Delaware C-Corp vs LLC for foreign founders

This is the most consequential decision foreign founders make when forming a US entity. A Delaware C-Corp puts you on the VC fundraising track. A Delaware LLC keeps things simple and tax-efficient. Choosing wrong is expensive to fix — converting between entity types triggers tax events, resets your EIN, and costs $2,000-5,000+ in legal fees. Get it right the first time.

The core decision is whether a Delaware foreign owned LLC with Delaware LLC form 5472 and simpler Delaware LLC compliance is better than a foreign owned C corporation built for fundraising.

**Short Answer:** Choose a Delaware LLC when you want simplicity, pass-through treatment, and lower maintenance. Choose a Delaware C-corporation when you need venture capital, stock options, or institutional investor expectations.

Decision framework for a Delaware foreign owned LLC vs foreign owned C corporation

QuestionIf Yes → C-CorpIf No → LLC
Will you raise equity investment from US VCs or angels?C-Corp (non-negotiable for institutional investors)LLC
Do you plan to issue stock options to US employees?C-Corp (LLCs cannot issue stock options)LLC
Will you have more than $500K in annual US revenue within 2 years?C-Corp may be better (corporate tax rate advantages)LLC
Is your exit strategy an IPO or acquisition by a US company?C-Corp (standard acquisition target structure)LLC

If you answered “No” to all four → Delaware LLC (or better yet, Wyoming LLC to save money)

If you answered “Yes” to any one → Delaware C-Corp

Full Comparison Table

FactorDelaware C-CorpDelaware LLC
**Tax treatment**Corporate tax (21% federal on net income)Pass-through (profits taxed to owner, not entity)
**VC fundraising**✅ Standard structure — investors require it❌ VCs will not invest in an LLC
**Stock options**✅ Can issue ISOs and NSOs❌ Cannot issue stock options (only profit interests)
**Annual franchise tax**$400 minimum (can be $75,000+ if miscalculated)$300 flat fee
**Franchise tax due date**March 1June 1
**Annual report**Required (filed with franchise tax)Not required
**Form 5472**Required if 25%+ foreign-ownedRequired if 25%+ foreign-owned
**Double taxation risk**Yes — corporate tax + dividend withholdingNo — single layer of taxation
**Conversion difficulty**Hard to convert to LLC (tax event)Hard to convert to C-Corp (tax event)
**Formation cost**~$200-400 (with Stripe Atlas/Clerky)~$90-200
**Ongoing CPA costs**Higher (corporate return + Form 5472 + 1042-S)Lower (Form 5472 + Pro Forma 1120 only)
**Exit (sale of company)**Standard M&A structureBuyer may require conversion first
**Self-employment tax**No (owner is shareholder, not self-employed)Possible depending on ECI determination

Tax Treatment Deep Dive

Delaware C-Corp Taxation for Foreign Owners

Tax EventWhat HappensRate
Corporate income (US-sourced)Corp pays federal income tax21%
Dividend to foreign shareholderWithholding tax applies30% (or treaty rate: 15-25%)
Effective combined rateCorporate tax + dividend withholding36.7% — 44.7%
No US-sourced incomeNo tax, but still file Form 54720%

Delaware LLC Taxation for Foreign Owners

Tax EventWhat HappensRate
US-sourced income (ECI)Owner files 1040-NR and pays personal rate10-37% graduated
No US-sourced incomeNo income tax — but still file Form 54720%
DistributionsNot separately taxed (pass-through)Already included above
Effective rate (no ECI)Information filing only$0 tax + CPA fee

Key insight for foreign founders: If your Delaware entity earns no US-sourced income (common for SaaS companies serving non-US clients through a US LLC for banking), an LLC produces zero US tax liability while a C-Corp also produces zero tax — BUT the C-Corp creates future double-taxation risk when you eventually distribute profits.

Compliance Cost Comparison (Annual)

ObligationC-Corp CostLLC Cost
Delaware franchise tax$400-500 (with Assumed Par Value election)$300
Form 5472 filing (CPA)$500-1,000$300-800
Corporate tax return (Form 1120)$1,000-2,500Not required
Annual report (Delaware)$0 (included in franchise tax filing)Not required
1042-S (dividend withholding return)$200-400 (if dividends paid)Not applicable
Registered agent$100-200$100-200
**Total annual compliance****$2,200-4,800****$700-1,300**

A C-Corp costs $1,500-3,500/year MORE in compliance than an LLC. This is justified only if you need the fundraising or stock option capabilities.

