GeoBusinessIQGeoBusinessIQ

Running a remote business from United States

United States remote-business notes — formation, payments, banking, and compliance overhead for fully remote operations.

Last updated:

Country notes

The United States hosts the deepest venture capital, angel, and accelerator ecosystem globally, concentrated in San Francisco, New York, Boston, Los Angeles, Seattle, Austin, and other major metros.

Key data

Compliance difficulty (1=easy, 5=hard)4
Banking difficulty (1=easy, 5=hard)5
StripeAvailable
Wise BusinessAvailable

Quick answer

United States's compliance difficulty is 4/5 — worse than the covered-country median (3/5) and worse than the EU-member median (3/5). It ranks #13 of 13 (lower is better).

Where United States stands

United States — Compliance difficulty (1 = easy, 5 = hard)
4/5
Rank
#13 of 13
Better than
0% of covered countries
Covered-country median
3/5
EU-member median
3/5
Best (Estonia)
2/5
Highest (United States)
4/5

Regional peers — North America

North America countries covered by GeoBusinessIQ, ordered by Compliance difficulty (1 = easy, 5 = hard) (lower is better).

CountryCompliance difficulty (1 = easy, 5 = hard)
Canada3/5
United States4/5

How this context is computed

Context is computed from the GeoBusinessIQ country dataset using Compliance difficulty (1 = easy, 5 = hard) (lower is better). Median is a simple median across all covered countries; the EU-member median covers EU members only. Figures are descriptive data drawn from the cited sources — not tax, accounting, or legal advice.

Data limitations

  • Nominal banking availability does not guarantee non-resident onboarding, which depends on ownership and provider policy.
  • Payment-provider availability (Stripe, PayPal, Wise) reflects the most recent review and may change over time.

Sources

  • U.S. Internal Revenue Service Internal Revenue Service — Publication 542 (Corporations) (accessed ; reviewed )
    Covers: US federal corporate income tax treatment for C corporations.
    Why it matters: Primary-authority reference for the United States corporate tax rate in the dataset.
  • OECD OECD — economic and tax statistics (accessed ; reviewed )
    Covers: Comparable corporate tax, statutory rate, and economic indicators across member and partner economies.
    Does not cover: Effective tax rates, deductions and incentives, local surtaxes, and personal residency rules.
    Why it matters: Used as a cross-country baseline to sanity-check rates against primary tax-authority figures.
    Review cadence: Annual, plus on major statutory changes.
  • PricewaterhouseCoopers PwC Worldwide Tax Summaries (accessed ; reviewed )
    Covers: Corporate income tax, VAT, and dividend withholding rates across most covered jurisdictions.
    Does not cover: Your specific effective rate, bespoke incentives, rulings, or transactions requiring professional advice.
    Why it matters: Used to triangulate rates against primary tax-authority sources, not as the sole authority.
    Review cadence: Updated by the publisher per tax year; re-checked each data review.
  • Stripe Stripe — supported countries (accessed ; reviewed )
    Covers: Countries where Stripe supports first-party account creation.
    Does not cover: Per-account approval outcomes, supported business categories, or pricing; availability can change without notice.
    Why it matters: Used as the primary signal for the stripeAvailable field driving payments-weighted scorers.
    Review cadence: As published by the vendor; re-checked each data review.
  • Wise Wise — service availability (accessed ; reviewed )
    Covers: Countries where Wise Business multi-currency accounts are available.
    Does not cover: Individual onboarding decisions, feature availability per region, or fees; availability can change over time.
    Why it matters: Used for the wiseAvailable field, the EMI-fallback signal in banking and payments scorers.
    Review cadence: As published by the vendor; re-checked each data review.

Last updated: