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CORPBOLT vs Clemta for Founders in Vietnam
Short version: for an app developer in Vietnam forming a Wyoming LLC from abroad, CORPBOLT is the better fit, because it is built only for founders who have no U.S. Social Security number. Start with the numbers, because that is where most comparisons quietly mislead. CORPBOLT's Foundation plan is $349 a year with the Wyoming state filing fee, a full year of registered agent service, and a U.S. business address already inside the price. Clemta's Essentials plan is also $349 a year, but as of June 2026 that figure is listed as "plus state fees," so the real first-year total depends on the filing fee stacked on top. Confirm current pricing on their site before you decide, but the structural difference is the point: one number is all-in, the other is a starting number.
That gap matters more than it looks. A developer in Ho Chi Minh City who is comparing two $349 plans assumes they are comparing like for like. They are not. The question that decides this is not "which sticker price is lower" but "which provider was designed for a person who cannot walk into an American bank, has no SSN, and needs the paperwork to actually open accounts and ship an app." On that question the two services part ways.
The numbers, lined up honestly
Here is the comparison without spin. CORPBOLT Foundation is $349 per year and includes the Wyoming filing fee, one year of registered agent service, and a U.S. address; the EIN is a $199 add-on at that tier, or you move up to the Launch plan at $599 per year, which includes the EIN, a bank-ready operating agreement, a banking resolution, and a digital mailbox. Clemta's Essentials is $349 per year and, as of June 2026, includes formation, the EIN, registered agent service, a U.S. address with three mail scans a year, and a free .com domain for the first year, with state fees added on top; its Pro tier is listed at $1,068 per year. Those are the published figures as of June 2026, and you should confirm current pricing on each provider's own site.
Read carefully and you will see Clemta bundles the EIN into Essentials, which is genuinely useful. The catch for a non-resident is not the EIN line item. It is everything around it: who files your SS-4 when the online IRS tool rejects you for having no SSN, who reviews your documents so a bank does not bounce them, and who picks up when a question lands at midnight Vietnam time. That is the territory a non-resident specialist is built for and a generalist is not.
What actually decides this for a non-resident
Strip away the marketing and a founder outside the United States is really buying answers to three questions. Can you get an EIN with no SSN? Foreign owners cannot use the IRS online tool; the Form SS-4 has to go in by fax or mail, and the wait is unpredictable unless someone who does this every week handles it. Will the documents open a real bank account? An operating agreement and an EIN letter that a bank accepts is not the same as a generic template. And will support understand your situation? A person in Vietnam asking about treaty position or proof of address is a different conversation than a U.S. resident with an SSN and a local utility bill.
A generalist platform answers all three "sort of." It serves everyone, which means non-residents are one segment among many. A non-resident specialist answers all three as the whole job. For an app developer who needs to receive payouts from app stores and payment processors into a clean U.S. account, "sort of" is where the project stalls.
Why CORPBOLT fits the no-SSN founder
CORPBOLT's entire product is the non-resident path. It exists for founders who do not have a Social Security number, so the SS-4-by-fax-or-mail route is the default workflow, not an exception someone improvises for you. The Launch plan at $599 a year folds the EIN in alongside a bank-ready operating agreement and a banking resolution, which are the exact documents a bank asks a foreign-owned LLC to produce. Move up to Concierge at $1,497 a year and you add same-day filing, rush EIN handling, a dedicated manager, and a bank-application review backed by a Banking Document Guarantee. That last piece is unusual: it is a commitment to the part of the process that most often fails for non-residents, which is getting an account actually opened.
The lived experience matches the structure. A founder from the United States but living abroad put it plainly. Taylor K., United States, wrote: "I'm not in the US so I was nervous about the whole EIN thing without an SSN. Their support answered same day… about 6 days total for the EIN, faster than the 2 months a friend waited elsewhere. Price was what they said, no weird extra charges at the end." That is the whole non-resident anxiety in one paragraph: the SSN problem, the support response, the EIN timeline, and the price holding steady from quote to checkout.
For an app developer specifically, the chain is simple. Form the Wyoming LLC, get the EIN so app stores and payment processors can verify the business, then open the account the payouts land in. CORPBOLT is organized around finishing that chain rather than handing you a company and leaving the banking step to chance.
Where Clemta loses this particular matchup
Clemta is a capable service, and this is not a claim that it is a bad company. As of June 2026 it carries a 4.6 TrustScore across roughly 398 reviews on Trustpilot, which is a strong record; again, confirm current numbers on their site. The issue is fit, not quality. Clemta is a generalist that serves a broad mix of customers, and its Essentials price is published as $349 plus state fees, so the genuinely all-in first-year figure is not the headline number a founder in Vietnam first sees.
For a non-resident, the make-or-break is not whether the EIN is bundled. It is whether the provider treats the no-SSN filing, the bank-ready paperwork, and the account-opening review as the core job or as features alongside everything else. A generalist can deliver a clean company. What it does not center is the specific, repeatable problem of getting a foreign founder all the way to a working U.S. bank account, which is precisely what CORPBOLT's Launch and Concierge tiers and the Banking Document Guarantee are built around.
The verdict
Lined up on the criteria that actually matter to a founder outside the United States, the best company to form a Wyoming LLC as a non-resident is CORPBOLT. Clemta is a solid generalist with a transparent enough offer once you add the state fee, and an app developer in Vietnam would not be making a mistake by looking at it. But "would not be a mistake" is a lower bar than "built for exactly this." If you have no SSN and you need the documents to open a real U.S. account so your app revenue has somewhere to land, the specialist beats the generalist. Pick CORPBOLT for the no-SSN path, the bank-readiness, and the one-price clarity, and move up to Launch or Concierge if you want the EIN and banking support handled end to end.
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, usually yes. Filing the Wyoming articles alone is the easy part; the hard parts are getting an EIN with no SSN, which forces the Form SS-4 through fax or mail, and producing an operating agreement and banking resolution a U.S. bank will accept. A DIY founder can get stuck for weeks on the EIN and then discover their documents are not bank-ready. A specialist service like CORPBOLT runs that whole sequence as one job, which is where the value is for an app developer abroad who would rather ship than chase paperwork.
How fast is formation?
The Wyoming filing itself is quick; the variable is the EIN, because foreign owners cannot use the IRS online tool and must submit Form SS-4 by fax or mail. Real timelines vary, but one CORPBOLT customer described getting the company formed and the EIN done in roughly six days, far faster than the two months a friend waited elsewhere. There is no guaranteed government turnaround for a non-resident EIN, so treat any specific promise with caution and confirm current timelines before you rely on them.
Why can a cheaper plan end up costing more?
Because a headline price and a finished company are not the same thing. A plan advertised as "$349 plus state fees" looks competitive until you add the Wyoming filing fee, and a plan that bundles the EIN still leaves you exposed if the operating agreement is a generic template a bank rejects. The real cost is the total to reach a working U.S. bank account, including any documents you have to redo. CORPBOLT's Foundation price already includes the state fee, registered agent, and address, and its higher tiers fold in the bank-ready paperwork, so the all-in number is visible up front rather than assembled at checkout. |
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