Insights
Why Most Non-Resident Founders Struggle to Open a U.S. Bank Account (And How to Get Approved With Much Lower Deposits)
Leiros Consulting · June 19, 2026 · 5 min read
I’ve watched plenty of solid companies walk away because of that number assuming the door is closed. It isn’t always like that.
I spent eight years on the bank’s side reviewing these applications. I saw exactly where banks had room to move, which files got better treatment, which banks were more flexible than others, and how the way you present your company can change the outcome. Now I help many founders from the other side of the table.
If a big minimum balance is the only thing stopping you, it’s often worth having a conversation before you give up. I’ve helped many get approved with much lower deposits than what the bank first quoted.
The Real Reason Banks Quote High Numbers
Banks have to follow strict rules around knowing their customers and preventing money laundering. When the owner lives outside the U.S., the compliance work goes up a lot. From the bank’s perspective, a small overseas account can create almost as much work as a big domestic one, but it brings in far less revenue.
That’s why some relationship managers lead with a high minimum balance. It’s their way of managing risk and deciding whether the relationship is worth the effort. The number they quote isn’t always a hard rule, it often depends on how complete and clear your file looks when it lands on someone’s desk.
What Actually Changes the Outcome
After reviewing hundreds of these applications, I noticed the same patterns. The files that got better terms usually had a few things in common. The ownership was clearly laid out. The purpose of the account made sense and matched the documents. Everything was consistent, names, addresses, dates. There were no gaps that forced the reviewer to ask more questions. When those pieces are in place, the bank sees lower risk. And lower risk often means they’re willing to work with a smaller opening deposit or drop the minimum balance requirement altogether. I’ve seen the exact same company get quoted $50,000 by one bank and approved with almost a quarter of the amount after the file was put together differently.
How Founders Usually Get Stuck
Most people send in whatever they have and hope for the best. The application looks fine to them, but from the bank’s side it raises flags.
Here are most common issues I saw over and over:
Ownership details that didn’t line up across documents
A business description that was too vague
Using only a registered agent address with no other proof of real activity
Applying to banks that simply don’t want this type of relationship
When those problems show up, the easiest path for the bank is to quote a high minimum or decline the application. It protects them and moves the file off their desk.
What Actually Helps
The biggest difference usually comes from how you tell the story. Banks want quick answers to a few basic questions: Who owns this? What will the account actually be used for? How will this relationship work going forward?
When you make those answers obvious and consistent, reviewers spend less time digging and become more open to giving better terms. It’s not about having the biggest company or the most money already in the bank. It’s about removing friction from their process.
Some banks are simply more open to non-resident founders than others. Once you know which ones have more flexibility and how to speak their language on the application, the outcome changes.
Questions Leiros Consulting Get Asked All the Time
Do I really need a U.S. address?
A lot of banks want some form of U.S. address. How strictly they check it depends on the institution. Some are satisfied with the right documentation even if it’s not a full physical office.Can this be done without flying to the U.S.?
Yes, in many cases. Some banks and platforms handle everything remotely when the file is prepared properly. Others still prefer or require an in-person step.
What documents matter most?
Formation documents, EIN confirmation, passport or ID for the owners, and a clear operating agreement usually sit at the top. The key is making sure everything matches and tells a clean story.
Are there banks that don’t require a big minimum balance?
There are options with low or no ongoing minimums, especially once your file shows low risk. It’s not automatic, but it’s more common than most founders realize.
Should I just go with a fintech platform instead?
Plenty of founders start there because it’s faster. Some later decide they want a traditional bank relationship for other reasons. Both paths can work depending on what you need.
If You’re Stuck Right NowA high minimum balance quote doesn’t always mean that’s your only option. Sometimes it just means the file needs to be presented differently or sent to a different bank.
If you’re running into this and it’s the main thing holding you back, feel free to reach out. Our team at Leiros Consulting 1 is happy to take a look and tell you whether there’s real room to move or not.
Has a bank ever hit you with a minimum balance requirement that made you stop and think twice?
I’d be interested to hear what happened.
Cristian Leiros is the founder of Leiros Consulting. After eight years working Amerant Bank, he now helps many non-resident founders open U.S. bank accounts with far lower minimum balance requirements than most are initially quoted. He brings real insider knowledge of how banks actually evaluate applications and where the flexibility really exists.
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