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Build a Private Corporate Stack Without Playing Rich Guy Dress-Up

Apple routes revenue through Ireland and the Cayman Islands. Amazon uses Luxembourg, Delaware, and Nevada. Google has long used Ireland, the Netherlands, and Bermuda. None of this is exotic. It is standard corporate plumbing built from public legal tools.

Those tools are not reserved for multinationals. A landlord, freelancer, crypto holder, or small business owner can use the same entity types for a few hundred dollars a year. What changes is scale, not the menu.

Legal disclaimer: This guide covers legal tax planning and asset protection structures only. Tax evasion, hiding income, filing false returns, or concealing assets from your home country's tax authority, is a crime. Nothing here is legal or tax advice. Hire a qualified attorney and CPA before you set up any of this.
$100/yr
WYOMING LLC FEE
Wyoming Secretary of State
$300–500
PANAMA FOUNDATION
Formation cost estimate
5 yrs
TAX EVASION PENALTY
US federal prison term

Use Structure or Stay Exposed

Corporate structure does three jobs at once:

  1. Liability separation. A claim against one entity should not reach assets in another.
  2. Tax efficiency. Some entities pass income through. Some jurisdictions tax less. Some layers defer tax.
  3. Privacy. Some registries publish little. That keeps your name out of public-facing records.

Wealthy people and large firms use these tools as routine infrastructure. The surprise is not that they exist. The surprise is how cheap they are.

The Eight Structures That Matter

1

Wyoming LLC Is the Best Domestic Starting Point

Wyoming built the strongest privacy-first LLC framework in the US. Key points:

  • No public member/manager disclosure. The Wyoming Secretary of State shows the registered agent, not the owners or managers.
  • Charging order protection. A personal creditor may get a charging order, but cannot easily take control of the LLC.
  • No state income tax. Wyoming has no personal or corporate income tax.
  • Cost: $100/year. Add a registered agent and you are usually still under $200 a year.
  • Flexible operating agreement. You can build in manager control and other separation tools.

For most US users, Wyoming is the default base layer.

2

Delaware Wins When the Goal Is Investors

More than 60% of Fortune 500 companies sit in Delaware. The state has deep case law, flexible rules, and a court system businesses trust.

Delaware is less private than Wyoming. Use it when you need VC money, complex equity, or a standard Delaware C-Corp. If you want privacy and asset protection first, Wyoming usually wins.

Delaware LLCs still pass income through by default, so they can work as holding entities too.

3

Series LLCs Split Risk Without New LLCs Every Time

A Series LLC creates separate internal compartments under one parent. Each series can hold its own assets, members, and liabilities while sharing one registered entity.

Available in: Wyoming, Delaware, Nevada, Illinois, Texas, Utah, and a handful of others.

Main use case: real estate. Put one property in each series. A lawsuit tied to Property 1 should not reach Properties 2 through 5.

Caveat: not every state respects out-of-state series segregation. Get legal advice before you rely on it across state lines.

4

Anonymous Land Trusts Keep Your Name Off Deeds

Real estate ownership sits in public land records. A land trust cuts that exposure.

The trust holds title. The trustee appears in the record. You hold the beneficial interest, which usually does not show in normal title searches.

Pair a land trust with a Wyoming LLC as beneficiary and public records get much thinner.

This is common among high-net-worth investors and anyone who wants less public visibility on property holdings.

5

BVI or Seychelles Adds the Offshore Holding Layer

British Virgin Islands and Seychelles IBCs are common offshore holding vehicles. Key traits:

  • No corporate tax on foreign-sourced income.
  • Thin public registries. Beneficial ownership is not public, though authorities can still get access.
  • Annual cost: $300–$800 with agent fees.
  • Common use: hold shares, investments, or sit between a domestic LLC and a foundation or trust.

These are lawful tools, but both jurisdictions take part in information-sharing regimes. Privacy from the public is not privacy from every government.

