incomplete ownership details, unsupported business model, high-risk country or industry issues, or too much friction in the file.

No. The LLC is the starting point. Approval stays with the institution. Good setup improves file quality and lowers friction, but it does not make approval automatic.

Payments

Cleaner entity. Better processor path.

Payment problems show up when company records, website, business profile, and owner details do not match cleanly.

It can help because the business file can read more clearly to processors, but the entity alone is not enough. The business model, website, records, owner details, and risk category also matter.

No. No serious operator should promise that. What can be improved is the quality of the company file, business narrative, supporting documents, website match, and response path if the account gets questioned.

Onboarding is not the only check. Platforms can review again at payout setup, account activity, website review, document refresh, chargeback risk, or ownership clarification.

Scattered business identity, thin website presence, inconsistent address data, vague activity wording, unsupported claims, missing support records, or a business model that the platform does not want to support.

Tax and filings

The part people oversimplify.

Tax outcomes are fact-specific. Do not trust one-size-fits-all promises here.

Not automatically. Tax outcome depends on facts like activity, nexus, ownership, elections, where work is performed, where customers are, and how money moves. A U.S. LLC can be useful for non-US founders without creating the same answer for every founder.

It can. Foreign-owned U.S. disregarded entities can have Form 5472 and pro forma Form 1120 filing requirements when applicable. This is one of the most important tax-side issues non-US founders should not ignore.

This is tax filing territory. Setup support is not a substitute for a tax professional.

Yes. Think state renewals, registered-agent renewal, annual reports where applicable, tax-side filings where relevant, address updates, and keeping the company file current. Formation is not the whole lifecycle.

No. This is setup, file preparation, document organization, banking/payment readiness, and practical path guidance. Legal advice, immigration advice, and tax filing should be handled by qualified professionals.

Compliance and limits

What is handled, and what is not fake-promised.

Good setup work is honest about what can and cannot be controlled.

FinCEN currently exempts U.S.-created entities from BOI reporting. Some foreign companies registered to do business in the U.S. may still have BOI obligations, so old BOI advice should not be reused without checking the date.

Current practical wording: U.S.-created domestic entities exempt; some foreign reporting companies may still need to report.

Bank approval, Stripe approval, PayPal approval, IRS timing, platform decisions, tax outcome, immigration outcome, or any third-party review. The controlled part is the company setup, document quality, sequence, and preparation before review.

If your case involves prior rejection, high-risk business activity, country-risk issues, old EIN mistakes, mismatched documents, or unclear tax/immigration questions, start with intake or ask directly before paying.

Use Guides if you want to read first. Use Services if the file needs work. Use Prices if you want package clarity. Use Start Intake when you want your exact route reviewed.

Ready When You Are

Start with the intake.

Send the details once. The route, package, state fee, payment method, and next steps get confirmed before execution.