Common Scenarios: What We Recommend

ScenarioRecommended StructureRationale
Solo SaaS founder, no VC plans, billing US clients**LLC** (Wyoming preferred)Simplest, cheapest, no double taxation
Funded startup, Series A planned within 18 months**Delaware C-Corp**VCs require it; stock option pool needed
E-commerce (Amazon FBA, Shopify)**LLC** (Wyoming preferred)No investor requirement, simple compliance
Consulting firm billing US companies**LLC**Pass-through taxation, minimal compliance
Two co-founders (one foreign, one US) planning to raise**Delaware C-Corp**Multi-owner + fundraising = C-Corp
IP holding company for licensing**Delaware LLC**Tax efficiency on royalty flows
YC/Techstars accepted startup**Delaware C-Corp**Accelerator requirement — non-negotiable
Freelancer using Stripe/PayPal**LLC** (Wyoming preferred)Simplest possible structure

The “I’ll Start as LLC and Convert Later” Myth

Many foreign founders plan to form an LLC now and convert to a C-Corp when they raise funding. This sounds logical but has significant costs:

Conversion IssueImpact
Tax eventConversion triggers a taxable event — assets deemed “contributed” to new corp
New EIN requiredMust apply for new EIN; bank accounts may need to be reopened
Legal fees$2,000-5,000 for conversion documents
Historical cap tableComplex to reconstruct equity history for investors
Timeline4-8 weeks to complete conversion properly
Investor patienceSome VCs won’t wait — they expect Delaware C-Corp on day one of diligence

Our advice: If there’s a >50% chance you’ll raise VC within 3 years, form the C-Corp now. The extra $1,500-3,500/year in compliance is cheaper than a $5,000+ conversion plus tax complications later.

Form 5472 Applies to BOTH Structures

Regardless of whether you choose C-Corp or LLC, your Form 5472 obligation is identical:

RequirementC-CorpLLC
Form 5472 required?Yes (if 25%+ foreign-owned)Yes (if any foreign ownership)
Penalty for non-filing$25,000/year$25,000/year
DeadlineApril 15 / October 15April 15 / October 15
What’s reportedTransactions with foreign related partiesTransactions with foreign owner
Filed withForm 1120 (actual corporate return)Pro Forma Form 1120

The Form 5472 filing does not change based on entity type. What changes is the host return it attaches to and the complexity of transactions to report.

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)
  • [Delaware Division of Corporations](https://corp.delaware.gov/)

Frequently Asked Questions

I’m a solo foreign founder with a SaaS product. Do I need a C-Corp?

Only if you plan to raise US VC or issue stock options to US employees within 2-3 years. If you’re bootstrapping or plan to remain self-funded, an LLC is simpler, cheaper, and more tax-efficient.

Can foreign owners hold shares in a Delaware C-Corp?

Yes. There is no restriction on foreign ownership of Delaware C-Corps. However, dividends paid to foreign shareholders are subject to 30% withholding (or reduced treaty rate).

Stripe Atlas formed my Delaware C-Corp. Am I stuck with it?

You can convert to an LLC, but it triggers a tax event and costs $2,000-5,000 in legal fees. If you’re not planning to raise VC, an LLC would have been cheaper — but conversion costs may exceed the savings depending on how long you’ve operated.

Does OptimizeTax file for both C-Corps and LLCs?

Yes. We handle Form 5472 for both entity types. For C-Corps, we also advise on franchise tax elections (Assumed Par Value method), dividend withholding (1042-S), and corporate return coordination.

Does a Delaware foreign owned LLC have lighter compliance than a foreign owned C corporation?

Usually yes. A Delaware foreign owned LLC often has simpler annual maintenance, even though Delaware LLC form 5472 and federal reporting can still be significant.

Is there a Delaware LLC annual report for LLC founders comparing structures?

No. There is no Delaware LLC annual report, but Delaware LLC compliance still includes annual state tax and registered agent upkeep.

How does Delaware franchise tax foreign owner exposure differ between the two structures?

A Delaware franchise tax foreign owner bill for an LLC is generally predictable, while a corporate bill can vary substantially depending on share structure and assets.

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