
The US LLC enjoys a notorious reputation in digital nomad and online entrepreneur circles: simple structure, little to no mandatory accounting in the United States, "made in USA" image. But behind this myth lies a far more nuanced tax reality, even frankly unfavorable depending on your situation. This article debunks the misconceptions, explains why the LLC can become a trap for the majority of non-residents, and answers the question you're interested in: if you are a tax resident in Paraguay, is it worthwhile to create one?
1. The "Non-Resident" LLC: What Are We Really Talking About?
When we talk about LLCs for non-residents, we're referring to a specific configuration: a US Limited Liability Company owned 100% by one or more foreigners (non-Americans, non-US residents), with no commercial activity on US soil, no employees in the USA, and no physical office per se.
In this scenario, the IRS (US tax authority) classifies the single-member LLC by default as a disregarded entity, literally an "ignored" entity, meaning a fiscally transparent structure. This point is absolutely fundamental: it changes everything in the analysis.
Fiscal Transparency: A Double-Edged Sword
In contrast to a fiscally "opaque" company, transparency means that the LLC is not taxed where its structure is geographically and legally incorporated: its income flows directly to its members, who declare it individually where they have their personal tax domicile. In the United States, for a US resident, this is a welcome simplicity. But for a foreigner living outside the USA, this transparency produces a radically different effect depending on the country where they reside.
⚠️ What many haven't understood: the LLC doesn't "protect" its income from your country of residence. Fiscally, the vast majority of countries in the world see through it and tax its members or UBO (Ultimate Beneficial Owner) as if you had received this income directly in your own name.
2. In a Worldwide Taxation Country: The LLC Is Almost Always a Bad Idea
France, Belgium, Germany, Canada, Australia, and Spain all apply the principle of worldwide taxation: tax residents of these countries are taxed on all their income, regardless of its geographic origin.
In this context, creating a US LLC amounts to adding an administrative layer without any tax advantage. Here's why.
2.1 The Disregarded Entity: No Shield Effect
Since your country of tax residence "looks through" the LLC, the income it generates is considered as directly received by you, the member(s). Again, contrary to the false discourse of certain amateur blogs that copy each other and spread the fallacious rumor, it doesn't matter whether the money stays in the LLC's bank account and is not repatriated to your tax domicile country: as long as you are the beneficial owner, your local tax administration can tax it.
Result: you pay as much tax as if you were operating as a sole proprietor or through a local company, but with the additional administrative burden of managing a US entity.
2.2 A Costly Administrative Overhead
Contrary to what you read everywhere, the non-resident LLC is not exempt from all obligations in the United States. The foreign owner must file Form 5472 annually with the IRS (declaration of transactions between the LLC and its foreign owner), under penalty of a $25,000 fine per missing or incorrect return. They must also file the attached pro forma Form 1120. These obligations exist even if the LLC generated no income.
So you pay a US accountant (typically $300 to $1,500 per year), a registered agent (about $150 to $300 per year), state renewal fees, and potentially a tax attorney, all for a structure that doesn't save you any tax in your country of residence.
2.3 High Risk of Tax Audit
European tax administrations are perfectly familiar with this scheme. France, in particular, has developed detailed administrative doctrine on foreign transparent entities: the French tax authority retains taxation of the French member as long as they control the LLC. Using an LLC to "house" income without declaring it in France constitutes pure and simple tax fraud.
🛨 The concrete case: a French freelancer invoices their clients through a Delaware LLC. They think they don't have to declare this income in France as long as they don't pay themselves a salary. This is false: the disregarded entity makes the LLC's income immediately taxable in France, distributions or not. This scheme is one of the most frequently audited by the national directorate of tax investigations (DNEF).
3. In a Territorial Taxation Country: Better, But Not Without Risks
Territorial taxation countries (Panama, Georgia, Malaysia, United Arab Emirates, and of course Paraguay) in principle only tax locally sourced income. Income generated abroad by their residents is in principle exempt. In this context, the US LLC seems at first glance useless: if your foreign income is already exempt, why add a US structure?
The answer is nuanced. While the LLC is less dangerous in this context, it doesn't solve all problems and creates new ones.
3.1 The LLC Doesn't Solve the Income Source Problem
In a territorial taxation country, the key question is not "who receives the income" but "where is the income generated." If you're a freelancer, digital nomad, consultant based in Paraguay and you sell services to Western clients through an LLC, your income may be considered locally sourced by Paraguayan authorities (if you work from Paraguay), in which case the LLC changes nothing about your tax situation.
