Delaware LLC for Egypt Founders: 2026 Guide
A founder in Egypt can own a Delaware LLC with no SSN, no visa, and no US address. Here is exactly how the formation, EIN, banking, Stripe, and tax steps work in 2026 — and why a US entity is the cleanest way for Egyptian freelancers, agencies, and ecommerce sellers to reach Stripe and PayPal.
Last updated: June 3, 2026
- SSN requiredNo
- US visa or address requiredNo
- Formation time~48 hours
- EIN time (no SSN)2-4 weeks
- Stripe accessYes, via US LLC + EIN
- Our price$397 all-in (state fee included)
- Year 2+ cost$300 tax + ~$99 agent
Can an Egypt resident open a Delaware LLC?
Yes. A resident of Egypt can own a Delaware LLC outright, and it is one of the most common reasons Egyptian founders look to the United States in the first place. There is no citizenship or residency requirement to be a member or manager of a Delaware LLC. You do not need a green card, a US visa, a US Social Security Number, an ITIN, or to set foot in the United States. You can live in Cairo, Alexandria, Giza, or anywhere else and still hold 100% of a US legal entity that can sign contracts, invoice clients in dollars, and hold a US bank account.
What you do need is a Delaware registered agent with a physical Delaware address, which is a legal requirement for every LLC in the state. That agent is included in your first year with us. Beyond that, the paperwork is the same Delaware LLC formation process a US founder follows, just routed so that the EIN and banking steps work without an SSN. If you want the country-agnostic version of this, our Delaware LLC for non-residents guide covers the same ground for founders worldwide. The single biggest attraction for most Egyptian founders is simple: a US company is the cleanest route to charging international clients in dollars.
Why do Egyptian founders choose a Delaware LLC?
For most Egyptian founders, the decision comes down to one practical gap: the payment and banking rails available locally are not enough to run an international online business at scale. Egyptian freelancers, marketing and development agencies, and ecommerce sellers regularly hit a wall when a client or platform expects to pay a US entity, or when they want to charge cards directly rather than wait on slow international bank transfers. A Delaware LLC solves that by giving you a recognized US company with its own federal tax ID.
The benefits stack up quickly. A US entity unlocks Stripe and PayPal access that Egypt-based merchants often cannot get directly. It lets you open a US business bank account with Mercury, Relay, or Wise, so you hold and receive dollars cleanly rather than relying solely on local pounds-denominated accounts. It adds credibility with US, Gulf, and European clients who prefer to contract with a US LLC — a real advantage for MENA freelancers and agencies competing for higher-value work. And Delaware specifically is widely recognized by banks and payment processors, which tends to make approvals smoother than a more obscure jurisdiction. For founders who plan to raise money later, Delaware is also the default home for US startups, though that path usually means a Delaware C-Corp rather than an LLC.
There is a regional angle worth naming. Egypt sits at the centre of the MENA freelance and agency economy, and a large share of the work flows to clients in the Gulf, Europe, and North America. Those clients increasingly expect to pay a company, not an individual, and they expect to pay by card or through a US processor. A Delaware LLC turns a solo Egyptian freelancer into a contracting party that looks the same on paper as a US agency — without changing where you live or work.
Step-by-step: forming a Delaware LLC from Egypt
The process is deliberately simple, and every step is handled remotely. Here is how it runs in order, with realistic timing for an applicant in Egypt.
- Day 0 — Name and structure. You confirm an available Delaware LLC name and decide whether you are the single owner or have co-founders. We run the Delaware name check so you do not file a name that is already taken.
- Day 1-2 — Certificate of Formation. We file with the Delaware Division of Corporations, pay the $110 state fee on your behalf, and your LLC legally exists in about 48 hours.
- Weeks 1-4 — EIN. We submit Form SS-4 to the IRS without an SSN. This is the slowest step and the reason the overall timeline is measured in weeks, not days.
- Days after EIN — Banking and Stripe. With the EIN in hand, you apply for a US business account and then activate Stripe to start charging customers.
You sign everything electronically, so there is no courier paperwork between Egypt and the US and no notarized forms to mail. The full walkthrough lives on our how it works page, and the entire sequence is covered by the flat $397 service, including a money-back guarantee on the filing and the EIN. From signature to a working Stripe account, most Egyptian founders are fully operational inside a month, with the EIN wait being the only real pause in the timeline.
How does an Egypt founder get an EIN without an SSN?
