Ask HN: Next best to incorporate other than Delaware?
I wish this was more of Ask YC / VC. I have been told it is either Nevada, Wyoming and Texas. Considering Stripe Atlas dont support anything other than Delaware. Does anyone have any Pros and Cons or recommendation.
57 comments
[ 4.7 ms ] story [ 125 ms ] threadhttps://www.bbc.com/news/business-68163184
https://www.texasstandard.org/stories/tesla-reincorporation-...
Most likely, SpaceX benefits the most in TX from avoiding California’s EQA.
I've used this law firm for representation in the past, and they are excellent:
https://randazza.com/marc-j-randazza/
Not that have a good idea what this says about incorporating there. It isn't one of my core areas of expertise. This has Wyoming ranked 23, and it could be accurate, for all I know: https://wallethub.com/edu/best-states-to-start-a-business/36...
It's not just Stripe Atlas, the rest of the American venture economy (service providers, accountants, etc.) is well-lubricated around Delaware C Corps.
It was interesting to me that it was considered a bedrock of corporate jurisprudence until then.
When faced with that contradiction, I first checked my premises...
Delaware still has the most certainty, by far. You are much better off there the vast majority of the time. Delaware has a court (the court of Chancery) that is specifically geared for rapid and thorough resolution of corporate disputes, with some of the absolute best and judges (the chancellor and vice chancellors) in the country.
If you want to screw around, try incorporating in another state (maybe even one with elected, political judges!) and see how that goes when a real dispute arises.
EDIT: Some facts are too dangerous to share, because of how they make people feel.
[1] https://medium.com/@13032765d/the-chance-of-becoming-a-billi... | https://archive.today/CwENd
[2] https://medium.com/@RisingUnicorns/reality-of-95-startup-fai... | https://archive.today/NCzaX
[3] https://www.ycombinator.com/library/D0-startups-for-students
To the degree it works is because for some reason, people follow him. Is the OP worried they won't get their $40 billion payday?
I am not a lawyer or accountant.
Age old advice is that founders should put their attention on what matters for the startup to succeed. Succeeding already requires a lot of work. Avoid making things difficult where they don’t need to be.
More dangerous examples is things like inventing new PTO policies, trialing unproven HR policies (e.g. “we work 6 hour days instead of 8 hours”), and incorporating a c-corp in any state other than Delaware.
It’s a major red flag when I see companies doing things like this. It tells me the founder’s attention is scattered and not focused solely on ensuring the startup’s success, and not customer focused.
For most people, incorporation in their home state is the best choice. I had a DE company once. Currently, I have an LLC in my home state. I may in the future open a DE LLC for another project. But there is not one-size-fits all solution. But if you want to open out of state, for a start-up DE might be the best option. I vaguely remember that Wyoming is good for trusts but I am not an expert in this field.
That was before the development of the current VC funded tech startup culture, so that probably needs to be modified to say something about incorporating where the people who are giving you the money tell you to.
They still tell you Delaware because Delaware has a long tradition of protecting shareholders from corporate malfeasance.
Basically anyone who I would want to give me money or to buy the company will require that the company be registered in Delaware.
If it's just a legal entity for personal protection, and I don't expect anyone else to be involved, it's cheaper for me to just use my home state.
If you have the problem you mentioned, you're on a whole different level than the OP.
[1] https://x.com/paulg/status/1863737832818479385
[2] in the startup sphere
To re-domesticate the LLC in South Dakota (where I live now), I had to manually mail in the paperwork, which then took them several months to process.
It's possible this was pandemic-related stupidness and they've since gotten their act together, but based on my experience I can't recommend incorporating there.
You are right to avoid Delaware, after the judicial activism with Elon Musk. Elon moved to Texas, which may have been because he has a launch base there.
Wyoming does not have a lot of infrastructure, but if your business doesn't need that, it may be your best choice.
Why Stripe? This payment solution only accepts DE companies? Why?
It’s a hassle for most businesses to incorporate in a state where they don’t have any officers. Typically you have to at least hire an in-state agent, which is both additional expense and an additional failure point for particular kinds of notices that don’t always get delivered via email.