VaultLeap vs Stripe Atlas + Mercury: The Non-US Founder Stack

VaultLeap

VaultLeap

If you have spent any time in online communities for non-US founders, you have seen this advice: “Use Stripe Atlas to form a Delaware LLC, then open Mercury for banking.” It is repeated so often it sounds like the only path. And for some people, it is the right path. But for many others, it is expensive overkill.

The Stripe Atlas + Mercury Stack

Here is what the “standard” non-US founder stack looks like:

Step 1: Stripe Atlas ($500)

  • Forms a Delaware LLC or C-Corp
  • Files with the state
  • Provides an EIN (tax ID)
  • Includes one year of registered agent service
  • Provides basic operating agreement template

Step 2: Open Mercury (free, but requires the entity)

  • Business checking account
  • ACH and wire capabilities
  • Team access and cards
  • Bill pay and integrations

Ongoing annual costs:

  • Registered agent renewal: $100-300/year
  • Delaware franchise tax: $300/year minimum
  • US tax filing (Form 5472 for foreign-owned LLCs): $500-1,500/year via CPA
  • Additional state/local compliance: varies

Total first-year cost: $1,400-2,600. Annual maintenance: $900-2,100.

The VaultLeap Path

Sign up. Complete KYC with your passport and proof of address. Receive your USD account details (routing number + account number). Start receiving payments.

Total first-year cost: transaction fees only (0.75% Standard, 0.65% Pro, 0% Zero tier up to $40K/mo). No entity formation. No registered agent. No US tax filing. No Delaware franchise tax.

When the Full Stack Is Worth It

The Stripe Atlas + Mercury path makes sense when:

  • You are raising US venture capital. VCs require a US entity (typically a Delaware C-Corp) to invest. If you are pursuing institutional funding, you need the entity regardless of banking.
  • You need Stripe payment processing with US terms. Stripe’s non-US terms are less favorable in some countries. A US entity gives you access to US Stripe pricing and features.
  • You are hiring US employees. US payroll requires a US entity. If you have W-2 employees in the US, you need the LLC/Corp.
  • You want to build long-term US business credit. Business credit history requires a US entity with an EIN.
  • Your revenue justifies the compliance cost. If you are making $15,000+/month, the $1,500-2,000 annual overhead is a small percentage of revenue.

When It Is Overkill

The Stripe Atlas + Mercury path is overkill when:

  • You are a freelancer making under $10K/month. Spending $2,000/year on compliance for a $60K-120K/year freelance income is 2-3% of revenue just for the privilege of having a US bank account.
  • You do not need Stripe processing or US VC. If your clients pay you directly via ACH/wire, you do not need a US entity to receive those payments.
  • You have no plans to hire in the US. No employees means no payroll requirement means no entity requirement.
  • You want to test the waters. Forming an LLC is a commitment. If you are still validating whether your international freelance income is sustainable, adding $2,000 in annual overhead before you know if it will work is a risky bet.

Cost Comparison Over 3 Years

Cost Item Stripe Atlas + Mercury VaultLeap (at $5K/mo revenue)
Year 1 Setup $500 (Atlas) + $0 (Mercury) $0
Year 1 Compliance $900-2,100 $0
Year 1 Fees $0 (Mercury free banking) $450 (0.75% on $60K) or $0 (Zero tier)
Year 1 Total $1,400-2,600 $0-450
Year 2 Total $900-2,100 $0-450
Year 3 Total $900-2,100 $0-450
3-Year Total $3,200-6,800 $0-1,350

At $5,000/month in revenue, VaultLeap’s Zero tier (0% up to $40K/mo) means zero transaction fees – making the 3-year total cost $0 compared to $3,200-6,800 for the Stripe Atlas + Mercury path.

The Middle Path

You do not have to choose one forever. Many founders start with VaultLeap to receive payments immediately, then form a US entity later when their revenue justifies it or when they have a specific reason (raising VC, US hiring, Stripe optimization).

Starting with VaultLeap costs you nothing if you eventually form an LLC anyway. Starting with Stripe Atlas costs you $1,400+ even if you realize six months later that a US entity was unnecessary for your situation.

The Bottom Line

Stripe Atlas + Mercury is the right choice for non-US founders who need a US corporate entity for fundraising, hiring, or payment processing. VaultLeap is the right choice for non-US freelancers and small businesses who need USD accounts without the overhead of US corporate compliance. Start with what you need today; upgrade when your business demands it.

VaultLeap is a financial technology company, not a bank. Banking and payment services are provided by Bridge, a licensed money transmitter and regulated payment provider, in partnership with Lead Bank, Member FDIC. VaultLeap does not hold or have custody of customer funds.

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VaultLeap vs Stripe Atlas + Mercury: The Non-US Founder S...