Updated June 2026 · Reviewed by a Form 5472 specialist

The short answer
Key takeaways
Generally no. Under FinCEN's interim final rule effective March 2025, all entities created in the United States — including foreign-owned US LLCs — are exempt from BOI reporting. Only companies formed outside the US and registered in a US state must file.
This is the question that brings most non-resident founders to this page, and the 2026 answer is reassuring: most foreign-owned US LLCs no longer file a BOI report. On March 21, 2025, FinCEN issued an interim final rule that removed the beneficial ownership information reporting requirement for US companies and US persons under the Corporate Transparency Act.
The rule narrowed the definition of a “reporting company” to cover onlyentities that are formed under the law of a foreign country and have registered to do business in a US state. Every entity created in the United States— previously called a “domestic reporting company” — is now exempt. A US LLC formed in Wyoming, Delaware, New Mexico, or any other state is a US-created entity, so it is exempt, regardless of who owns it.
One vital caveat that this page returns to throughout: the BOI exemption is a FinCEN matter and has no effect on your Form 5472 obligation, which is an IRS filing under a different law. If your LLC had a reportable transaction, you still must file Form 5472.
A BOI report is a filing with FinCEN under the Corporate Transparency Act that discloses a company's beneficial owners. As of the March 2025 interim final rule, only foreign reporting companies must file; US-formed entities are exempt.
The beneficial ownership information report comes from the Corporate Transparency Act (CTA), enacted in 2021 and administered by the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) — part of the US Treasury, but separate from the IRS. Its purpose is anti-money-laundering transparency: identifying the real human beings who own or control US companies.
A “beneficial owner” is generally an individual who either exercises substantial control over the company or owns or controls at least 25% of it. When BOI applies, the report discloses each beneficial owner's name, date of birth, address, and an identifying document.
The crucial 2026 point is who must file. After the March 2025 interim final rule, the answer is narrow: only foreign reporting companies. The CTA's reach over ordinary US-formed LLCs — the structure used by nearly every non-resident founder — has been removed.
Yes. FinCEN's interim final rule, announced March 21, 2025, removed the BOI reporting requirement for US companies and US persons. The definition of “reporting company” was narrowed to only entities formed abroad and registered to do business in the US.
The BOI landscape changed dramatically between 2024 and 2025. When the CTA first took effect in January 2024, domestic reporting companies — most US LLCs and corporations — were required to file. That requirement was litigated heavily throughout 2024, with on-again, off-again court injunctions creating widespread confusion.
| Period | Who had to file | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Jan 2024 | Most US companies (domestic reporting companies) | Requirement in effect |
| 2024 | Subject to court injunctions | On-and-off enforcement |
| March 21, 2025 | US-formed entities removed from scope | Interim final rule |
| 2026 (current) | Only foreign reporting companies | US-formed entities exempt |
Source: FinCEN interim final rule (March 21, 2025); FinCEN.gov BOI. Verified June 2026.
The March 21, 2025interim final rule resolved the uncertainty for US entities by removing them from the rule entirely. If you read older guidance saying “every LLC must file BOI by [date] or face $500/day,” that guidance predates this change and no longer applies to a US-formed LLC.
It is a domestic company. “Domestic” refers to where the entity was formed, not who owns it. A US LLC formed in any US state is a domestic entity and is exempt from BOI reporting, even if its owner is a non-resident.
This is the distinction that confuses people most, so it is worth stating plainly: for BOI, “domestic” vs “foreign” is about where the company was formed, not about the owner's nationality. A Wyoming LLC owned 100% by a resident of Pakistan is still a domestic entity, because it was created under the law of a US state.
| Entity | Formed where? | BOI in 2026? |
|---|---|---|
| US LLC (Wyoming) owned by a non-resident | United States | Exempt — domestic entity |
| US LLC (Delaware) owned by a US person | United States | Exempt — domestic entity |
| Foreign company registered to do business in a US state | Abroad | Must file — foreign reporting company |
Source: FinCEN interim final rule (March 2025); FinCEN BOI FAQs. Verified June 2026.
So the typical non-resident founder — who formed a US LLC to access US banking and payment processors — owns a domestic entity and is exempt from BOI. The exemption is not about being foreign; it is about the company being American.
Yes. BOI (a FinCEN filing) and Form 5472 (an IRS filing) are completely separate. The BOI exemption for US-formed LLCs does not affect Form 5472 at all — a foreign-owned LLC with a reportable transaction must still file Form 5472 or face a $25,000 penalty.
This is the most important takeaway on the page, and the one most likely to save a founder from a costly mistake. The BOI exemption is a relief from a FinCEN requirement. It does nothingto your IRS obligations. Form 5472 lives under a completely different law (IRC §6038A), administered by a completely different agency.
| Feature | BOI report | Form 5472 |
|---|---|---|
| Agency | FinCEN | IRS |
| Law | Corporate Transparency Act | IRC §6038A |
| Applies to a US-formed foreign-owned LLC? | No (exempt since March 2025) | Yes — if reportable transaction |
| Penalty | Up to $591/day when it applies | $25,000 per form, per year |
| Filed with | FinCEN BOI E-Filing system | Pro forma Form 1120, by mail or fax |
Source: FinCEN BOI; IRC §6038A; IRS Instructions for Form 5472. Verified June 2026.
In other words: a foreign-owned US LLC in 2026 generally has no BOI report to file but still has a Form 5472 to file. Do not let the good news on BOI cause you to overlook the filing that still carries a $25,000 penalty. The BOI vs Form 5472 distinction and the what is Form 5472 guide cover this in full.
Only foreign reporting companies — entities formed under the law of a foreign country that have registered to do business in a US state by filing with a secretary of state. They report their beneficial owners but are not required to report US persons.
The remaining BOI obligation is narrow. A foreign reporting company is an entity formed abroad that has registered to do business in a US state or tribal jurisdiction by filing a document with a secretary of state or similar office. These entities must still file a BOI report — but even they are not required to report any US persons as beneficial owners.
For the audience of this site — non-residents who form a US LLC — this almost never applies, because their LLC is US-formed (domestic). The foreign-reporting-company rule catches a different structure: an existing overseas company that registers as a foreign entity in a US state. The how to file a BOI report guide covers the determination and filing steps for those who do fall into this category.
Possibly. The March 2025 rule is an interim final rule and FinCEN accepted public comments before finalizing it. Always confirm the current requirement on FinCEN.gov before relying on any BOI guidance, as the area has changed rapidly.
Honesty requires a caveat. The March 2025 rule is an interim final rule, which FinCEN issued with a public comment period and an intention to finalize. While it is in effect now and exempts US-formed entities, regulatory and legislative changes in this area have been fast and unpredictable since 2024.
For that reason, treat any BOI guidance — including this page — as a snapshot, and confirm the current requirement directly on FinCEN.gov before acting. What does not change with the BOI rules is your Form 5472 obligation: that has been stable since 2017 and remains required.
Most foreign-owned US LLCs are now BOI-exempt, but Form 5472 is still required. We file it with the pro forma 1120 for a flat $299.