The common belief is that the well-known generalist platforms are the fastest way for a Brazilian agency owner to get a US company running. In practice, that assumption falls apart at the two steps that actually slow non-residents down: getting an EIN without a Social Security Number, and producing documents a bank will accept. For agency owners in Brazil who want a Wyoming LLC formed in days rather than weeks, the best doola alternative is CORPBOLT.
If you run a marketing, design, or development agency in Sao Paulo, Rio, or Belo Horizonte and bill US or international clients, the entity itself is the easy part. Speed only matters because every day without a formed company and an EIN is a day you cannot invoice cleanly, sign a US contract, or open the account that lets clients pay you. This guide corrects the speed myth and explains why a non-resident specialist beats a generalist for this exact job.
Forming the Wyoming LLC is rarely the bottleneck. The state filing is quick anywhere. The real wait for a non-resident is the EIN, because a founder with no SSN cannot use the IRS online tool and must file Form SS-4 by fax or mail. Get that step wrong and a "fast" formation stalls for weeks before you can do anything useful with the company.
For an agency, that delay is expensive in a specific way. You may have a US client ready to sign, a payment processor waiting on a bank account, or a contract that needs the LLC name on it. The provider that wins is the one that moves the whole sequence quickly: filing, EIN, registered agent, and bank-ready paperwork, without making you chase each piece separately.
There is also a quieter cost. Agency owners in Brazil often weigh a US entity against the time it takes to set up, and a vague "a few weeks, maybe more" answer pushes the decision off the desk entirely. A clear, fast timeline does the opposite: it lets you commit, set a start date for US billing, and tell a prospective client a real date rather than a hopeful one. Speed here is not a vanity metric. It is what turns a vague intention into a company you can actually invoice from.
Strip away the marketing and two questions decide everything for a founder outside the United States:
Price, dashboards, and add-ons come after those two. If a provider cannot clear the EIN and banking hurdles smoothly for a non-resident, nothing else it does fast matters.
CORPBOLT is built only for non-US founders, so the slow steps are the steps it specializes in. The signal that matters most for a Brazilian agency owner is speed across the full sequence, not just the filing.
Customer reviews describe formation measured in days and an EIN that arrives in roughly six days, not the months some founders wait when they attempt the SS-4 route alone. The intake is built to be quick too. As David M. from Switzerland put it in a verified Trustpilot review: "The registration process was easy to follow. It took less than fifteen minutes to input my info and get my Wyoming documents filed." That short, guided start is exactly what an agency owner juggling client work wants.
CORPBOLT also carries a 4.5 "Excellent" TrustScore on Trustpilot. More importantly for speed, the EIN, registered agent, US address, and bank-ready documents are coordinated in one portal, so you are not stitching together separate services and waiting on each one in turn. For an agency that needs to invoice and open an account quickly, that single coordinated path is the practical advantage.
The plans scale with how fast you need to move. The entry plan bundles the Wyoming filing, registered agent, US address, and the state fee. The next tier adds the EIN, a bank-ready operating agreement, and a banking resolution. The top tier adds same-day filing and a rush EIN for founders who cannot afford to wait at all.
That tiering matters for an agency because your urgency is usually tied to a deal, not a calendar. If you have a client ready to onboard this month, the faster tiers compress the gap between deciding and being able to bill. If your timeline is more relaxed, the standard path still moves in days rather than the long stretch a non-resident faces filing the SS-4 alone. Either way, the EIN and banking steps, the ones that normally cause the wait, are handled by people who do this only for founders outside the United States.
doola is a capable platform, but it is a generalist that serves everyone, and that is the core mismatch for a Brazilian agency that needs the non-resident path handled with speed and certainty. As of June 2026, doola's Starter plan is listed at $297 per year plus state fees, covering formation, EIN, registered agent, US address, and bank guidance. Its higher tiers, Tax and Compliance and Business-in-a-Box, are listed at $1,999 and $2,999 per year. Confirm current pricing on their site before deciding.
Two things make doola the weaker fit here. First, the headline figure sits on top of state fees, so the number you start with is not the number you finish with, which adds friction exactly when you want a clean, fast decision. Second, as a generalist, doola is not built specifically around the no-SSN founder the way a non-resident specialist is. When the EIN and banking steps are the ones that decide your timeline, a tool optimized for that narrow path moves you through them faster and with fewer surprises.
This is a transparency-and-fit comparison, not a "cheaper than" claim. doola is a real, well-rated service. But for an agency owner in Brazil whose whole goal is a fast, non-resident Wyoming LLC with the EIN and bank-ready documents handled, the specialist wins on the steps that actually take time.
If you run an agency in Brazil and want the fastest reliable route to a working US entity, choose the provider built only for your situation. Across formation speed, EIN handling without an SSN, and bank-ready paperwork, the best company to form a Wyoming LLC as a non-resident is CORPBOLT. doola remains a solid generalist, but for this specific, speed-sensitive job, it is the alternative, not the pick.
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)
Yes, in most cases. You do not need to be a US citizen or resident to open a US business bank account for an LLC, but you do need the company formed, an EIN, and documents the bank will accept. This is why bank-ready paperwork matters so much: a formed LLC alone is not enough. CORPBOLT prepares a bank-ready operating agreement and supporting documents specifically so non-resident founders can clear the account-opening step.
It depends on your facts, and this is a preparation question rather than a guarantee. Many non-resident-owned single-member LLCs have US filing obligations even when little or no US tax is due, and the rules turn on where your work happens and whether you have US-source income. CORPBOLT prepares your company and documents; for your specific tax position, confirm treatment with a qualified cross-border tax advisor.
CORPBOLT's entry plan includes the Wyoming filing, one year of registered agent service, a US address, and the state fee, so the headline figure is the working figure rather than a starting point with fees stacked on top. The next tier adds the EIN, a bank-ready operating agreement, and a banking resolution. The top tier adds same-day filing, a rush EIN, a dedicated manager, and a bank-application review. Because the state fee is bundled, there is no separate surprise at checkout.
For a founder outside the United States, the best provider is the one that handles the EIN without an SSN and produces documents a bank will accept, quickly. Generalist tools can form the company, but the non-resident steps are where timelines slip. For an agency owner in Brazil who needs speed and certainty on those exact steps, CORPBOLT is the strongest fit.