The EIN (Employer Identification Number) is your LLC’s federal tax ID, and you need it to open a US bank account and activate Stripe. US residents get one online in minutes, but that online tool requires an SSN or ITIN. As a founder in Egypt, you instead apply with Form SS-4, which the IRS processes by fax or mail. This is why it takes 2 to 4 weeks rather than minutes.
On the SS-4, your LLC is the applicant, you are listed as the responsible party, and you can write Foreign in the field that would otherwise hold an SSN or ITIN — that is exactly how the IRS expects non-resident-owned entities to apply. We prepare and submit the SS-4 for you as part of the flat $397 service, and the filing plus EIN are covered by our money-back guarantee. The IRS issues a CP 575 confirmation letter with your number; keep it, because banks and Stripe sometimes ask to see it. If you want a deeper walkthrough of the federal ID itself, the team at ein.so covers EINs in detail for non-residents.
How does an Egypt founder open a US bank account?
Once your EIN is issued, US fintech banks open business accounts for non-residents entirely online. The most common choices are Mercury, Relay, and Wise, none of which require you to visit a branch or live in the US. You apply from Egypt with your formation documents and EIN, and most non-residents are approved within 1 to 5 business days. These accounts give you US ACH, wires, and a debit card so you can receive client payments and Stripe payouts in dollars.
One point to be clear about: approval is the bank’s own decision, not something any formation service can guarantee. Each provider reviews applications independently, so a decline from one is not a decline from all. Your specialist helps you apply to more than one until you are live with at least one account. The table below is a quick orientation on which fintech tends to suit which founder profile — apply where you fit best first, and keep a backup ready.
| Your situation | Often a good first apply | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Freelancer / solo, want simple US ACH + wires | Mercury | Clean online onboarding, strong fit for non-residents |
| Agency with multiple clients, need sub-accounts | Relay | Multiple accounts and cards under one login |
| Paid in several currencies, move money home often | Wise | Multi-currency balances and low-cost FX |
| First application was declined | Apply to a second of the three | Each reviews independently; a no from one is not a no from all |
Whatever you choose, the prerequisites are the same: a formed Delaware LLC, a finished EIN, a clear description of what the business does, and consistent details across every document. How you then move funds from your US account to Egypt, and any local reporting that involves, is a question for an Egyptian advisor and depends on current rules. Many founders keep most working capital in dollars in the US account and only bring home what they need, but the right approach for you depends on your own circumstances.
Accepting payments: Stripe and PayPal for Egypt founders
This is the single biggest reason Egyptian founders form a Delaware LLC. Stripe is not generally available to merchants based in Egypt, so charging cards directly from a local entity simply is not an option for most freelancers, agencies, and ecommerce sellers. A Delaware LLC with a US EIN and a US business bank account is exactly the structure Stripe is built to onboard. With those three things, you apply for Stripe as a US business, accept card payments from customers worldwide, and have funds paid out to your Mercury, Relay, or Wise account.
Stripe review times run from 1 to 14 days depending on your business model. The single biggest cause of a slow or paused review is a mismatch: a website that is not live, a business description that does not match the site, or products in a category Stripe treats as higher-risk. We help you line these up before you submit so the review runs smoothly, and our service includes Stripe approval support. PayPal is the other common rail, and it matters a great deal in the MENA region: a US PayPal Business account tied to your LLC and EIN broadens the customers and platforms you can serve, and gives Egyptian founders a cleaner way to receive and send money than many local options. Together, Stripe and PayPal cover the vast majority of online payment scenarios an Egyptian founder will meet.
Form 5472: the obligation Egypt owners must not miss
If you are a non-US person owning 25% or more of a single-member Delaware LLC that is treated as a disregarded entity, the IRS requires you to file Form 5472 each year, attached to a pro-forma Form 1120. It reports reportable transactions between you and your LLC, such as capital you contribute or money you withdraw. This is an information return, not necessarily a tax bill, but it is mandatory for almost every Egyptian founder running a single-member LLC.
The reason to take it seriously is the penalty: failing to file Form 5472 carries a $25,000 penalty, and it generally applies per-form, per-year, so a missed filing is expensive. The return is due with the Form 1120 around April 15, and that deadline is extendable. We track this date as part of compliance tracking and remind you ahead of time. Read the full breakdown on our Form 5472 for Delaware LLCs guide so you know exactly what is reported and when. Note that a multi-member LLC follows a different path — typically a partnership return rather than the 5472 and pro-forma 1120 combination.
Taxes: what Egypt founders should know
Tax has two sides, and it helps to keep them separate. On the US side, a US LLC with no US-source income and no US presence — meaning no US office, employees, or dependent agent — is often not subject to US federal income tax on profit earned abroad, under the effectively-connected-income rules. Many Egyptian founders running an online service or store with no US staff or inventory fall into this category. That said, this is general information, not advice, and it is fact-specific; you still have filing duties such as the Form 5472 and pro-forma 1120 described above. Confirm your own US position with a cross-border tax professional.
On the Egyptian side, how your foreign company and its income are treated — including any reporting of foreign income, rules on receiving money from abroad, and your personal tax position — varies by your circumstances and changes over time. This page deliberately does not state Egyptian tax rates, treaty outcomes, or local regulations as fact, because getting that wrong is costly and the rules genuinely move. Confirm your local obligations with a qualified Egyptian tax advisor or accountant. The structure itself stays constant; only the home-country treatment differs from founder to founder. Our Delaware LLC cost page sets out the fixed US-side numbers you can plan around.
What does a Delaware LLC cost for an Egypt founder?
Our service is a single flat fee of $397, and the $110 Delaware state filing fee is already included — there is no separate state charge to add on. That one payment covers the Certificate of Formation, the EIN application, a registered agent for year one, your operating agreement, US bank and Stripe application support, and compliance tracking, all with WhatsApp support. The same price applies whether you are a freelancer forming your first entity or an agency owner formalizing an existing business.
| Year 1 | Year 2 and after | |
|---|---|---|
| Our service / agent | $397 all-in | ~$99 registered agent |
| Delaware state fee | Included ($110) | $0 |
| Franchise tax | $0 (first year) | $300 (due June 1) |
| Annual report | Not required | Not required |
| Typical total | $397 | ~$399 |
Year two is roughly the $300 franchise tax plus about $99 to renew your registered agent. There is no Delaware annual report for an LLC, so the franchise tax is the entire state obligation. Miss the June 1 deadline and Delaware adds a $200 penalty plus 1.5% interest per month, and your LLC loses good standing — which is exactly why we track the date for you. For the full pricing picture and what is and is not included, see our pricing page. For Egyptian founders pricing this against local pound costs, remember the US fees are fixed in dollars and do not change with the exchange rate — the $300 franchise tax is the same flat amount every founder pays.
Common questions and mistakes from Egypt founders
Formation itself almost never fails — Delaware accepts properly filed paperwork routinely. The friction for Egyptian founders shows up later, at the bank or at Stripe, and the causes are predictable. Knowing them in advance is the easiest way to get approved on the first try.
- Vague business description. “Freelancing” or “consulting” tells a reviewer nothing. A specific one sentence — what you sell, to whom, and how — clears most automated flags.
- Mismatched details. If your name, address, or LLC name differs across your passport, your formation document, and your application, the review stalls. Keep everything identical, and match the Latin spelling of your name across every document.
- No live website. Stripe in particular wants to see a working site or product page that matches your description — even a simple one-page site helps.
- Applying before the EIN is issued. Trying to open a bank or Stripe account before the IRS has issued the EIN is a frequent cause of an early decline. Wait for the number.
- Ignoring annual duties. The two dates that matter are June 1 (the $300 franchise tax) and around April 15 (Form 5472). Both are easy to forget once the business is running, which is why we track them.
Almost every one of these is fixable. We help you present a clear description, consistent details, and a working web presence, then apply to a second provider if the first declines. If you are still deciding between jurisdictions, Wyoming is the other popular pick for non-residents and is worth comparing for privacy and lower ongoing fees — our sister site wyomingllc.co covers that path, and our own Delaware vs Wyoming LLC page lays out when each one wins. If you will eventually need a personal US tax ID — for example to claim a treaty benefit — the team at itin.so handles ITIN applications for non-residents.
How does Egypt compare to other founder markets?
The Delaware filing is identical no matter where you are; what differs is the banking detail and, above all, local payment access. Egypt stands out because Stripe is not generally available locally, which makes the US LLC route especially valuable for the country’s large base of freelancers, agencies, and ecommerce sellers who need to charge cards and contract with Gulf, European, and North American clients. Founders in neighboring MENA markets often form a Delaware LLC for the same reason, and the process for each is the same as described here.
If you are comparing notes with founders elsewhere, our Delaware LLC for the UAE and Delaware LLC for Nigeria guides walk through the same steps for those audiences, with the banking and local-tax nuances adjusted for each country. Whatever your market, the structure that gets you to Stripe and a US bank account is the Delaware LLC, the EIN, and the annual filings — and you can start the whole process remotely from anywhere in Egypt.
Frequently asked questions
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