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by fertrevino 611 days ago
Me and my cofounder are non-US residents and live in Germany. If we get into YC, what would a typical / recommended way to proceed be?

We haven’t established a company in Germany yet, we want to be strategic and make what’s best to succeed.

From what I know we can do the batch with our current tourist visa, so I’d like to know more about the post batch options. Being US based or Germany based is an option for us.

Thanks in advance

6 comments

That's right, a lot of international founders participate in the batch as business visitors, whether under ESTA or a B-1 visa. The most common post-batch work authorization options are the country-specific visas (for those from Australia, Canada, Chile, Mexico, and Singapore), the O-1, and the E-2. If based abroad and only coming to the U.S. for investor meetings and the like, then you could continue as a business visitor but practically this can become a problem if traveling to the U.S. regularly; at some point CBP will push back.
There was a blogpost from someone from germany who got accepted. I looked it up for you: https://web.archive.org/web/20220604131034/https://richventu...

There is also a post on hackernews about it: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=31601638 And there is a Ask HN that could be helpful: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=31620700

Could follow this group of EU business people forming a US entity this year:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=shWe5dNqUrc

Also, attend a few free AMCHAM webinars to get the details on foreign ownership rules.

Depending on how large your project becomes, some people may just use a brokerage service to localize the Merchant on Record (MoR) like withreach.com for online retailers. However, only US domestic corporations can mitigate liability on sold goods/services etc. Keep aware of the IRS grace thresholds on sales, as even if you owe $0 in federal and state taxes... it can still become a $8k fine for forgetting to file a return in the US.

Best of luck, =3

Are you aware of the US Green Card lottery? There are very few people who apply from Germany, so you can also try that route. You have a surprisingly good chance to win it. Also, you are not forced to accept it if you win the lottery -- you can decide.
I think "surprisingly good chance" is overselling it. The reported odds for Germany are about 1%.

https://dvlottery.me/win-chances-green-card-lottery

True, however many countries have no option to apply at all (e.g. Canada).

And while the odds are low, I believe you can apply year after year. And the biggest benefit is that you basically get a green card, and skip the usual process of H1-B, to labor cert, to I-140/485, which can be a 3-5 year process.

Odds are extremely low.
You should still create a US C-Corp, ideally in Delaware.
Why should you do so? What’s the advantage or would you say it’s even necessary?
Thank you for your answers, it's super helpful