Worse, if your LLC only has clients from a single country like France for example, the local tax authority can easily consider that your setup is pure tax evasion and will retain a tax nexus against you. In short, guaranteed tax audit! And don't imagine that distance and the international nature of your setup protects you—quite the contrary, international agreements (OECD/CRS automatic financial and tax data exchange and FATCA) and modern AI tools (Fiat and crypto financial engineering) will catch up with you sooner or later, often starting with an audit from one of your clients (invoices, VAT, etc.).
Moreover, it's worth noting that Paraguay has very few bilateral tax treaties, which exposes you even more to double taxation. Finally on this last point, just because Paraguay is not CRS (Common Reporting Standard) nor a full OECD member doesn't mean it doesn't exchange administrative, financial, and tax data with Western countries (bilateral tax agreement with Spain since 2025, Multilateral Agreement: OECD/Council of Europe Convention on Tax Assistance since 2021, Institutional Agreement: EU-Paraguay Cooperation since 1992 and similar MERCOSUR arrangements).
3.2 The Risk of US Tax Nexus
This is often the most underestimated point. The LLC being a US entity, it can involuntarily create a tax nexus in the United States if certain conditions are met, jurisprudence included! Billing to a US address, physical presence on US soil, employing US employees, storing goods in the United States, exceeding state revenue thresholds (economic nexus). This nexus can generate US taxation (federal and/or state) that you weren't counting on and of course severe penalties.
3.3 The Risk of Permanent Establishment in Your Country of Residence
Even in a territorial taxation country, if you actively manage your LLC from your place of residence (making operational decisions, signing contracts, communicating with clients from your home), local authorities may consider that your LLC has a permanent establishment in their country. It then becomes locally taxable, exactly like a local company.
📌 The key notion: operational control. If you are the sole member, the sole manager, and you conduct all business from your country of residence, your LLC has its "place of effective management" where you are. This criterion alone is sufficient in many countries to establish local taxation.
4. Summary: The LLC for Non-Residents According to Your Situation
| Your Situation | LLC Relevant? | Main Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Resident of a worldwide taxation country (France, Belgium, Canada, etc.) | ❌ No. Almost never. | Income taxed locally + IRS penalties + tax fraud risk |
| Resident of a territorial taxation country, passive income (dividends, SaaS, affiliate, etc.) | ⚠️ Possible, under conditions | State nexus, economic substance to prove |
| Freelance / consultant resident in Paraguay, foreign clients | ✔ Yes, if properly structured | Permanent establishment, operational control, economic substance |
| Digital nomad without stable tax residence | ⚠️ Risky. Priority: establish your tax residence first | Tax residence in multiple countries simultaneously, double taxation |
5. LLC and Tax Residence in Paraguay: The Right Question
Paraguay is one of the last countries in the world to offer such an attractive combination: strict territorial taxation, low income tax (10% on Paraguayan-sourced income only), accessible permanent residence procedure, and very low minimum presence requirements. This is why many freelancers, infopreneurs, consultants, and online entrepreneurs choose to establish their tax residence there.
But then: should you create a US LLC when you are a tax resident in Paraguay?
Short answer: in some cases yes, provided the structure is properly set up by a legal and financial professional and serves a real purpose.
5.1 When the LLC Can Make Sense in Paraguay
There are situations where a US LLC logically complements Paraguayan tax residence, notably:
- Commercial credibility: some international clients, especially American ones, prefer to contract with a US entity. The LLC opens doors that neither a Paraguayan company nor your personal name will easily open.
- Access to online payments: Stripe, Payoneer, PayPal Business, and other US platforms are more easily accessible through an LLC. From Paraguay, access to these tools can prove complicated without a US entity.
- US-sourced income to structure: if your business generates income specifically from the US market and a local legal presence is necessary.
- Access to US banking and fintech services: Mercury, Relay, Wise Business, etc., powerful tools for managing international Fiat and Crypto flows at lower cost. Incidentally, raising debt is often easier and more advantageous in the USA.
5.2 Non-Negotiable Conditions to Avoid Traps
Creating an LLC when you're a resident in Paraguay is not automatically problematic. It's how it's managed that makes all the difference. Three concepts are at the heart of the analysis.
a) Economic Substance
An LLC without real economic substance is an empty shell. For it to be recognized as an autonomous entity (and not as a "front name" for your personal activities), it must present tangible elements of economic reality: dedicated business/corporate bank account, contracts in its name, proper invoicing, strict separation between the LLC's finances and your personal assets.
