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Last updated: February 2026

US LLC vs UK LTD: Which One Should You Choose in 2026?

This isn’t really about which one’s cheaper to set up. It comes down to what your clients expect, what your bank wants to see, and how your business actually runs day to day. If you’re running a SaaS product or an agency out of Lahore, Karachi, Islamabad, or maybe a desk in Dubai as an NRP, you already know a foreign company is what gets you taken seriously by Stripe, PayPal, and clients overseas. What you probably haven’t worked out yet is which one fits how you actually operate, a US LLC or a UK LTD. That’s the question this page is here to answer.

Not sure yet? Skip straight to the Quick Verdict below, or check out US LLC Service or UK LTD Service if you’re already leaning one way.

Quick Verdict: US LLC or UK LTD?

A US LLC tends to suit founders who want Stripe-style banking access and a bit more privacy around who owns what. A UK LTD tends to suit founders who need credibility with UK clients and aren’t bothered by their company info sitting in public search results. Neither one is a tax shelter, and we won’t pretend otherwise. What’s below is a practical look at banking, compliance, and everyday fit, not legal theory dressed up as advice.

Choose US LLC if:

  • Most of your clients or customers are US-based
  • You want Stripe onboarding that doesn’t feel like a fight
  • You’d rather your ownership details stayed out of public search results
  • You’re building a SaaS product and might raise from US investors later on

Choose UK LTD if:

  • Your clients are mostly in the UK or somewhere in Europe
  • You like the trust that comes from being listed on Companies House
  • Public paperwork doesn’t bother you
  • You run an agency where clients tend to check who they’re actually working with

US LLC vs UK LTD: The Full Comparison

Before getting into details, here’s the day-to-day picture.

Setup Speed

A US LLC can often form within a few days, depending on the state you pick. A UK LTD usually forms in 24-48 hours through Companies House, sometimes faster than that.

Public Disclosure

US LLC ownership details generally aren’t publicly searchable, though this varies from state to state. A UK LTD’s details, directors, registered office, all of it, sit on Companies House for anyone to look up.

Banking & Stripe/PayPal Access

A US LLC usually onboards a little more smoothly with Stripe when your revenue is US-facing. A UK LTD does the same for clients in the UK and Europe. Neither structure gets locked out of either processor, for what it’s worth.

Compliance Workload

A US LLC’s obligations shift by state, sometimes an annual report, sometimes franchise tax. A UK LTD’s main job is the annual confirmation statement, due within 14 days of the review period ending.

Formation Cost

UK LTD incorporation runs £100 as of February 2026. US LLC formation cost varies by state, anywhere from under $100 to a few hundred dollars.

Annual Maintenance Cost

The UK LTD’s confirmation statement runs £50 a year. US LLC annual costs depend on the state plus whatever your registered agent charges you.

Credibility by Client Region

A UK LTD carries more weight with UK and European clients. A US LLC carries more weight with US-based clients and anything running through Stripe.

Fit for SaaS vs Agency Models

SaaS founders selling to US customers usually lean toward a US LLC. Agencies working with UK or EU clients usually lean toward a UK LTD.

Banking & Payment Onboarding

This is probably the real reason you clicked through to this page. Stripe, PayPal, most processors, they were built with US entities in mind first, so a US LLC with an EIN tends to move through Stripe onboarding a bit more predictably, especially if you’re billing US-based SaaS customers who expect a US-style invoice landing in their inbox.

A UK LTD isn’t at a disadvantage here, it’s just wired for a different crowd. If your clients sit in the UK or Europe, a UK LTD paired with a UK business account often feels more familiar to them, and Stripe’s UK onboarding path is well worn by now too. It’s not that one works and the other doesn’t, it’s about which banking world your clients already trust and pay into without thinking twice.

Lahore-Based SaaS Founder

Take a Lahore-based SaaS founder billing US customers on a subscription model. A US LLC with an EIN usually clears Stripe’s KYC checks a bit faster, mostly because the whole process, proof of address, business verification, all of it, was built around US entities from the start.

Dubai-Based NRP Agency

Now flip it around: a Dubai-based NRP running an agency for UK clients. A UK LTD with a UK bank account tends to feel less like a hurdle and more like a formality, because that’s the setup those clients already expect from anyone they hire.

For NRPs juggling Wise, Payoneer, or a mix of both, either structure connects fine. But account opening usually goes smoother when your entity’s country roughly lines up with where your revenue actually comes from. That matters more than most comparisons let on, more than all the tax framing everyone else spends their time on.

If banking access is genuinely what’s holding you back, our Banking Services team can walk you through what’s realistic for your setup before you lock in either jurisdiction.

Explore Banking Services

Compliance Workload & Maintenance

Most comparisons stop right after formation cost. Here’s what founders actually pay and file every year after that, because this is where the real difference shows up.

A UK LTD’s main ongoing job is the confirmation statement, a short annual filing that confirms your company’s details, directors, shareholders, registered office, haven’t changed, or updates them if they have. You get a 14-day window after your review period ends to file it. Miss it too many times and Companies House can strike the company off, which is a genuine headache to sort out afterward.

A US LLC’s compliance workload depends heavily on which state you formed in. Some states want an annual report plus franchise tax. Others ask for very little beyond keeping your registered agent current. What stays consistent across most states, though, is a separate federal filing tied to foreign ownership, one founders sometimes miss entirely because they assumed the state paperwork was the whole picture.

UK LTD, Annually

  • Confirmation statement
  • Corporation Tax return
  • Registered office kept current

US LLC, Annually

  • State annual report where applicable
  • Registered agent renewal
  • Federal foreign-ownership filing where required

Neither workload is heavy on its own. What actually trips founders up is forgetting these come back around every single year, whether business was good that year or dead quiet.

