Quick Answer
Non-US freelancers and solo consultants who set up US LLCs for credibility often discover that the filing obligations outweigh the benefits. A US LLC owned by a non-resident triggers mandatory IRS filings (Form 5472, pro forma Form 1120), a $25,000 penalty for missed filings, and ongoing registered agent and franchise tax costs. Singapore offers simpler compliance, stronger international perception outside North America, and global banking access. Savvy Platform helps freelancers and solo consultants incorporate in Singapore through SavvyStart, with nominee director, company secretary and compliance support included.
The US LLC Trap for Non-Resident Freelancers
The most common mistake non-US freelancers make is forming a US LLC because it feels credible. Thousands of blog posts recommend Wyoming or Delaware LLCs as the default structure for digital nomads and international consultants. What those guides rarely mention is the compliance cost.
What a non-resident US LLC actually requires
|
Obligation |
Detail |
Cost |
|
Form 5472 + pro forma Form 1120 |
Mandatory annual IRS filing for foreign-owned US entities |
US$500-1,500 (CPA fees) |
|
Penalty for missed Form 5472 |
Per foreign owner, per year |
US$25,000 |
|
Delaware franchise tax (LLC) |
Flat annual fee |
US$300 |
|
Wyoming annual report (LLC) |
Annual filing |
US$60 |
|
Registered agent |
Required in the state of incorporation |
US$100-300/year |
|
US CPA engagement |
Required for IRS filings |
US$1,000-3,000/year |
|
EIN application |
One-time, but it can take weeks for non-residents |
Free (time cost) |
|
State income tax returns |
Required if the LLC has nexus in states beyond the state of incorporation |
US$500-2,000 per state |
A solo consultant with a Wyoming LLC billing $100,000 per year spends US$2,000 to US$5,000 annually just on compliance. The LLC generates zero tax benefit if the consultant has no US-source income, because single-member LLCs owned by non-residents are treated as disregarded entities for US tax purposes. The income passes through to the owner and is taxed in their country of residence.
The consultant pays compliance costs to the US for the privilege of having a US address on their invoices. That is the trap.
The $25,000 penalty most freelancers do not know about
Form 5472 requires foreign-owned US entities to report "reportable transactions" with related parties. For a solo consultant, this includes capital contributions, loans from the owner, and payments between the owner and the LLC. Missing this filing triggers an automatic US$25,000 penalty per owner per year.
Many freelancers discover this obligation only after receiving an IRS notice. By then, multiple years of penalties may have accumulated.
What Singapore Requires Instead
|
Obligation |
Detail |
Cost |
|
ACRA annual return |
One filing per year |
S$60 |
|
Corporate tax return (Form C-S) |
Simplified form for companies under S$5M revenue |
S$500-1,500 (accounting fees) |
|
Company secretary |
Mandatory, handles all statutory admin |
S$300-800/year |
|
Nominee director |
Required for foreign-owned companies |
S$1,450-3,000/year |
|
Registered address |
Provided by CSP |
S$200-500/year |
|
GST registration |
Only required above S$1M turnover |
Not applicable for most solo consultants |
|
Total annual compliance |
S$2,500-5,500 |
No equivalent of Form 5472. No $25,000 penalty risk. No registered agent in a US state. No US CPA required. One regulator (ACRA), one tax authority (IRAS), one annual filing.
The Tax Comparison for Solo Consultants
|
Tax factor |
US LLC (non-resident owner) |
Singapore Pte Ltd |
|
Corporate tax on profit |
Pass-through to owner (taxed in home country) |
17% (effective 4.25-8.5% for startups) |
|
US filing obligations |
Form 5472, pro forma 1120, potentially state returns |
None |
|
Dividend tax |
N/A (pass-through) |
0% |
|
Capital gains on sale |
Depends on home country |
0% |
|
GST/Sales tax |
Potentially multi-state if US customers trigger nexus |
9% above S$1M turnover (most consultants exempt) |
|
Tax benefit of US LLC |
None if no US-source income |
Startup exemptions reduce the effective rate to 4.25-8.5% |
For a non-US consultant earning $150,000 with no US-source income, the US LLC provides zero tax advantage. The income is taxed in the consultant's home country regardless. The LLC only adds US compliance costs.