An LLC where money flows in and out directly to the member's personal account, without distinction or accounting treatment, has no substance. It will not be recognized as a distinct entity by anyone.
b) Operational Control
This is the most delicate criterion. If you're in Asunción and you sign all contracts, respond to clients, make all strategic and operational decisions from your apartment, the "place of effective management" of your LLC is in Paraguay, not in the United States.
The criterion of place of effective management is decisive for qualifying the tax location of an LLC. When strategic and operational decisions are made from Paraguay, the place of management is deemed to be there. Three scenarios must be distinguished:
1. Requalification as a Paraguayan resident company
The LLC is considered a local company.
It is subject to Paraguayan taxation on its Paraguayan-sourced income.
2. Maintaining US transparent entity status (favorable but conditional interpretation)
The LLC retains its fiscal transparency in the United States.
For a Paraguayan tax resident, its foreign-sourced income may be exempt.
This qualification requires cumulatively:
- that tax residence in Paraguay be established,
- that income comes exclusively from abroad,
- that the company has real economic substance outside Paraguay,
- and that there is no permanent establishment in Paraguay.
Otherwise, the tax administration could requalify and tax the income locally.
3. High-risk tax nomadism
The Paraguayan resident lacks sufficient anchoring (short stays, absence of economic substance) and creates tax nexuses with each trip abroad.
The US transparent LLC is not a robust structure.
The taxpayer faces legal and tax uncertainty, lacking effective tax residence and opposable substance.
c) Permanent Establishment
The notion of permanent establishment (PE) is defined in international tax treaties and national legislations. In essence: if a foreign entity has a fixed place of business in a country, or if a dependent agent concludes contracts there on its behalf, it may be subject to tax in that country.
Paraguay has signed few tax treaties. But its national legislation still provides for provisions on Paraguayan-sourced income. An LLC whose manager resides in Paraguay, manages Paraguayan clients from Paraguay, generates Paraguayan-sourced income, taxable accordingly.
✅ The right approach: if you are a resident in Paraguay, you use the LLC to invoice foreign clients for dematerialized services, you maintain rigorous separation between your personal finances and those of the LLC, and you correctly declare as a non-resident in the United States (Forms 5472 and 1120 pro forma), the structure can function legally and effectively in the absence of tax nexuses.
6. Before Creating Your LLC: The Questions Checklist
Before you dive in, honestly ask yourself these questions:
- Do I have a clearly established and defensible tax residence? An LLC doesn't create tax residence. You must have it, first and foremost.
- Does my country of residence tax worldwide income or only local income? If you're still a tax resident of Brazil, France, Belgium, Spain, Argentina, Chile, Peru, or Canada, stop there.
- Do I have a concrete objective that the LLC solves better than another structure? Access to Stripe, US clients, bank account: list the specific reasons.
- Am I ready to maintain rigorous accounting and file Forms 5472 and 1120 pro forma each year? Non-optional for LLCs with foreign members.
- Will my LLC have real substance? Proper bank account, contracts in its name, total separation from your personal assets.
- Have I consulted a tax specialist who knows both US taxation and that of my country of residence? An expert in one or the other is not enough.
7. Beware of Fallacious Narratives: Influencers, Turnkey Setup Sellers, and Other Merchants of Tax Dreams
It would be incomplete to talk about LLC traps without addressing what fuels their proliferation: an entire ecosystem of misleading content and, in the most serious cases, unscrupulous service providers selling unsuitable tax structures to entrepreneurs who trust them.
7.1 The Problem of Content Creators Without Tax Expertise
YouTube, TikTok, Instagram: videos on "LLC to avoid taxes" number in the thousands. Their authors (often digital nomads who have themselves created an LLC) disseminate their personal experience as if it constituted universal tax advice applicable to all. This is not the case!
These creators are not necessarily in bad faith: they simply don't know what they don't know (everyone has their trade: the only talent of content creators is creating content, which doesn't make them business law attorneys). They generally ignore business law (which is nevertheless the foundation for creating a company), your country of origin's tax residence rules, bilateral tax treaties, the notion of permanent establishment, CFC (Controlled Foreign Corporation) law, or even IRS declaratory obligations for foreign owners. Their LLC may work for them (often in the "so far so good" category), in their specific situation, with their specific country of residence, but it will be catastrophic for you.
