Quick answer: LLC formation is only one step in a US company setup path. For a non-US founder, the useful decision sequence is entity fit, state, registered agent, address roles, EIN, banking, payment-platform readiness, bookkeeping, and annual compliance.
Separate each role before choosing providers or submitting applications.
-
01
Confirm entity fit
Choose LLC/C-Corp, state, ownership, and tax context before paying a provider.
Output: filing path and company name. -
02
Assign registered agent
Use the agent for state notices and service of process.
Do not treat it as routine mail handling. -
03
Separate address fields
Decide which field needs agent, mailing, business, or owner residential address.
Output: address map before applications. -
04
Prepare EIN context
Collect responsible-party details, SS-4 facts, and formation records.
EIN helps setup; it is not approval. -
05
Apply for banking/payment tools
Submit KYB, owner ID, website, business model, and address proof where required.
Eligibility is provider-specific. -
06
Maintain compliance
Track annual reports, bookkeeping, tax forms, and renewal dates.
Formation is not the finish line.
- Keep entity, address, EIN, banking, and compliance as separate workstreams.
- Do not buy a package because it says "all-in-one" without checking what each step actually covers.
Use this hub when
- You are outside the United States and want to understand whether a US LLC path fits your business.
- You are comparing formation providers but are unsure what is included after filing.
- You need to separate formation from EIN, banking, Stripe, address, and tax/compliance decisions.
Formation decision table
| Decision | What to verify | Common mistake |
|---|---|---|
| Entity type | LLC vs C-Corp vs local entity, tax facts, investor plans | Choosing LLC only because setup is fast |
| State | Fees, reporting, privacy, nexus, where business is actually operated | Assuming one state is best for every foreign founder |
| Registered agent | State legal notice role and annual renewal pricing | Treating the agent as a full business mailbox |
| Address stack | Registered office, mailing, business, owner, and platform address fields | Using one address everywhere |
| EIN | IRS route, responsible party, SS-4 information, entity record consistency | Expecting instant timing for every case |
| Banking and payments | Eligibility, documents, country support, address proof, business model | Thinking formation guarantees approval |
Recommended path
- Decide whether a US entity is actually the right structure for your tax and business facts.
- Choose the state only after checking fees, annual obligations, privacy, and operating reality.
- Appoint a registered agent for the formation state.
- Keep company records consistent before EIN, bank, and payment applications.
- Choose mailing and business-address services by use case, not by marketing label.
- Prepare banking and Stripe documents without assuming approval.
Start with these guides
- How to form a US LLC as a non-resident
- Registered agent for non-US residents
- Registered agent vs virtual mailbox vs virtual office
- EIN without SSN
- US business banking as a non-resident
- Firstbase vs doola
Official sources to verify
This page is educational and does not provide legal, tax, accounting, banking, or financial advice. Provider assistance cannot guarantee IRS, banking, payment processor, marketplace, or state-agency outcomes.