A Singapore Pte Ltd, by contrast, creates a separate taxable entity. Profit retained in the company is taxed at Singapore's startup rates (effective 4.25-8.5% on the first S$200,000). Dividends paid to the founder are tax-free in Singapore.
International Perception and Client Credibility
The brief for this article targets a real issue: freelancers set up US LLCs because they believe "Inc." or "LLC" on an invoice carries credibility. This is true for US clients. It is less true everywhere else.
|
Market |
Perception of US LLC |
Perception of Singapore Pte Ltd |
|
United States |
Familiar, credible |
Less familiar, but accepted |
|
Europe (UK, EU) |
Recognised but not preferred for contracts |
Familiar (common law), strong credibility |
|
Asia-Pacific |
Recognised |
Strong credibility, regional business hub |
|
Middle East |
Recognised |
Strong credibility, neutral jurisdiction |
|
Latin America |
Recognised |
Growing recognition |
|
Global enterprise clients |
Standard for US-based vendors |
Standard for Asia-Pacific and international vendors |
For consultants working with clients outside North America, a Singapore Pte Ltd carries equal or stronger credibility. Singapore is ranked #1 for economic freedom, has AAA sovereign credit ratings, and operates under English common law. Contracts governed by Singapore law are familiar to legal teams globally.
For consultants working exclusively with US clients, a US entity still makes sense. For everyone else, the perceived credibility of a US LLC does not justify the compliance overhead.
Global Banking Access
Banking is a practical differentiator for consultants who bill clients internationally.
US banking as a non-resident
Opening a US business bank account as a non-resident is difficult. Most traditional banks (Chase, Bank of America) require an in-person visit or a registered agent workaround. Digital options (Mercury, Relay) have simplified this but may still require US tax documentation.
Once opened, a US account is primarily USD-denominated. Multi-currency support is limited. International wire transfers work but involve correspondent bank fees.
Singapore banking
Singapore banks (DBS, OCBC, UOB) offer multi-currency corporate accounts as standard. Account opening takes one to three weeks for properly prepared applications. Digital alternatives (Aspire, Wise Business, Airwallex) offer faster onboarding with full multi-currency support.
|
Banking factor |
US LLC |
Singapore Pte Ltd |
|
Account opening speed |
Weeks, often requires in-person or workaround |
1-3 weeks, remote possible with CSP support |
|
Multi-currency |
Limited |
Standard |
|
Stripe integration |
Full |
Full |
|
PayPal business |
Full |
Full |
|
Wise Business integration |
Full |
Full |
|
International wire cost |
Moderate (correspondent fees) |
Competitive (deep global network) |
|
FBAR/FATCA trigger |
Possible if founder triggers US tax residency |
None for non-US persons |
For a consultant billing clients in USD, EUR, GBP and SGD, Singapore's multi-currency banking is a practical advantage.
No Physical Presence Required
A common concern for consultants: "Do I need to live in Singapore to run a Singapore company?"
No. A nominee director from a registered CSP handles the resident director requirement. The consultant can operate from London, Berlin, Dubai, Bali or anywhere else. The company exists in Singapore for corporate, banking and compliance purposes. The consultant does not need to relocate.
|
Requirement |
Singapore |
US |
|
Physical office |
No (registered address sufficient) |
No (virtual address or registered agent) |
|
Must live in jurisdiction |
No (nominee director) |
No |
|
In-person bank visit |
Often not required with CSP support |
Often required for traditional banks |
|
Remote management |
Fully supported |
Fully supported |
Both jurisdictions allow remote operation. Singapore's nominee director structure is more straightforward than the US registered agent requirement because it solves both the local presence requirement and the director obligation in one step.