The short format (a ten-minute video, an Instagram post, a Twitter thread) is structurally incapable of accounting for the complexity of an international tax situation. The apparent simplicity of the message ("create an LLC, no more taxes") is inversely proportional to its danger.
⚠️ Golden rule: if your tax strategy fits in less than five minutes of video, it is almost certainly incomplete. Serious international tax planning takes hours of analysis, involves deep knowledge of your personal situation, and requires the intervention of qualified professionals in at least two jurisdictions.
7.2 Turnkey Setup Sellers: A Business Model Built on Your Ignorance
Even more problematic are service providers who sell "international setups" at all costs: LLC + Mercury account + nomad residence, all wrapped in a nice presentation and billed for several hundred or thousands of euros. The problem isn't the price: it's that these setups are standardized, applied to all their clients without distinction of nationality, wealth situation, type of activity, or country of origin.
Yet international taxation is not a product that can be sold in series. A French person doesn't have the same situation as a Belgian, who doesn't have the same as a Canadian or a Swiss. A SaaS freelancer doesn't have the same tax exposure as a strategy consultant, who doesn't have the same as an e-commerce merchant with physical inventory subject to VAT and customs duties. Selling the same setup to everyone is selling a one-size-fits-all suit: it may fit some, but it will be catastrophic for the majority.
Regarding price, these package solutions have nothing magical and have incompressible structural costs starting from about $1,000 to $2,500 the first year. Beware of packages displayed well below this price that would necessarily be incomplete or unsuitable.
7.3 "No Misuse of Corporate Assets" and Credit Card Usage: 2 Myths That Can Cost You Dearly
Among the arguments most often advanced to sell an LLC, there are two that recur in influencers' and setup sellers' content: the absence of misuse of corporate assets and total freedom to use the company's credit card. These two claims are either false or truncated to a point that makes them dangerous.
a) Misuse of Corporate Assets: True for France and Most Latin Countries, Not a License to Do Anything
Misuse of corporate assets (ABS) is a French criminal offense defined in articles L.241-3 and L.242-6 of the Commercial Code. It applies specifically to directors of SARL and SA who use the company's assets or credit in their personal interest, contrary to the company's interest. Influencers are right on one point: this specific criminal qualification doesn't apply to a US LLC, which is not subject to the French Commercial Code.
But that's where the truth ends. What they systematically fail to mention is that if you are a tax resident in a worldwide taxation country and you use an LLC to pay personal expenses by passing them off as professional expenses, you are still committing tax fraud in your country of residence, simply under a different qualification: fictitious expenses, understatement of taxable base, income concealment. The absence of the ABS label doesn't mean the absence of criminal risk. It simply means the applicable criminal code is different.
b) Commingling: What US Law Itself Prohibits
The second myth is even more concrete: "with an LLC, you use the company's credit card for everything, without constraint." This discourse is not only fiscally irresponsible, it is also illegal in the United States itself. US law imposes strict separation between the member's personal finances and those of the LLC. Mixing funds between the two (called commingling of funds) is a serious violation of LLC governance rules.
The consequences are twofold. First, commingling destroys the LLC's legal protection: it's the theory of piercing the corporate veil: if a court determines that the LLC is merely an alter ego of its owner, it can ignore the liability limit and make you personally responsible for the company's debts and obligations on your personal assets. Second, commingling constitutes a major accounting anomaly, which can trigger an IRS audit and significantly complicate your tax returns, both in the United States and in your country of residence.
🚨 What this means concretely: using your LLC's credit card to pay your rent, groceries, vacations, or Netflix subscription without rigorous professional justification is (1) potentially illegal in the United States (commingling), (2) fiscally requalifiable in your country of residence as disguised income, and (3) likely to destroy the limited liability protection that was one of the LLC's selling points. In other words, you paid for protection that no longer exists and you built the foundations of your professional assets on sand.
7.4 Total Absence of Follow-Up: The Real Scandal
The most dangerous characteristic of these offers: they stop at creation. You're delivered an LLC, an EIN, sometimes a bank account, and that's it. No follow-up, no personalized advice, no support when your situation evolves (you return to your home country, you change activities, you exceed a revenue threshold, new regulations come into force) and often no accountant so no accounting done or filed. Above all, no customer service when the tax audit arrives.