6

Nevis Makes Creditors Work for It

Nevis wrote its LLC law to frustrate foreign plaintiffs. The main features:

  • Plaintiff bond requirement. Foreign plaintiffs usually have to post a large bond before the case moves.
  • Short statute of limitations. Fraudulent transfer claims have a much shorter window than in most US states.
  • Charging order as sole remedy. Creditors cannot easily force a sale of LLC assets.
  • No automatic recognition of foreign judgments. A US judgment does not automatically work in Nevis.

Nevis works best as a holding layer for protected assets, not as an operating business entity.

7

Panama Foundations Add Privacy and Estate Planning

A Panama Private Interest Foundation is neither a company nor a trust. It is its own legal form.

Key traits:

  • No shareholders. Foundations have a founder, council, and beneficiaries, not equity holders.
  • No public beneficiary registry. The charter is filed, but beneficiaries sit in a private regulation document.
  • Asset holding only. A PIF holds assets. It does not run normal business operations directly.
  • Strong estate planning use. Assets can pass outside probate.
  • Cost: $1,000–$2,000 setup + ~$800/year.

The Panama Papers exposed abuse, not the structure itself. Used lawfully and reported correctly, a Panama foundation is a standard planning tool.

8

Cook Islands Trusts Sit at the Top End

Cook Islands trusts are still the hardest asset protection structure for foreign creditors to crack.

The landmark case: FTC v. BurnLounge, Inc. and related proceedings. The FTC won in the US and tried to reach assets in a Cook Islands trust. The Cook Islands trustee refused under local law. The US court could punish the defendant, but it could not directly seize the trust assets.

Why it works:

  • Foreign judgments do not control Cook Islands trustees.
  • Fraudulent transfer claims face a high burden of proof.
  • The filing window is short.
  • Local trustees must follow Cook Islands law, not foreign court orders.

Cost: $5,000–$15,000 setup + $2,000–$5,000/year. This is for people protecting real money, usually $500,000 and up.

US persons: Assets transferred to a Cook Islands trust are still reportable. You must file Form 3520 (annual report of foreign trust transactions) and Form 3520-A (annual information return) with the IRS. Failure to file these forms carries severe penalties, $10,000 minimum per violation, up to 35% of the trust corpus.

Compare the Structures by Function

Corporate structure comparison
StructureJurisdictionPrivacy LevelAnnual CostPrimary Use CaseUS Reporting?
Wyoming LLCWyoming, USHigh (domestic)~$150Domestic operating / holdingSchedule K-1 / 1040
Delaware LLC/CorpDelaware, USMedium$300–$500Startups, equity structuresSchedule K-1 / 1120
Series LLCWY / DE / NVHigh (domestic)~$200Multi-asset compartmentalizationSchedule K-1 / 1040
Anonymous Land TrustIL / most US statesHigh (real estate)~$500Real estate title privacyTrust income reporting
BVI / Seychelles IBCBVI / SeychellesVery High$500–$1,000International holding layerFBAR, Form 5471/8858
Nevis LLCNevis, CaribbeanVery High$1,000–$2,000Lawsuit / judgment protectionFBAR, Form 8858
Panama FoundationPanamaExtremely High$1,000–$2,000Estate planning, asset holdingForm 3520, FBAR
Cook Islands TrustCook IslandsHighest available$2,000–$5,000Bulletproof asset protectionForm 3520, Form 3520-A

Layers Do the Real Work

A single entity helps. A stack helps more. Every layer adds another wall between you and the asset.

Apple's structure (simplified): Apple Inc. (US operating entity) → Apple Sales International (Cork, Ireland, holds non-US sales revenue) → Apple Ireland Holdings Ltd. → held by a Cayman Islands structure. Revenue moves out of the US operating entity into the international stack, where tax treatment changes until funds come home.

An individual's equivalent (simplified):

A
Operating Layer: Wyoming LLC

Your business, freelance work, or investment activity runs through a Wyoming LLC. It signs contracts, holds the bank account, and receives income. Your name stays out of the public registry.

