EU Inc vs US LLC

EU Inc vs US LLC: Which Company Structure Fits You?

EU Inc and a US LLC solve different problems. A US LLC is a United States, state-level company with pass-through taxation, best when your market and customers are American. EU Inc, the proposed 28th Regime, would be a single EU-wide company valid across all 27 member states, built for founders scaling in Europe. EU Inc is not live yet (expected around 2027-2028), so today the real comparison is a US LLC versus an EU company you can form online now.

Last updated July 2026 · 7 min read

The short answer

Pick the structure that matches where you actually do business. If your customers, payments and team are in the United States, a US LLC is simple and well understood. If you are building across Europe, an EU company is the better base, and EU Inc aims to become the single EU-wide version of that once it becomes law. The catch is timing: EU Inc is a proposal expected around 2027-2028, so today you compare a US LLC against a national EU company you can form right now.

What each one is

A US LLC (limited liability company) is formed under the law of a single US state, such as Delaware or Wyoming. It gives you limited liability and, by default, "pass-through" taxation: the company itself usually pays no federal income tax, and profits are reported on the owners' personal returns. It is flexible, cheap and popular with freelancers, holding structures and US-facing small businesses.

An EU Inc would be a company incorporated under the 28th Regime, an optional EU-wide legal form recognised in all 27 member states from the moment it is formed. One registration, one legal identity, the whole single market. It is designed to be fully digital, set up in around 48 hours for at most €100, with no minimum capital and an EU-wide employee stock option framework. It is not a product you can buy yet.

Quick clarification

"EU Inc vs US LLC" is really two questions. EU vs US is about which market you are building for. LLC vs corporation is about how you raise money: a US LLC is a poor fit for venture capital, where founders use a Delaware C-Corp, and in Europe the equivalent is a normal company that EU Inc would unify.

EU Inc vs US LLC, side by side

FeatureEU Inc (proposed)US LLC
Legal natureOptional EU-wide company formUS state-level limited liability company
StatusProposal, expected around 2027-2028Live, long established
Where it is validAll 27 EU member statesThe US; not an EU entity
FormationFully digital, target around 48 hoursOnline via a state, often days to a couple of weeks
Cost to formAt most €100 (proposed)Roughly $35 to $500 state fee, varies
Minimum capitalNone (€0 to €1)None
Default taxationCorporate tax where resident and operatingPass-through to owners (can elect corporate)
Venture-capital fitBuilt for EU startups, EU-wide stock optionsPoor; VCs prefer a Delaware C-Corp
Best forFounders building across the EUUS-facing business, solo founders, holding

How they are taxed

The biggest practical difference is tax treatment. A US LLC is, by default, pass-through: the entity does not pay income tax itself, and profits flow to the owners, who pay tax where they are liable. That is simple for a US-resident owner, but for a non-US founder it creates US filing duties (an EIN, and forms such as 5472 for a foreign-owned single-member LLC) without necessarily removing tax at home.

An EU company, and a future EU Inc, pays corporate tax where it is tax-resident and where it operates, at the national rate of that country. EU Inc would not change this: it harmonises company law, not tax. We explain that split in EU Inc taxes. Wherever you incorporate, get advice for your own situation, structure does not override where you genuinely live and work.

What investors prefer

If you plan to raise money, the structure matters more than the marketing. Venture investors want preferred shares, clean cap tables and an option pool. A US LLC does not provide those well, which is why US startups raising venture capital convert to or start as a Delaware C-Corp. In Europe, investors back national companies today, and a major aim of EU Inc is to give European founders one investable, EU-wide form so they no longer default to a US incorporation just to raise. That is the gap the 28th Regime is trying to close.

Which one to choose

  • Choose a US LLC if your revenue, customers and banking are mostly American, you want pass-through simplicity, or US clients expect a US vendor.
  • Choose an EU company (and EU Inc later) if your market, team or fundraising is in Europe, or you want EU credibility, EU VAT and SEPA, and GDPR-native operations.
  • Raising venture capital? A US LLC is the wrong tool. Today that is a Delaware C-Corp or an EU company depending on where your investors are; EU Inc is built to become the EU answer.

What you can do today

Because EU Inc is not live, the practical decision is a US LLC versus an EU company you can form online now. The closest thing to EU Inc that already exists is an Estonian company via e-Residency, fully remote and often ready in about three days. We compare every EU jurisdiction on cost, tax and setup time so you can choose with confidence.

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Frequently asked questions

Is EU Inc better than a US LLC?

Neither is universally better, they fit different markets. A US LLC is best when your customers, payments and tax base are mainly in the United States. EU Inc, the proposed EU-wide company form, is built for founders operating across Europe. Since EU Inc is not live yet, the real choice today is a US LLC versus an EU company you can form online now.

Is a US LLC valid in the European Union?

No. A US LLC is a United States company formed under a single state's law. It is not an EU entity, and to trade in the EU it would generally need to register locally and would fall under EU tax-residence and permanent-establishment rules. EU Inc is designed to be recognised across all 27 member states from day one.

Should a startup raising venture capital use a US LLC?

Usually not. LLCs do not issue the preferred stock and option pools that venture investors expect, which is why US startups raising VC use a Delaware C-Corp instead. In Europe, founders use a national company today and EU Inc aims to become the EU-wide equivalent.

Can a non-US resident own a US LLC?

Yes, but with obligations. A foreign-owned US LLC still has US filing requirements (such as Form 5472 for a single-member LLC), needs an EIN, and often finds US banking the hardest step. Many European founders find an EU company simpler to run from Europe.

Can I convert a US LLC into an EU Inc later?

There is no direct path from a US LLC to EU Inc. EU Inc is expected to allow conversions from existing EU companies, not US ones. If your future is in Europe, forming an EU company now is the cleaner route to adopt EU Inc when it launches.

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