New Mexico foreign owned LLC: Tax Guide

New Mexico Foreign-Owned LLC

New Mexico is the most hands-off state for LLC ownership in the United States. No annual report. No franchise tax. No state income tax on out-of-state LLCs. No public disclosure of members. It’s the state that asks the least of you — which is exactly why foreign founders choose it. But the IRS doesn’t care which state you picked. Form 5472 is still required, and the $25,000 penalty applies.

A foreign owned LLC form 5472 is still required here, and foreign owned LLC tax filing often needs a form 5472 CPA even though New Mexico LLC compliance is lighter than other states.

**Short Answer:** New Mexico is popular because it has no annual report and strong privacy, but foreign-owned LLCs still face IRS filing duties. The state is simple, yet the federal Form 5472 requirement remains fully in force.

Why New Mexico LLC compliance feels easy but federal filing is not

BenefitDetailsHow It Compares
No annual reportZero state filings after formation — everWyoming requires annual report ($60); Delaware requires franchise tax ($300)
No franchise tax$0 annual state feesDelaware charges $300/year (LLC)
No state income tax (non-residents)Out-of-state LLCs with no NM-sourced income owe nothingSame as Wyoming and Delaware
Maximum privacyMembers and managers not listed on Articles of OrganizationSame as Wyoming; stronger than many states
Lowest ongoing cost$0/year in state fees (only registered agent cost)Wyoming: $60/year; Delaware: $300+/year
No publication requirementUnlike Arizona/New York, no newspaper notice neededSaves $100-500 vs states with this rule
No operating agreement filingOperating agreement stays private — never filed with stateStandard across most states
Formation cost$50 filing feeCheapest major formation state

New Mexico vs Wyoming vs Delaware: The True Cost of “Free”

Cost Component (Annual)New MexicoWyomingDelaware
Annual report / state filing$0$60$0 (but franchise tax replaces it)
Franchise tax$0$0$300
State income tax (no NM income)$0$0$0
Registered agent$100-150$100-150$100-200
Form 5472 CPA (federal)$300-800$300-800$300-800
**Total annual compliance****$400-950****$460-1,010****$700-1,300**
**5-Year total****$2,000-4,750****$2,300-5,050****$3,500-6,500**

New Mexico saves $60-350/year vs other popular states purely on state fees. Over 5 years, that’s $300-1,750 in savings.

The “Set It and Forget It” Trap

New Mexico’s zero-report structure creates a dangerous psychological effect: foreign owners form the LLC, set up a bank account, and then forget about it. No annual report means no annual reminder from the state. No franchise tax means no annual bill. The LLC just… exists silently.

This is exactly how $25,000+ penalties accumulate.

YearState Asks of YouIRS Asks of YouWhat Happens If You Ignore IRS
Year 1NothingForm 5472 + Pro Forma 1120$25,000 penalty accruing
Year 2NothingForm 5472 + Pro Forma 1120$50,000 cumulative exposure
Year 3NothingForm 5472 + Pro Forma 1120$75,000 cumulative exposure
Year 4NothingForm 5472 + Pro Forma 1120$100,000 cumulative exposure
Year 5Nothing — LLC still in good standingCP15 notice arrivesShock. Panic. Call a CPA.

The state silence is NOT confirmation that you’re compliant. New Mexico will never warn you about IRS obligations — that’s not their job.

Federal Tax Filing Requirements (Same as Every State)

RequirementDetails
Form 5472Required for all foreign-owned US LLCs — regardless of state
Pro Forma Form 1120Filed as the host return alongside Form 5472
DeadlineApril 15 (extension to October 15 via Form 7004)
Penalty$25,000 per form, per year
Triggered byAny reportable transaction between LLC and foreign owner
Common reportable transactionsCapital contributions, bank deposits, loans, expense payments, distributions
EIN requiredYes — apply via Form SS-4 (mail/fax for foreign owners without SSN)

New Mexico State-Specific Compliance

ObligationRequirementDue DateCost
Articles of OrganizationFile once at formationFormation only$50
Annual reportNOT REQUIREDNever$0
Franchise taxNOT REQUIREDNever$0
Registered agentRequired — must maintain at all timesOngoing$100-150/year
State income tax returnOnly if NM-sourced incomeApril 15 (if applicable)Varies
Gross receipts tax (GRT)Only if conducting business IN New MexicoMonthly/quarterlyVaries by county
CRS-1 registrationOnly if selling goods/services in NMBefore first sale in NM$0

For most foreign owners with no New Mexico operations: Your only ongoing state obligation is maintaining a registered agent. That’s it. Everything else is federal.