B
Holding Layer: BVI or Seychelles IBC

The Wyoming LLC is owned by a BVI or Seychelles company. That company can also hold other assets, such as brokerage accounts, crypto, or foreign property. A claim against the Wyoming LLC should not reach everything above it.

C
Foundation Layer: Panama Foundation

The BVI company is then held by a Panama foundation. You sit as beneficiary. Public records stay thin, and succession planning is built in.

Result: your name may appear nowhere in a public registry. A creditor now has to fight through Wyoming charging order rules, an offshore company, and then a foundation. Most do not keep going.

This does not protect you from criminal acts. Fraud, tax evasion, and other crimes cut through any structure fast. These tools protect lawful assets from civil plaintiffs, not from criminal prosecution or false tax filings.

Set Up a Wyoming LLC in One Day

For most people, this is the first move. You can do it in a day for under $300.

1
Choose a name

Check name availability with the Wyoming Secretary of State. Pick something that does not point back to you. “Ridgeline Holdings LLC” exposes less than “Hamilton Real Estate LLC.”

2
Hire a Wyoming registered agent

You need a registered agent with a Wyoming address. Expect $50–$100 a year. The public record shows the agent's address, not yours. Options: Northwest Registered Agent, Wyoming Registered Agent LLC, Registered Agents Inc.

3
File Articles of Organization

File online through Wyoming's SOS portal. You need the LLC name, the registered agent, and an organizer. The organizer can be a lawyer or service provider. Fee: $100. Online processing is usually same day.

4
Draft an operating agreement

Wyoming does not require a public operating agreement, but you still need one. For privacy, use manager-managed language, add a nominee manager if needed, and restrict transfers. Keep it in your records. It is not public.

5
Obtain an EIN

Get an EIN from the IRS with Form SS-4. Banks need it. The IRS will require a real responsible party with an SSN, but that stays out of public records.

6
Open a business bank account

Mercury, Relay, or a local Wyoming bank are common picks. You will need the Articles, EIN letter, operating agreement, and personal ID. Banks still collect beneficial ownership data under FinCEN rules. That is internal, not public. Do not mix personal and business funds.

7
Maintain separation, the "corporate veil"

The liability shield dies if you use the LLC like a personal wallet. Do not pay personal bills from the LLC. Record transactions. Keep written resolutions. Keep enough capital in the entity. Neglect is how courts pierce the veil.

UBO Registers Shrink the Offshore Privacy Window

Ultimate Beneficial Ownership registers record the real humans behind entities. They keep spreading:

FBAR and FATCA apply to all US persons. If you hold a financial interest in or signature authority over foreign bank accounts with an aggregate value exceeding $10,000 at any point during the calendar year, you must file FinCEN 114 (FBAR) annually. FATCA (Form 8938) has higher thresholds but applies to foreign financial assets. Failure to file FBAR can trigger large civil and criminal penalties.

The practical point is simple. Offshore structures can hide assets from public view and make civil collection harder. They do not erase your reporting duty to your own tax authority.

Start With the Structure That Fits Your Situation

Recommended starting structure by situation
SituationRecommended Starting StructureWhy
Freelancer / consultantWyoming single-member LLCSeparates personal assets from business liability; name not public; pass-through taxation
Real estate investor (1–5 properties)Wyoming Series LLC + land trust per propertyLiability isolation between properties; name off public deed; single annual filing
Crypto investorWyoming LLC holding crypto accountsBankruptcy remoteness; charging order protection; some privacy from exchange KYCKnow Your Customer rules require users to submit identity information such as passports, selfies, addresses, or phone numbers before accessing a service.Glossary → records (KYC still required at exchange level)
Online business ($100k–$1M revenue)Wyoming LLC (operating) + BVI IBC (holding)International layer allows future expansion; separates IP and brand from operating risk
High-net-worth individual ($1M+)WY LLC → BVI IBC → Panama FoundationFull layered protection; estate planning built in; no public beneficial owner record
At-risk professional (doctor, attorney)Wyoming LLC or Nevis LLC for asset holdingProfessionals face high malpractice exposure; charging order protection makes personal assets unattractive to plaintiff attorneys

Know the Hard Limits

Hard limits on corporate structure protection:
  • Criminal acts. No entity structure protects you from prosecution for fraud, money laundering, tax evasion, or other criminal conduct.
  • Personal guarantees. If you personally guarantee a debt, your personal assets are still exposed.
  • Alter ego / veil piercing. Mix funds, ignore formalities, or undercapitalize the entity and courts can ignore the shield.
  • Fraudulent transfers. Moving assets after a claim appears is not protection. It is evidence.
  • IRS enforcement. Offshore structures do not erase US tax duties. Income still has to be reported.

Get Real Professional Help

Reading about these structures is easy. Setting them up right is not. Bad setup, bad funding, or sloppy records can kill the whole point.

What to look for in an attorney or CPA:

  • An attorney who works specifically in offshore asset protection and international tax, not a generic business lawyer.
  • A CPA who knows FBAR, FATCA, Form 5471, Form 3520, and CFC rules. Many general CPAs do not.
  • Avoid vendors selling “turnkey offshore secrecy” packages. If they tell you not to disclose offshore accounts, leave.
Cost perspective: A solid Wyoming LLC costs under $300 in year one. A domestic stack with a Wyoming LLC, Series LLC, and land trusts can stay under $1,500 in year one and under $500 a year after that. Adding offshore layers often pushes annual costs into the $2,000–$5,000 range. That is still cheap next to one lawsuit or one ugly divorce.

Privacy Is Narrowing, Not Dead

Global policy now pushes toward beneficial ownership transparency. The EU, UK, US, and OECD all want governments to know who owns what. That shifts privacy from “hidden from everyone” to “hidden from the public, disclosed to authorities.”

That still matters. If the public cannot trace your assets, creditors, stalkers, reporters, and competitors have a harder job. If authorities can still see the structure because you reported it correctly, that means you stayed inside the law.

The structures that survive are the lawful ones: disclosed, taxed, maintained, and documented. The ones built for actual concealment were always a liability.

For more on jurisdiction choice and financial privacy law, see our guides on Five Eyes jurisdiction and privacy tools and Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs) and how financial surveillance works. If you are pairing international structures with residency planning, see offshore banking and second residency options for 2026.

Follow the Money

Registered agents, filing fees, and nominee services create a large formation industry. Jurisdictions keep privacy-friendly structures alive because those structures pay them.

$Corporate formation industry economics: jurisdiction revenue flows
Wyoming LLC
~100K+ LLCs/yr · registered agent only in public registry · key agents: CT Corp, Harvard Business Services, RAI
Delaware
$1B+/yr franchise tax revenue to state · statute written to attract corporations · profits from corp-friendly law
BVI
400,000+ companies registered · $15B+ financial services sector revenue · Panama Papers: 11.5M docs leaked 2016
FinCEN CTA 2024
Corporate Transparency Act mandates US beneficial ownership disclosure · enforcement contested in federal courts as of 2025

Frequently Asked Questions

Is using an LLC or offshore structure legal?

Yes, when you use it lawfully. LLCs, holding companies, foundations, and trusts are legal tools for privacy and asset protection. The line is simple: report income and foreign accounts correctly. Legal tax planning is allowed. Hiding income or lying on returns is tax evasion, and it is a crime.

What is the most private LLC in the United States?

Wyoming. Wyoming does not publicly list members or managers, only the registered agent. The annual fee is $100. It also has strong charging order protection. New Mexico is close behind and skips the annual report.

Do I still owe US taxes if I use offshore structures?

Yes. US citizens and green card holders owe tax on worldwide income no matter where it is earned or held. Foreign accounts can also trigger FBAR and FATCA filings. Offshore structures may defer or reshape tax in some cases, but they do not erase US tax duties. Use a qualified tax attorney or CPA.

What is a Series LLC used for?

A Series LLC splits assets into separate internal series inside one parent LLC. Each series can hold a different asset, such as a rental property, with liability separation from the others. It is popular with real estate investors who want less cross-liability without forming a new LLC for every asset.