LLC Formation Cost Comparison: Delaware vs Wyoming vs Home State

“Form your LLC in Wyoming for $100 and pay no taxes!” It sounds like a dream, but for most real estate investors, it is a trap. Real estate is legally tethered to the ground it sits on. If your rental property is in California, but you form your LLC in Wyoming, you must register that Wyoming LLC in California anyway. The result? You pay filing fees and annual taxes to BOTH states. Here is the mathematical truth about where you should actually form your entity.

BMT Legal Team BMT Legal Team · 📅 Feb 2026 · ⏱️ 5 min read · LEGAL › COSTS
Wyoming
Cheap
Low Fees / High PrivacyGood
Delaware
Pro
For VC-Backed StartupsFact
Reality
Local
Rentals = Home StateRule

1. The Rule: “Doing Business”

You cannot hide a house.

Jurisdiction of Real Estate
States have the right to tax any business activity that happens on their soil.
The Law: Owning a rental property constitutes “Doing Business” in that state.
The Trap: If you form a Wyoming LLC to manage a Florida rental, Florida requires you to file for “Foreign Qualification.” This costs money and negates the benefit of the Wyoming LLC.

2. Cost Showdown (Checklist)

See the stark difference in maintaining these entities.

State Initial Filing Fee Annual Franchise Tax Best Used For
Wyoming $100 $60 Privacy / Online Biz. (Anonymous ownership allowed).
Delaware $90+ $300 Startups. Investors prefer DE Law.
California
(Example of High Cost)
$70 $800 (Min) Must Pay if doing business in CA.
Texas/Florida
(Landlord Friendly)
$300 / $125 $0 / $138 Rentals. No state income tax.

3. Timeline: The “Double Fee” Nightmare

Here is what happens when a California investor tries to get clever by forming a Wyoming LLC for a California property.

Step Action Financial Impact
Step 1
(The Idea)
Form WY LLC
Pay Wyoming $100
Step 2
(The Reality)
Register in CA
Must file “Foreign LLC” in CA ($70)
Step 3
(Annual Pain)
Double Tax
Pay WY ($60) AND CA ($800) Every Year
Planning Note
If you own properties in multiple states (e.g., one in Texas, one in Florida), the best strategy is usually to form separate LLCs in each state. A “Holding Company” in Wyoming can own them all for anonymity, but the local LLCs must still exist to hold the title.

4. Strategy: Privacy without the Hassle

You want privacy, not extra fees.

  • The Goal: Keep your name off the public record so tenants can’t look up your home address.
  • The Solution: Instead of a Wyoming LLC, simply use a Registered Agent Service in your home state.
  • How it Works: For ~$100/year, a professional service lists their address on the Secretary of State website. They receive legal mail and forward it to you. Your home address remains private.

5. Warning: The Registered Agent Cost

The hidden subscription fee.

⛔ “I’ll be my own Agent”

You can legally be your own Registered Agent, BUT:

  • Requirement: You must have a physical address (not a P.O. Box) in that state and be available during business hours.
  • The Trap: If you form an out-of-state LLC (e.g., Nevada), you cannot be your own agent because you don’t live there. You MUST hire a service ($100-$200/year). This adds to the annual carry cost.

6. Frequently Asked Questions

Can I just not register?
Dangerous. If you don’t register your foreign LLC, you generally cannot sue in that state’s courts (e.g., you can’t evict a tenant legally). Plus, you face penalties for back taxes and interest.
Is Delaware worth it for rentals?
Rarely. Delaware is built for corporations planning to IPO or raise millions from VCs. For a mom-and-pop landlord, the high franchise tax ($300+) and complexity offer no real benefit over a local LLC.