Structure and state fit
We help you choose the entity and state based on your actual business model, not generic filing advice.
- LLC vs. C-Corp decision framing
- Delaware, Florida, Texas, or Wyoming fit review
- Operating-model discussion before filing
Cumbaco helps Turkish founders turn company formation into an operating plan, not just a filing.
We coordinate the choices that shape your launch: LLC vs. C-Corp, state fit, EIN timing, banking readiness, tax coordination, and the first channel you want to enter. That way the legal structure supports real execution instead of becoming a separate project.
If you are still comparing options, start with our U.S. expansion FAQ and the deeper guide on how to open a business in the USA from Turkey.
The goal is to avoid a paper company that still cannot bank, launch, or operate.
We help you choose the entity and state based on your actual business model, not generic filing advice.
Formation is only useful when the documentation stack also supports banking, payouts, and platform approvals.
We help founders understand the filings and tax touchpoints that matter early so nothing important is left to chance.
Your company structure should match the channel you plan to activate first, whether that is Amazon, wholesale, Shopify, or a hybrid path.
We help align core materials so the brand, entity, and launch story make sense across channels.
When you are ready to move beyond formation, we help carry the plan into operations, marketplaces, and demand generation.
We focus on the practical decisions that usually create delays after the filing is done.
We start with your product, margins, timeline, and channel goals so the entity choice supports the business you actually want to build.
We help you line up the core inputs around formation, EIN, banking readiness, and the documentation the next stage will depend on.
Once the foundation is clear, we help move the plan into marketplaces, operations, digital growth, or the mix that fits your launch path.
These resources answer the questions founders usually ask before they commit to a U.S. structure.
Use this if you need fast answers on visas, state choice, EIN, banking, tax, and launch readiness.
Read the FAQA deeper guide for Turkish founders comparing entity types, state options, banking flow, and operational planning.
Read the guideIf Amazon may be your first U.S. channel, compare fulfillment models before finalizing the operating setup.
Read the articleThese are the decisions that usually shape the first 90 days after setup.
Usually no. Many Turkish founders can legally form and own a U.S. company remotely. Visa planning becomes a separate topic if you later want to live or work physically in the U.S.
There is no single answer. Delaware is often chosen for investor-backed startups, while Florida, Texas, or Wyoming can make more sense for operating businesses, logistics-heavy models, or lean launches.
Yes. Non-resident founders can usually get an EIN and build a banking-ready file, but the process often takes more planning than domestic founders expect.
No. Formation works best when it is coordinated with tax, banking, fulfillment, and launch-channel planning so the company can operate as soon as setup is complete.
Tell us your product type, target channel, and timeline. We will help you decide whether to start with formation, banking, marketplace setup, or operations.
Book Your 15-Minute CallNo pressure. If you are still early, we will tell you what to prepare first.