2026 Cost Comparison

As of February 1, 2026, Companies House bumped its UK incorporation fee up to £100 for standard online registration, and the confirmation statement fee climbed to £50. Small increases on paper, sure, but they matter if you were budgeting off numbers from some old blog post nobody bothered updating. This applies to UK LTDs that already exist too, not just new ones, so if you’ve already got a company registered, your next confirmation statement carries the new £50 fee no matter when you originally formed it.

A US LLC’s formation cost depends entirely on the state, anywhere from under $100 to a few hundred dollars, plus whatever your registered agent charges to renew each year. Add EIN setup on top, and if you’re a non-resident who needs one for banking, an ITIN application as well.

UK LTD Costs

Year 1 Cost £100 incorporation, plus any service fee for filing support
Ongoing Annual Cost £50 confirmation statement, plus Corporation Tax based on profit

US LLC Costs

Year 1 Cost Formation fee (state-dependent), EIN setup, registered agent fee
Ongoing Annual Cost Registered agent renewal, state annual report fee where applicable

The mistake most founders make isn’t picking the “expensive” one, it’s only looking at the sticker price on formation and forgetting the recurring cost that follows every year after. A UK LTD’s total is predictable and sitting there in public for anyone to see. A US LLC’s total swings more by state, so get an exact number for your specific state before assuming it’s automatically the cheaper route.

Who Should Choose a US LLC?

A US LLC is probably the better fit if you:

  • Sell mostly to US-based clients or customers
  • Want Stripe onboarding that feels straightforward from day one
  • Would rather keep ownership details out of public search results
  • Might raise from US investors down the line, since American investors tend to already know their way around LLC structures

Real-World Fit

Take a Lahore-based SaaS founder selling a subscription product to US startups. Their customers expect US-style invoices, most of their payment volume already runs through Stripe, and the disregarded entity status keeps things simple enough that they can focus on the product instead of chasing paperwork all quarter.

If that sounds like where you’re at, Explore US LLC Service, and we’ll walk you through formation, EIN setup, and the banking pieces together instead of leaving you to guess the right order.

Who Should Choose a UK LTD?

A UK LTD is probably the better fit if you:

  • Serve clients mostly based in the UK or Europe
  • Are fine with your company details being publicly listed
  • Want a UK banking relationship that feels native to your clients
  • Run an agency where client-side trust and verification actually matter

Real-World Fit

Take a Dubai-based NRP running an agency for UK clients. Those clients can pull up the business on Companies House before signing anything, UK banking and Stripe onboarding feel familiar to them from the start, and the annual confirmation statement ends up being a lighter lift than most people expect once they’ve been through it once.

If that’s closer to your situation, Explore UK LTD Service, and we’ll handle the registration and the ongoing filings so you’re not tracking deadlines in some spreadsheet nobody checks.

Common Mistakes When Choosing

Comparing only the formation cost.A founder sees “UK LTD costs less to set up” and stops reading right there, without checking whether their clients even bank the way UK clients do. Formation is a one-time cost. Compliance and banking friction stick around, and picking the wrong fit ends up costing more time than it ever saved in money.

Choosing based on tax framing instead of banking fit.The real decision factor is client geography and how comfortable you are with each entity’s compliance rhythm, not some abstract tax theory a comparison page has no business advising you on anyway.

Missing the UK’s 14-day confirmation statement window.Founders who register a UK LTD sometimes don’t realize this filing comes back every single year with a hard deadline attached, and missing it repeatedly can get the company struck off.

Assuming offshore-style secrecy benefits that don’t exist.Neither structure hides anything from banks, payment processors, or tax authorities. The privacy difference is about what the general public can see, not what regulators or financial institutions have access to.

FAQs

Yes, both are open to non-residents, and neither one requires you to relocate or hold citizenship in the country of formation. Most of the process happens remotely, though a UK LTD needs a registered office address in the UK, and a US LLC needs a registered agent in whichever state you pick.
As of February 2026, UK incorporation costs £100 through the standard online route, and the annual confirmation statement runs £50. Those are the Companies House fees directly, separate from whatever service fee your filing help charges on top.
A single-member LLC owned by a non-resident is usually treated as a disregarded entity, which just means the LLC itself doesn’t file a separate federal income return the way a corporation would. This is general info, not tax advice, so check your specific filing obligations with a tax professional rather than assuming anything about what you owe.
Both connect fine to Stripe and PayPal. A US LLC tends to onboard a touch more smoothly when your revenue is mostly US-based, and a UK LTD does the same for UK and European-facing businesses. It comes down to where your clients actually are, not which structure gets some kind of preferential treatment.
Usually, yes, though the process and paperwork differ by bank and entity type. Some banks want a video call or extra verification for non-resident owners, so it’s worth checking the specific requirements rather than assuming a fully remote account opening every time.
A UK LTD is usually up and running within 24-48 hours through Companies House. A US LLC’s timeline depends on the state, anywhere from same-day to a few business days.

Still deciding? Book a free consultation, no obligation, and we’ll go through your specific client base before you commit to anything.

Still Not Sure? Here’s the Short Version

A US LLC generally fits founders chasing US-facing banking and Stripe access. A UK LTD generally fits founders who need UK client credibility and don’t mind public compliance records. Whichever way you’re leaning, we’ll help you confirm the right fit before you commit to either one.

Not sure? Answer 3 quick questions and we’ll recommend a path, no pressure, no obligation.

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