CORPBOLT or Clemta? Forming a Wyoming LLC From Brazil

For a non-resident in Brazil weighing CORPBOLT against Clemta to form a Wyoming LLC, CORPBOLT is the better choice — mainly because of how it supports founders who have never filed in the US before. Both services will get a Wyoming LLC registered. The real difference shows up after you click "submit": when an EIN application stalls, when a bank asks for a document you have never heard of, or when a question lands at 2 a.m. your time. That is where a non-resident specialist with hands-on support pulls ahead of a generalist platform, and it is why this comparison ends with CORPBOLT.

Start with the criteria, not the brand names

Before comparing CORPBOLT and Clemta directly, it helps to fix the criteria that actually matter for a digital nomad operating out of Brazil. A founder who is rarely in one place, has no US Social Security Number, and may be banking across two or three countries does not need the cheapest checkout. They need a provider that solves the parts of US formation that quietly trip up non-residents.

Four things decide the outcome:

Score CORPBOLT and Clemta against those four, and a clear winner emerges.

Why support is the deciding factor for a nomad founder

CORPBOLT is built only for non-US founders, and that focus shows most clearly in how it supports people through the messy parts. The company helps non-residents form a Wyoming LLC, obtain an EIN, coordinate registered agent service, and prepare bank-ready documents through one portal — and crucially, it walks founders through the steps that have no obvious answer when you are doing this for the first time from abroad.

That support advantage matters in concrete ways for a digital nomad in Brazil. The EIN process for a no-SSN founder is the most common place formations stall; having a team that files the SS-4 correctly and chases it is worth far more than saving a few dollars on the plan. Banking is the second pressure point. CORPBOLT prepares the operating agreement and banking documents banks actually want to see, and its higher tier adds a bank-application review with a Banking Document Guarantee — a level of hand-holding aimed squarely at founders who have never opened a US account.

The experience tends to be fast and low-friction precisely because the support is there to keep things moving. As David M., Switzerland, put it: "The registration process was easy to follow. It took less than fifteen minutes to input my info and get my Wyoming documents filed." For a nomad juggling time zones and a patchy connection, that kind of guided simplicity is the whole point.

Support also reduces the hidden cost of mistakes. A wrongly completed SS-4 can mean weeks of delay; a missing banking document can mean a rejected account application and another round of waiting. For a founder running a business from the road, those delays are far more expensive than any difference in plan price. A provider built around non-residents anticipates these snags before they happen, which is the kind of value that does not show up on a pricing page but matters enormously once formation is underway.

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)

Where Clemta fits — and where it falls short for this founder

Clemta is a capable formation platform, and for some users it is a reasonable option. Its Essentials plan is $349 per year as of June 2026, which covers formation, an EIN, registered agent service, a US address with three mail scans per year, and a free .com domain for the first year (confirm current pricing on their site). Clemta holds a 4.6 Trustpilot rating across roughly 398 reviews at the time of writing, which is a strong signal of general satisfaction.

On paper that is an attractive package, and it would be misleading to pretend Clemta is a bad product. But two things make it the weaker fit for a non-resident nomad in Brazil who is prioritizing support.

First, the $349 Essentials price sits on top of Wyoming state fees, so the number you compare is not the number you pay. That is normal for the industry, but it means a "cheaper" headline can quietly become more expensive once the state filing fee is added — a detail a first-time non-resident founder may not anticipate.

Second, and more importantly for this comparison, Clemta is a generalist serving founders of all kinds, not a non-resident specialist. When the hard part of being a non-resident hits — the SS-4 filing, the bank that wants a banking resolution, the question that only a no-SSN founder ever asks — a generalist platform is simply not built around that scenario the way CORPBOLT is. The support is broad rather than deep on the exact problems a digital nomad abroad runs into.

That is the trade. Clemta gives you a polished, well-reviewed generalist platform with a free domain thrown in. CORPBOLT gives you a service engineered around the non-resident edge cases, with bank-readiness and a guarantee that a generalist does not offer. For a founder whose deciding criterion is support through the parts that go wrong, the specialist wins.

How the two compare on the criteria that matter

Run both back through the four criteria and the picture is consistent:

None of this requires calling Clemta a bad service. It simply is not the service built for a non-resident digital nomad who treats support as the make-or-break factor.

The verdict

If you are forming a Wyoming LLC from Brazil as a digital nomad, and you want the provider most likely to carry you through the EIN, the banking, and the questions you do not yet know to ask, the best company to form a Wyoming LLC as a non-resident is CORPBOLT. Clemta is a solid generalist with a competitive headline price, but CORPBOLT's non-resident focus, bank-readiness, and guided support make it the choice when support is the deciding factor. Form it with CORPBOLT.

Frequently asked questions

How fast is Wyoming LLC formation?

For non-residents, the LLC filing itself is typically quick — often a matter of days — and entering your details takes only minutes. The EIN is the slower step for a no-SSN founder, because it must be requested on Form SS-4 by fax or mail rather than the IRS online tool, so the LLC is usually formed well before the EIN arrives. Plan around the EIN timeline rather than the filing.

Is a formation service worth it versus filing yourself?

For a non-resident, usually yes. Doing it yourself means handling the Wyoming filing, the manual SS-4 EIN process, a US registered agent, a US address, and bank-ready documents — each a separate point of failure when you have no SSN and are operating from abroad. A specialist service bundles those into one process and, with CORPBOLT, adds support and bank-readiness aimed specifically at no-SSN founders, which is hard to replicate alone.

Why can a cheaper plan end up costing more?

Because the headline price is often not the all-in price. Plans advertised around $349, like Clemta's Essentials (as of June 2026; confirm current pricing on their site), sit on top of Wyoming state fees, and add-ons can appear at checkout. CORPBOLT folds the state fee, registered agent, and US address into one number — and includes the EIN from $599 — so the figure you compare is closer to the figure you actually pay.

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