Quick answer: a US business address can mean mailing address, registered office, public contact address, virtual office, principal office, physical operating address, or platform-specific proof of address. Define the use case before buying an address service.
Registered agent, mailbox, office, and owner address fields do different jobs.
- Pick the address by the exact form field, not by the marketing label on a provider plan.
- When a platform asks for proof, check its current document and address rules before submitting.
Scenario table
| Scenario | Likely starting point | Still verify |
|---|---|---|
| You need state legal notices | Registered agent | State requirement and renewal pricing |
| You need routine mail | Virtual mailbox | Form 1583, company-name mail, forwarding |
| You need business presence | Virtual office | Address documentation and office services |
| You need bank/platform proof | Provider-specific documents | Whether mailboxes or virtual offices are excluded |
What not to do
- Do not buy the cheapest address before checking the form field.
- Do not assume a CMRA mailbox is physical operating proof.
- Do not use a registered agent address as public support address unless the provider allows it.
- Do not submit inconsistent addresses across IRS, bank, payment, and marketplace records.
Address services to compare
iPostal1
large virtual mailbox and business address location network
iPostal1 can help with mail handling and address choice, but mailbox acceptance for banking or platforms is never guaranteed.
Alliance Virtual Offices
virtual office address and business-center presence
Alliance can help with a more office-like business presence, but virtual office acceptance varies by bank, platform, and document requirement.
US Global Mail
long-term US mail forwarding for remote founders and expats
US Global Mail can help with ongoing mail management, but founders should verify company-name mail, forwarding costs, and platform address rules.