
You chose New Mexico for its simplicity — no annual report, no franchise tax, no state income tax. Smart choice. But the IRS isn’t as hands-off as New Mexico. Form 5472 is required every year, and the $25,000 penalty for non-filing doesn’t care which state your LLC calls home. We handle the one obligation New Mexico can’t protect you from.
Our team handles foreign owned LLC form 5472 work, foreign owned LLC tax filing support, and form 5472 CPA guidance for clients who want simple New Mexico LLC compliance.
**Short Answer:** New Mexico may have no annual report, but a foreign-owned LLC still needs Form 5472 and pro forma Form 1120 each year. We prepare the filing and keep the federal side from becoming an expensive surprise.
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Table of Contents
ToggleThe foreign owned LLC form 5472 problem in New Mexico
| The Attraction | The Trap | Our Solution |
| No annual report → nothing to remind you | No annual reminder → easy to forget Form 5472 | Proactive filing reminders + preparation |
| No state fees → feels like zero obligations | False sense of zero compliance → penalties accumulate silently | Annual compliance check-in every March |
| Maximum privacy → minimal paper trail | Minimal documentation → harder to reconstruct transactions later | Year-round recordkeeping guidance |
| Set-and-forget formation → easy | Forgotten LLC → 3-5 years of unfiled returns | DIIRSP catch-up filings when needed |
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What’s Included
| Service Component | Details |
| Form 5472 preparation | Identify and report all transactions between you and your NM LLC |
| Pro Forma Form 1120 | Filed as the host return with the IRS |
| Extension filing (Form 7004) | Extends deadline to October 15 if needed |
| Annual reminder system | We contact you every March — before April 15 deadline |
| Transaction identification | We find reportable transactions you may have missed |
| IRS correspondence | If IRS contacts you, we respond on your behalf |
| FBAR advisory | Assess whether your US bank account triggers FBAR filing |
| Multi-year catch-up | DIIRSP filings for years you missed while NM stayed silent |
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Why NM LLC Owners Need Proactive Compliance
We see more delinquent filings from New Mexico LLC owners than any other state. Here’s why:
| State | Annual Touchpoints | Reminder Triggers | Likelihood of Forgetting Form 5472 |
| Delaware | Franchise tax bill (June 1) | Bill arrives → “what else do I owe?” | Medium |
| Wyoming | Annual report due (anniversary month) | Report notice → “should I check my tax filing?” | Medium |
| New Mexico | None | Zero state contact after formation | Very High |
| Florida | Annual report (May 1) | Report notice → may trigger compliance review | Medium |
New Mexico’s silence is the enemy of compliance. Other states accidentally remind you that obligations exist. New Mexico does not.
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Client Profiles We Serve
| Profile | Why They Chose NM | Their Common Mistake | How We Help |
| Nigerian freelancer | Cheapest formation, banking access | Never heard of Form 5472 | First-year education + filing |
| Pakistani software company | Privacy, low cost | Assumed “no report = no filing” | Catch-up filing + ongoing service |
| Indian SaaS founder | Minimal admin, focus on product | Filed Year 1, forgot Year 2-3 | Reminder system prevents gaps |
| UAE consultant | Zero-tax appeal matched NM’s zero-fee appeal | Believed NM exempts them from IRS | “No state filing ≠ no federal filing” education |
| European digital nomad | Set-and-forget while traveling | Lost track of LLC entirely | DIIRSP for multiple years |
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Pricing
| Filing Type | Starting At | Typical Scenario |
| Standard annual filing | $450 | One owner, basic bank transactions |
| First-time filing (includes education) | $450 | Explains obligations + files first Form 5472 |
| Multi-year catch-up (per year) | $450 | 2-5 years delinquent via DIIRSP |
| Filing + FBAR | $600 | Form 5472 + FinCEN 114 if applicable |
| Filing + ITIN application | $600 | For owners who still need identification numbers |
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/)
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Frequently Asked Questions
New Mexico has no annual report. Does that mean no annual filings at all?
No. New Mexico has no STATE filings. The IRS (federal) still requires Form 5472 every year from foreign-owned LLCs. These are completely separate systems.
I formed my NM LLC 4 years ago and never filed anything. How bad is it?
Your IRS penalty exposure is $25,000 × 4 years = $100,000. However, we can file delinquent returns through DIIRSP and request penalty abatement. Most clients with reasonable cause get significant relief. Act now — the longer you wait, the harder abatement becomes.
Should I switch from New Mexico to Wyoming?
Probably not. Wyoming costs $60/year MORE (annual report) and provides no additional IRS protection. If you’re already in NM, stay — just make sure you’re filing Form 5472 annually.
Does OptimizeTax remind me when Form 5472 is due?
Yes. For all NM LLC clients, we send proactive reminders in March (before April 15) and in September (before October 15 extended deadline). New Mexico won’t remind you — we will.
Does a foreign owned LLC form 5472 still apply in New Mexico with zero state fees?
Yes. A foreign owned LLC form 5472 filing is a federal rule and is not affected by New Mexico’s low-maintenance state system.
Why work with a form 5472 CPA for foreign owned LLC tax filing instead of filing alone?
A form 5472 CPA helps identify reportable transactions, prepare the pro forma return correctly, and keep New Mexico LLC compliance aligned with the IRS calendar.
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