And the tax audit always arrives when you make significant revenue that brings you from the shadows to the light. European tax administrations (DGFiP in France, SPF Finances in Belgium, CRA in Canada) have considerably strengthened their detection capabilities since 2018, notably through automatic bank data exchange (CRS/OECD standard) and access to beneficial owner registers (UBO). Hiding income behind a US LLC is much riskier today than 10 years ago. The setup seller will be unreachable.
🚨 Tax audit: who pays the price? You, and you alone. In tax law, liability rests with the taxpayer. "A service provider advised me" is not an acceptable defense before a tax administration. Tax assessments, penalties (up to 80% in case of fraudulent maneuvers in France), late interest, and possibly criminal prosecution: all of this rests on you.
7.5 How to Identify and Avoid Them
Some alarm signals to recognize immediately:
- "Regardless of your country, it works for everyone": false, completely false. International taxation is specific to each situation.
- Absence of questions about your personal situation before selling you anything: a serious advisor spends time understanding you before recommending anything.
- Promise of "zero tax legally" without in-depth analysis: legitimate tax optimization exists, but it results from meticulous structuring, not a miracle recipe.
- No verifiable professional identity (bar number, registration with accounting board, business registration, etc.): tax and legal advice are regulated professions in most countries. Demand verifiable references.
- No post-creation follow-up offered, no mention of annual obligations: creating the LLC is just the beginning. Form 5472 & 1120, registered agent, annual renewal, tax returns in both countries: a service provider who doesn't mention this isn't preparing you for reality.
The good news: there are serious, transparent professionals about their limitations, who ask the right questions before recommending anything, who work long-term, and who assume a duty of counsel on your entire situation (not just on creating a structure). They are the only ones you should work with.
7.6 International Financial Stack: What Discount Solutions Can't Give You
There remains a subject that setup sellers carefully avoid discussing: once your LLC is created, how are you actually going to collect and manage your international financial flows legally, stably, and sustainably? This is where the vast majority of discount setups collapse, often a few weeks after creation.
Building an international financial stack that actually works long-term (and especially that is consistent with your personal tax domicile) requires rare cross-expertise: international tax law, banking compliance (KYC/AML), US corporate law, CPA accounting, and intimate knowledge of each financial player's operational constraints. A financial stack that doesn't take into account your tax residence is a stack that will expose you to blockages, account freezes, justification requests, and potentially automatic reports to tax authorities.
The Wise Business Myth (and Consorts)
The most frequently proposed solution in discount packages: a Wise Business account linked to the LLC. Wise is an excellent tool in certain contexts, but it is structurally inadequate as the backbone of a serious international professional stack, and for specific reasons that setup sellers never mention.
Wise is not a bank in the traditional sense: it's a British electronic money institution (EMI), subject to strict AML (anti-money laundering) compliance obligations but with limited investigative capabilities. As soon as flows become significant, the ownership structure appears complex, or the beneficial owner's country of residence generates regulatory friction (and Paraguay does), the Wise Business account almost systematically ends up frozen, with unlocking delays that can stretch over weeks or even months, completely or permanently paralyzing your business.
⚠️ The typical scenario: you paid for your setup package, received your LLC, your EIN, and your Wise account. Everything seems to work. Three weeks later, a client transfer exceeds a detection threshold, Wise triggers a verification procedure and freezes your account. Curiously, your setup seller is unreachable. You can no longer collect, you can no longer pay your suppliers. The "turnkey solution" just cost you far more than it saved you.
What a Real Professional International Financial Stack Contains
A truly operational setup is custom-built. It is of course consistent with your Paraguayan tax residence, requires a series of elements that only real professionals can properly assemble for you:
- Fast EIN for non-resident: obtained without US social security number, by mail or expedited procedure through an authorized local representative. Essential for everything else.
- ITIN (Individual Taxpayer Identification Number): individual tax identification number for foreigners, necessary to access certain US banking services, establish credit history, and sign certain types of contracts.
- Big Five US bank account: Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Citi, or PNC. An account in a top-tier bank confers maximum commercial credibility, facilitates relationships with US clients, and offers stability that EMIs and fintechs cannot guarantee. Its opening as a non-resident is difficult but possible with the right local contacts and documents.
