Guide

Banking and Payments

Prepare US business banking and payment workflows with entity records, EIN context, owner documents, address facts, and provider comparisons.

Quick answer: banking and payment setup starts after the company record is consistent. A US LLC, EIN, mailbox, or formation provider does not guarantee approval from a bank, fintech, Stripe, PayPal, Shopify, Amazon, or marketplace.

Readiness check EIN and banking document stack

Prepare company records, IRS context, owner identity, and address proof separately.

  1. 01
    Finalize company records

    Keep formation confirmation, registered agent details, ownership information, and operating context ready.

    Banks and fintechs often ask for these facts.
  2. 02
    Prepare EIN facts

    Align legal name, responsible party, mailing address, and SS-4 context before applying.

    Avoid conflicting company-name or address variants.
  3. 03
    Build owner/KYB packet

    Prepare owner ID, residential address proof, website, business model, and expected activity.

    Requirements vary by provider.
  4. 04
    Choose banking route

    Compare bank, fintech, Wise/Relay-style options, country eligibility, and address rules.

    An EIN does not guarantee account approval.
  5. 05
    Keep records synced

    Use consistent company details across IRS, bank, payment, accounting, and platform accounts.

    Mismatched records create review friction.
Before you move on
  • Treat EIN, banking, and payment onboarding as related but separate reviews.
  • Use official/provider instructions for current document requirements.
An EIN can support banking workflows, but it does not guarantee bank, fintech, or platform approval.

Banking readiness table

Review areaPrepareCommon risk
Company recordFormation documents, state record, legal nameName or state mismatch
Tax detailsEIN confirmation or current tax identifier detailsMissing or inconsistent EIN data
Owner identityPassport/ID, residential address, ownership percentage, roleKYC/KYB mismatch
AddressMailing, physical, registered agent, owner, and proof documents separatedMailbox used where physical address is required
Business modelWebsite, invoices, contracts, product details, policiesUnclear, unsupported, or restricted activity

Payment-platform readiness

Payment processors can review more than the entity. Stripe, for example, can request business and address verification information and acceptable documents. Treat a US company as one input in the application, not as an approval shortcut.

What not to do

  • Do not apply before entity name, EIN, owner identity, and address records are consistent.
  • Do not use a mailbox in a physical-address field if the provider excludes it.
  • Do not assume unsupported country, industry, website, or risk issues disappear because the entity is US-formed.
  • Do not submit repeated applications with inconsistent data after a rejection.

Useful next pages

Provider sources to verify

Frequently asked questions

Can a non-US founder open a US business bank account?

It may be possible with some providers, but eligibility, country support, documents, address rules, and risk review vary.

Does a US LLC guarantee Stripe approval?

No. A US company can be part of a setup path, but Stripe can still review identity, entity, address, bank, website, risk, and industry details.

Can I use a virtual mailbox for banking?

Do not assume that. Some providers distinguish mailboxes, PMBs, registered agent addresses, virtual offices, and physical operating addresses.

What should I prepare first?

Company documents, EIN or tax details, owner identity, residential address, website, business model, and consistent address records.