Admin Burden: Singapore vs US
For a solo consultant, admin time matters as much as cost.
|
Admin task |
Singapore |
US LLC |
|
Annual filings |
1 (ACRA return) |
2-3 minimum (Form 5472 + state filing + franchise tax) |
|
Tax returns |
1 (Form C-S, simplified) |
1-3+ (federal + potentially state returns) |
|
Who handles statutory admin |
Company secretary (included) |
Founder or CPA |
|
Sales tax monitoring |
Not applicable below S$1M |
Required if US clients trigger nexus |
|
Audit requirement |
None below S$10M revenue |
None, but CPA-grade records needed for IRS |
|
Penalty risk for missed filing |
S$300 late fee |
US$25,000 (Form 5472) |
The admin burden in Singapore is handled almost entirely by the company secretary. In the US, the founder must actively manage IRS filings or pay a CPA to do so, with $25,000 penalty risk if anything is missed.
When a US LLC Still Makes Sense for Consultants
A US LLC is the right choice when:
- The consultant's clients are exclusively US-based and prefer a US vendor
- The consultant plans to relocate to the US
- The consultant is a US tax resident (where LLC pass-through treatment is beneficial)
- The consultant needs a US-based contract vehicle for government or enterprise work
When Singapore Is the Better Choice
Singapore is the stronger option for consultants who:
- Bill clients across multiple countries and currencies
- Want to avoid the Form 5472 / $25,000 penalty risk
- Value international credibility outside North America
- Need multi-currency banking as a default
- Prefer a single filing with one regulator
- Want the option to retain profit in the company at low tax rates
- Do not need a US address for client perception
How Savvy Platform Helps Freelancers and Consultants
Savvy Platform's SavvyStart is designed for solo founders and service-based businesses.
Savvy Platform includes:
- Company incorporation for a flat fee
- Nominee director included (no separate charge)
- Company secretary and registered address
- Bank account setup with multi-currency support
- Employment Pass assistance if the consultant relocates
- Ongoing compliance and annual filing management
- Nominee director removable once the consultant obtains an EP
For consultants who want a professional corporate base without managing US IRS filings, Savvy Platform makes Singapore simple and fully managed.
Conclusion
Non-US freelancers and solo consultants who set up US LLCs for credibility often pay US$2,000 to US$5,000 per year in compliance for zero tax benefit. A missed Form 5472 filing triggers a $25,000 penalty. Singapore offers the same international credibility, simpler compliance, global banking access and the option to retain profit at startup tax rates. For consultants working outside North America, Singapore through Savvy Platform is the more efficient choice.
FAQ
What is Form 5472 and does it apply to my US LLC?
Form 5472 is a mandatory IRS filing for US entities that are 25%+ foreign-owned. It applies to all foreign-owned LLCs, even with zero revenue. The penalty for missing it is $25,000 per owner per year.
Does a US LLC give me a tax advantage as a non-resident?
Generally no. A single-member LLC owned by a non-resident is a disregarded entity for US tax purposes. The income passes through and is taxed in your home country. The LLC adds US compliance costs without a tax benefit.
Is a Singapore Pte Ltd credible with international clients?
Yes. Singapore is ranked #1 for economic freedom, has AAA sovereign credit ratings, and operates under English common law. Contracts governed by Singapore law are standard in international business.
Do I need to live in Singapore to run a Singapore company?
No. A nominee director handles the resident director requirement. The company can be managed entirely remotely from anywhere in the world.
How much does Singapore compliance cost for a solo consultant?
Total annual costs are approximately S$2,500 to S$5,500, including company secretary, nominee director, registered address, ACRA filing and accounting.
Can I bill US clients from a Singapore company?
Yes. A Singapore Pte Ltd can invoice US clients in USD, accept payments via Stripe, PayPal or wire transfer, and operate without a US entity unless economic nexus is triggered.
What is the penalty risk difference?
Singapore: S$300 late filing fee. US: $25,000 per missed Form 5472, $10,000 per missed FBAR, plus state penalties. The risk profile is fundamentally different.
Does Savvy Platform include nominee director for consultants?
Yes. SavvyStart includes nominee director in the base package. The nominee director can be removed once the consultant obtains an Employment Pass, reducing annual costs further.