Insights
How a Non-Resident Opens a Real US Business Bank Account Remotely in 2026
Leiros Consulting · June 11, 2026 · 6 min read
You Did Not Come This Far to Be Told No
It is past midnight in Bogotá, and the founder reads the rejection email again. The wording is polite, but the meaning is not. Her customers already pay her in dollars. She built the company herself, from a desk beside her bed. Yet every US bank keeps sending back one word, and that word is no.
She is not careless. She works the American market every single day, and she does it well. Still, the American banking system has quietly decided that she does not belong inside it. That is the part that stings, and it is not the paperwork or the long wait. It is the message underneath, the one that says you can sell here but never bank here.
If you have ever read an email like that, then this was written for you.
Do you have to be American to own a US company?
The first thing people hear is the least true thing of all. You do not need to be American to own an American company. The rule asks for no citizenship, no green card, and no Social Security number. A non-resident can hold a US LLC outright, with only a valid passport behind it.
So the very first objection breaks apart on the very first fact. You are not a US citizen. You can still own this company today, fully and in your own name. What you actually need is small and specific, and it really comes down to three plain things: a valid passport, a registered agent in the US, and an EIN from the IRS.
Why the door keeps closing anyway
Here is where most founders hit the wall, and it is not their fault. The largest US retail banks will not fully onboard a foreign non-resident online. Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, and Citi all want you inside a branch. Each one asks you to take a number and stand before a teller, in person.
So the founder in Bogotá starts pricing flights across an entire continent. That single rule sends thousands of capable founders shopping for an expensive plane ticket. You do not need one. The hard part was never your passport. The hard part is who opens the account, and through what relationship.
Is a fintech like Mercury, Wise, or Relay enough on its own?
There is an easier-looking road, and most founders take it without thinking twice. You reach for a fintech like Mercury, a clean app, and an account number by the afternoon. Then comes the morning it quietly stops working. The money will not move.
A founder in São Paulo opens his app and finds a frozen balance. A one-line notice tells him the account is now under review. There was no reason given, no timeline offered, and no person on the chat to help him. It sits locked for weeks, while payroll and suppliers and rent refuse to wait.
This is not rare, and it is not bad luck. It is the predictable cost of building your company on a single platform that owes you nothing. Each popular option carries a quiet catch worth knowing before you trust it with everything.
That single platform quietly becomes one point of failure. The fix is not a better app. The fix is a real banking relationship, with a person who answers the phone when something breaks.
The guide who used to say no
For eight years, Cristian Leirós sat on the bank’s side of that desk in Miami. He was the officer who read the file. More often than he liked, he was the one who said no. He knows exactly why the rejection arrives, because he personally used to write it.
Now he sits on your side of the table instead. Leirós opens the account through a real banking relationship. He keeps your entity in good standing, and he answers in English and Spanish. He reads every email himself, so no ticket queue and no offshore script stand in his place.
How does a non-resident open a US bank account, step by step?
You do not have to hold all of this inside your head at once. The whole path is short, and it runs in a clear and patient order. First, you form the entity, and a US LLC fits most non-resident founders. Second, you get the EIN directly from the IRS. Third, you set up a genuine US business address, not a mailbox a bank rejects. Fourth, you open the account through a relationship, not a web form that ghosts you.
One honest word about staying clean
This part is unglamorous, and skipping it gets expensive fast. A foreign-owned single-member LLC must file Form 1120 and Form 5472 each year. That holds true even with zero income, and even if you never sent an invoice.
Miss that filing, and the penalty starts at twenty-five thousand dollars. We keep your entity in good standing, so that number never quietly finds you. The full breakdown is next week’s subject. For today, it is enough to know the trap exists.
This summer, take the field
This is the summer the finest talent on earth comes to America to compete. The best players arrive for a few weeks and perform in front of the whole world. Then each one goes home to the city that made them. None of them had to move a life to belong on the field, and neither do you.
Your company can take that exact route, and it banks fully inside the United States. You keep building from the same home you never had to leave behind. You stop watching the market from the stands, and you walk onto the field and play. You did not come this far to be told no. Done for you, not done by you.
FAQ
Can a non-resident really own a US company without ever moving to the US?
Yes, and the bar is lower than you think. A non-resident can hold a US LLC with no citizenship, no green card, and no SSN. You do need a valid passport, a registered agent, and an EIN from the IRS.
Do I have to fly to the US to open the business bank account?
Not with us, and that is genuinely the entire point. Major US banks ask non-residents to appear personally at a branch, which leaves founders stuck. Leirós opens the account remotely, through a real banking relationship, from Miami.
Is a fintech like Mercury, Relay, or Wise good enough on its own?
Each one carries a catch worth knowing first. Mercury dropped registered-agent addresses in 2025, and Relay generally needs an SSN or ITIN. Wise charges a one-time fee for USD details, and accounts can freeze with no warning. A single platform is a single point of failure, so a real relationship gives you someone to call.
Begin
Put your business on American soil.
Tell us where you are and where you are going. We map the path to a U.S. operation and walk every step with you — no obligation.