Who Should Choose New Mexico

Ideal ProfileWhy NM WorksBetter Alternative If…
Solo freelancer / consultantLowest possible cost, zero state adminYou need VC funding → Delaware C-Corp
Dormant LLC for banking accessNo annual report means no risk of dissolution from missed filingsYou need Court of Chancery → Delaware
Privacy-maximizing ownerMembers never disclosed publiclyYou want asset protection charging orders → Wyoming
Budget-conscious founder$0 state fees saves $60-300/year vs alternativesYou have complex multi-entity structure → Delaware
E-commerce seller (no NM inventory)Zero state obligations beyond registered agentYou have NM warehouse/inventory → must pay GRT
Backup/holding LLCExists to hold assets or contracts, minimal activityYou need investor confidence → Delaware

New Mexico Gross Receipts Tax (Important Exception)

If your LLC conducts business WITHIN New Mexico (not just being registered there), you may owe Gross Receipts Tax:

FactorDetails
What it isNew Mexico’s equivalent of sales tax — but charged on the seller, not buyer
Rate5.0% — 9.3% depending on location within NM
Who owes itLLCs performing services or selling goods within New Mexico
Who does NOT owe itLLCs registered in NM but operating entirely outside the state
Foreign owner impactIf you’re overseas and your LLC serves non-NM clients: $0 GRT owed
RegistrationCRS-1 form required before first NM sale

 Most foreign-owned NM LLCs owe zero GRT because they operate entirely outside New Mexico. You registered in NM for privacy and cost — not because you have NM customers.

Compliance Calendar for New Mexico Foreign-Owned LLCs

DeadlineObligationFiled WithCost/Penalty
April 15Form 5472 + Pro Forma 1120 (or extension)IRS$25,000 penalty if missed
October 15Extended deadline for Form 5472IRS$25,000 penalty if missed
April 15FBAR (if US bank > $10,000)FinCEN$12,906/account
OngoingMaintain registered agentNM Secretary of StateLLC may be revoked
N/AAnnual reportNot required$0
N/AFranchise taxNot required$0

Your calendar has only 2-3 real deadlines — all federal. New Mexico itself requires nothing annually.

How OptimizeTax Helps New Mexico LLC Owners

ChallengeHow We Help
No state reminders about federal deadlinesWe send you Form 5472 filing reminders proactively
“Forgot I had an LLC” syndromeAnnual check-in ensures you’re not accumulating penalties silently
Multiple years unfiledDIIRSP catch-up filings with penalty abatement requests
Unsure if GRT appliesWe assess whether your activities trigger NM Gross Receipts Tax
Need EIN or ITINCAA designation for passport-free ITIN; SS-4 assistance for EIN

Authoritative Sources

  • [IRS Form 5472 Instructions](https://www.irs.gov/forms-pubs/about-form-5472)
  • [IRS Form 1120 Information](https://www.irs.gov/forms-pubs/about-form-1120)
  • [IRS FBAR Requirements](https://www.irs.gov/businesses/small-businesses-self-employed/report-of-foreign-bank-financial-accounts-fbar)
  • [New Mexico Secretary of State – Business Services](https://www.sos.nm.gov/business-services/)

Frequently Asked Questions

Does New Mexico require an annual report for LLCs?

No. New Mexico is one of the only states that does not require any annual report or periodic filing for LLCs. Once formed, your LLC remains active indefinitely as long as you maintain a registered agent.

My New Mexico LLC has had zero activity for 3 years. Am I still in good standing?

Yes — with New Mexico. The state considers you in good standing as long as your registered agent is active. However, you may owe 3 years of Form 5472 to the IRS ($75,000 penalty exposure) regardless of state standing.

Why would I choose New Mexico over Wyoming?

Cost: New Mexico saves $60/year (no annual report fee). Simplicity: zero state filings ever. The tradeoff is Wyoming has slightly stronger asset protection (charging order) and more established LLC case law.

Does “no annual report” mean no annual obligations at all?

No. It means no obligations to the STATE of New Mexico. Your FEDERAL obligations (Form 5472, FBAR) remain unchanged. The IRS operates independently of state filing requirements.

Is New Mexico a good choice for Amazon FBA sellers?

Yes, if you have no inventory or operations in New Mexico. If you store inventory in an NM warehouse, Gross Receipts Tax may apply. For most foreign FBA sellers using Amazon’s non-NM warehouses, New Mexico works perfectly.

Does a foreign owned LLC form 5472 still apply in New Mexico?

Yes. A foreign owned LLC form 5472 filing still applies even though New Mexico has no annual report for LLCs.

When should I hire a form 5472 CPA for foreign owned LLC tax filing and New Mexico LLC compliance?

You should hire a form 5472 CPA as soon as the LLC is funded, opened a bank account, or had owner transactions that must be documented correctly.

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