- Multiple complementary crypto and fiat business accounts: a resilient stack never relies on a single account. It combines stabilized Fiat solutions (Mercury, Relay) and secure crypto-fiat gateways to reduce and optimize financial costs of international transfers (USDC and USDT stablecoins enable fast and very economical transfers), each chosen based on its compliance profile and AML thresholds, with calculable and documentable redundancy. Moreover, it is highly advisable to have a multi-currency solution (euro, Canadian dollar, pound, etc.) to avoid being held hostage to SWIFT hell delays and exorbitant fees and stuck in the restrictive USD universe alone (whose global hegemony is increasingly questioned in 2026).
- MOR (Merchant of Record) and PSP (Payment Service Provider): for e-commerce or SaaS activities, choosing the right MOR (Paddle, etc.) and the right PSP (Stripe, etc.) must be calibrated both to your legal structure, your country of residence, and the type of income generated. A bad choice here creates tax nexus problems and regulatory incompatibilities.
- Quality commercial address (non-CMRA): US banks and many PSPs automatically reject addresses registered with CMRA (Commercial Mail Receiving Agencies, like UPS Store or Mailboxes Etc.), the very ones that discount packages offer where hundreds and sometimes thousands of LLCs share the same address. Your LLC needs a legitimate commercial address (certified non-CMRA virtual office address or, better, coworking space with actual lease) to pass KYC checks of serious banking and financial institutions.
- Lease agreement and adequate virtual office: a commercial lease agreement (even for a virtual office) is often required when opening a business bank account in the United States. It also contributes to establishing the LLC's economic substance, one of the fundamental criteria seen earlier. This is not an administrative detail: it's an essential piece of the puzzle.
- Custom operating agreement: the internal document governing your LLC's operation is also one of the most neglected elements in discount packages. A generic operating agreement downloaded online is worthless when it comes to demonstrating your LLC's economic substance, defining distribution terms, protecting your rights as a foreign member, or clarifying tax treatment of contributions and withdrawals. A custom-drafted operating agreement, by an attorney knowing both US law and your personal tax situation, is a centerpiece of any serious setup: it can make the difference between an LLC recognized as a legitimate entity and an empty shell overturned at the first audit. And the cherry on top, this document can be the key to give you access to bank leverage and raise debt.
- A real US CPA accountant with a valid "attest" license (many of them on famous freelance platforms are imposters or with expired licenses) familiar with non-resident taxation: a Certified Public Accountant specialized in non-resident taxation (not a generalist who "also does LLCs") to manage your Forms 5472, Form 1120 pro forma, and ensure ongoing IRS compliance. They also become your shield in case of audit. This essential professional is valuable and should preferably be found in your LLC's incorporation state to better manage federal and state aspects of your LLC's incorporation state. It's also often thanks to them that you can develop your business and give it an offshore dimension to structure yourself internationally (holding, trust, foundation, letters of recommendation, etc.).
✅ The absolute rule: each component of your financial stack must be chosen knowing exactly where you are a tax resident, what type of income you generate, which thresholds will trigger verifications, and how each account interacts with the others in terms of declaratory obligations. A setup that ignores one of these parameters is not a complete setup, it's a time bomb.
In Conclusion
The US LLC is an excellent tool, for Americans, for certain non-residents in specific situations, and sometimes for residents of territorial taxation countries who have good operational reasons to use it. But it is far from the universal panacea that social media influencers make it out to be.
For a tax resident in a worldwide taxation country, it is almost always a bad idea: it doesn't protect your income, it adds costly obligations, and it increases your audit risks.
For a tax resident in Paraguay (territorialist country that mostly ignores foreign structures that only exist once they register in Paraguay), it can make sense in certain specific cases (access to US payments, international commercial credibility, fintech infrastructure), provided it's properly set up by a professional whose job it is, with rigor and having well integrated the notions of economic substance, operational control, and permanent establishment.
The first step always remains the same: consolidate your tax residence. The LLC is just one tool among others, neither a magic wand nor a guarantee of tax optimization.
💬 Creating a US LLC from Paraguay requires precise analysis of your tax residence, your business, and international compliance rules. Poor structuring can lead to significant tax risks.
If you are considering using an LLC in your international strategy, our team of specialized Paraguayan lawyers will analyze your situation and support you in setting up a suitable, optimized, and compliant structure.
Book a free discovery meeting for a personalized assessment.
This article is written for informational purposes and does not constitute tax or legal advice. Consult a qualified professional before making any decision.