Overview: Digital Nomads with a US LLC
A US LLC gives digital nomads a stable business base regardless of where they travel. It provides access to US banking, payment processors, and gives clients a professional US entity to work with. The LLC's address doesn't change as you move between countries.
Best Business Structure
For digital nomads, we recommend: Single-Member LLC (Disregarded Entity)
A US LLC gives digital nomads a stable business base regardless of where they travel. It provides access to US banking, payment processors, and gives clients a professional US entity to work with. The LLC's address doesn't change as you move between countries.
Tax Considerations for Digital Nomads
Digital nomads face unique tax challenges because they may trigger tax obligations in multiple countries. Your US LLC's tax obligations depend on where your income is sourced and whether you have ECI. If all your clients are outside the US and you perform all work outside the US, you likely have no ECI. However, your personal tax residency in other countries may create obligations there.
Important Note for Digital Nomads
Digital nomads should be especially careful about unintentionally becoming tax residents in countries they visit. Many countries apply a 183-day rule — if you spend more than 183 days in a country in a calendar year, you may become a tax resident there. Some countries (like Portugal, Georgia, or Estonia) offer specific digital nomad visas with favorable tax treatment.
Required Tax Forms
As a non-resident digital nomad with a US LLC, you'll typically need these forms:
- Form 5472 + Pro Forma 1120 (required annually)
- Form W-7 (ITIN application)
- Form SS-4 (EIN application)
- FBAR (if you have foreign bank accounts over $10,000)
- Tax returns in countries where you're tax resident
Key Filing Deadline
Form 5472 + Pro Forma 1120: Due April 15 (extension available to October 15). Penalty for non-filing: $25,000. This applies even if your LLC had zero income.
Common Deductions for Digital Nomads
These business expenses are typically deductible for digital nomads operating through a US LLC:
- Coworking space memberships
- Travel between client locations
- International health insurance
- Communication tools (VPN, international phone plans)
- Laptop, equipment, and gear
- Accommodation (business portion if home office)
- Visa and work permit fees
- Professional development
Tips for Tax Compliance
- Establish tax residency carefully — avoid becoming tax resident in multiple countries
- Use a US LLC address and registered agent as your stable business address
- Keep records of where you perform work (country, dates, clients)
- Understand the 183-day rule in various countries
- Open a US business bank account before you start traveling
- Consider using Wise (formerly TransferWise) for multi-currency management
- Track your days in each country meticulously for tax purposes
Need Tax Help for Your Digital Nomad Business?
Our tax experts specialize in helping digital nomads with US LLC tax compliance. Let us handle the complexity.
Get Expert Help