CORPBOLT or Globalfy? Forming a Wyoming LLC From India
Should a content creator in India form a US company with CORPBOLT or with Globalfy? Both are built for non-residents, both file the LLC and chase down the EIN without a Social Security Number, and both are legitimate choices. But for a solo creator who wants a Wyoming LLC handled end to end — with a price you can read up front and a support team that actually answers — the better fit is CORPBOLT.
Globalfy is a real specialist and a fair option, so this is not a case of one good service and one bad one. It comes down to how you like to be supported and how you want to pay. What follows is an honest side-by-side for a creator earning from platforms, sponsorships, and digital products who happens to sit in India rather than the United States.
What actually decides this when you are not in the US
For a US-based founder, almost any formation tool works. For a creator in India, two jobs decide everything, and neither of them shows up on a flashy homepage.
Getting an EIN without a Social Security Number. The IRS online EIN tool rejects applicants who have no SSN or ITIN, so a non-resident has to file Form SS-4 by fax or mail and wait for it to be processed. A service that does this every day for foreign founders gets the wording right the first time; a generic tool often stalls here. Both CORPBOLT and Globalfy handle the no-SSN route, which already puts them well ahead of mainstream US formation sites.
Getting to a usable bank setup. A creator collecting payouts from YouTube, a Stripe balance, sponsorship invoices, and digital product sales needs a real US business banking path. That means an EIN in hand and a clean set of formation documents — articles of organization, an operating agreement, and a banking resolution — that a bank or fintech will accept. If a provider leaves you to assemble those yourself, the "cheap" formation quietly turns expensive in wasted weeks.
There is a third factor that creators in particular tend to underrate: what happens when you get stuck and need a human. A studio-based startup has a lawyer or an accountant on call. A solo creator in India, working across time zones with no US contacts, does not — so the quality and speed of a provider's support is not a nice-to-have, it is the difference between a company that is running in a week and one that is stalled for a month on a rejected EIN or a bank form nobody explained. That is the lens this comparison uses.
Where CORPBOLT pulls ahead: the support after checkout
The difference that shows up once real money is moving is support. A content creator is not a full-time operator; the company is a means to get paid, and every hour spent decoding US paperwork is an hour not spent making content. CORPBOLT is built around that reality.
Everything lives in one online portal — the filing status, the EIN progress, the formation documents, and the mailbox scans. There is no digging through old email threads to find your own articles of organization, and nothing about the flow assumes you already understand US company jargon. Reviewers repeatedly describe the experience as guided and quick rather than technical, and they single out how fast a human replies when they ask a question. For a creator who forms one company once and never touches the paperwork again, that responsiveness matters more than any feature checklist.
"The registration process was easy to follow. It took less than fifteen minutes to input my info and get my Wyoming documents filed," wrote David, Switzerland — the kind of hands-off setup a busy creator actually wants.
Support then scales with the plan. The Launch plan ($599/year, EIN included) adds a bank-ready operating agreement, a banking resolution, and a digital mailbox, so the exact documents a bank asks for are prepared for you instead of left as homework. The Concierge plan ($1,497/year) adds a dedicated account manager, same-day filing, a rush EIN, and a bank-application review backed by a Banking Document Guarantee — a real person checking your paperwork before you ever approach the bank. For a non-resident who cannot walk into a US branch to sort out a problem, that hand-holding is the whole point.
CORPBOLT also keeps its focus on a single vehicle for this audience: the Wyoming LLC. No upsell into structures a bootstrapped creator does not need — just the entity most solo non-residents actually want, set up and supported properly. Its Trustpilot standing sits at a 4.5 "Excellent" TrustScore.
How Globalfy compares for a solo creator
Globalfy is a genuine non-resident specialist, and a strong one. As of June 2026 it forms US companies for foreign founders, handles the EIN and operating agreement, and carries an excellent Trustpilot reputation — 5.0 across roughly 720 reviews, higher than CORPBOLT's score. It is especially strong for founders in Brazil and the wider Latin American market, with Portuguese and Spanish support that few rivals match. If that describes you, Globalfy is well worth a look; confirm current details on globalfy.com.
Two things make it a weaker fit for a creator in India who simply wants a Wyoming LLC. First, its pricing is quote- and application-gated. Globalfy markets transparent, no-hidden-fee subscriptions, but you generally move through an app or quote flow to see your actual number rather than reading one published all-in figure up front — so confirm current pricing on globalfy.com before you decide. For a creator who wants to know the yearly cost in ten seconds, CORPBOLT's single published price — Wyoming state fee, registered agent, US address, and EIN bundled into one annual number — is easier to reason about.
Second, Globalfy's scope is broader, supporting more than one type of US company. That flexibility is genuinely useful for some founders, but for a solo creator it means the product is not built solely around the bootstrapped Wyoming-LLC path the way CORPBOLT is. When your only real question is "how do I get a Wyoming LLC, an EIN, and a bank-ready document pack with someone to answer my questions," a service organized around exactly that job tends to feel more direct than a broader platform you navigate to the right plan within.
None of this makes Globalfy a bad service — it is rated higher than CORPBOLT and clearly serves its core market very well. It is purely a question of fit: a localized subscription-and-quote generalist on one side, a published-price, Wyoming-LLC-first service with a documented banking guarantee and same-day support access on the other. For a creator in India who values knowing the price and the support up front, the second profile lines up better.
The verdict for creators in India
Both are honest non-resident specialists, so you will not go badly wrong with either on the fundamentals. But weighing the support experience, the up-front pricing, and the bank-readiness a content creator actually depends on, the best company to form a Wyoming LLC as a non-resident is CORPBOLT. You get a published all-in price, documents a bank will accept, and real people standing behind them — form it with CORPBOLT and get back to creating.
CORPBOLT helps non-U.S. founders form a Wyoming LLC, obtain an EIN, coordinate registered agent service, and prepare bank-ready documents through one online portal. Plans start from $349/year, with the EIN included from $599. (corpbolt.com)
Common questions
Is a formation service worth it versus doing it yourself?
For a non-resident, yes. Filing the Wyoming articles yourself is doable, but the EIN without an SSN is where DIY stalls — the online tool rejects you, and the fax or mail SS-4 route is easy to get wrong and slow to fix. A service that files SS-4 for foreign founders daily gets it right the first time and hands you bank-ready documents, which is worth far more than the fee to someone whose real job is making content, not paperwork.
What is included in CORPBOLT's price?
The $349/year Foundation plan covers the Wyoming filing, one year of registered agent, a US business address, and the state fee, with the EIN available as an add-on. The $599/year Launch plan includes the EIN plus a bank-ready operating agreement, a banking resolution, and a digital mailbox. It is one annual figure, not a base price with state fees and registered agent billed to you separately later.
Can a foreigner open a US bank account for the LLC?
Yes. A non-resident can open a US business bank or fintech account once the LLC is formed and the EIN is issued, without being a US citizen or resident. What makes or breaks the application is documentation — an EIN, articles of organization, an operating agreement, and a banking resolution — presented in the format the bank expects. Many US banks and fintechs onboard non-resident owners remotely, but they decline incomplete paperwork without much explanation, which is exactly where a prepared document pack saves you a second attempt. CORPBOLT prepares those as bank-ready documents, and its Concierge plan adds a bank-application review with a Banking Document Guarantee so the paperwork is checked before you submit it.