| ▲ | quentindanjou 3 hours ago | |||||||
Yes. Unless you have hundreds of thousands of dollars that you can invest in the company that has not even been created, you would not be able to get a visa and your company would not be able to exist. Unless you are a startup with large investors, that route is closed. | ||||||||
| ▲ | fakedang an hour ago | parent [-] | |||||||
Who said anything about getting a visa? The entire point of my idea was about skipping German bureaucracy. The only US bureaucracy is the IRS, and 2 forms for offshore LLCs at that. Getting a visa actually defeats the purpose of the Wyoming LLC, since you'd have to pay federal taxes as a US resident. But with the Wyoming LLC being pass-through with the added benefit of zero liability (same arrangement as OP), you'd only have to pay corporate taxes and then German personal income taxes as a German resident. You don't need to step foot in the US at all. You can't get a visa to run your own company under normal circumstances anyways, the only routes being O1, EB5 or EB1. | ||||||||
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