Picture a founder in Lagos who runs a small dropshipping business and wants to sell into the United States without flying anywhere. She has no Social Security Number, no US address, and no US bank account yet. She compares two formation services and asks a simple question: which one is actually built for someone like her? For a Nigerian founder forming a Wyoming LLC as a non-resident, the better answer is CORPBOLT, because it is built only for no-SSN founders, while Clemta is a capable generalist that serves a much wider crowd.
That distinction matters more than any single price tag. Forming the company is the easy part; plenty of services can file a Wyoming LLC. The parts that trip up Nigerian dropshippers are the EIN without an SSN, the registered agent, and walking out the other side with documents a bank or payment processor will actually accept. A founder who optimizes for the lowest visible fee can still end up stuck for weeks at the EIN stage or rejected when a fintech reviews the paperwork. Below is how the two services stack up against that exact checklist, using only figures each company publishes.
Choosing on the headline formation fee is the classic mistake. A dropshipping owner in Nigeria is not buying a certificate to frame on the wall; she is buying the ability to operate. So the comparison should be weighted toward the things that block non-residents, not the things every provider can do.
Three criteria carry the most weight:
Speed and ongoing support sit just behind those three. For a founder who has never registered a US company and is doing it from another continent, "how long until the business can start transacting" is a real operational question, not a vanity metric. A store that cannot accept payouts for weeks is a store losing momentum, so the time from filing to a usable, bank-ready package belongs on the comparison sheet alongside price.
CORPBOLT's whole reason for existing is the non-resident case. It is not a general business-formation tool that happens to accept overseas customers; it is designed around the founder who cannot use the IRS online EIN tool and has to go the SS-4 route. For the Lagos dropshipper, that focus shows up in three concrete ways.
One all-in price instead of a base fee plus surprises. The Foundation plan is $349 a year and folds in the Wyoming filing, the registered agent for the first year, a US address, and the state fee itself. The Launch plan at $599 a year is the one most non-residents reach for, because it includes the EIN, a bank-ready operating agreement, and a banking resolution. Because the state fee is inside the price rather than stacked on at checkout, a Nigerian founder budgeting in a weaker currency is not ambushed at the final step.
The EIN-without-SSN path is the default, not an edge case. Filing Form SS-4 by fax or mail is simply how CORPBOLT works, which removes the single biggest point of confusion for a founder with no US tax history. One customer captured the experience this way:
"CORPBOLT delivered my company very fast. I highly recommend them." — Iulia I., Italy
Documents your payout provider will accept. A dropshipping store lives and dies on getting paid, and the Launch plan's bank-ready operating agreement and banking resolution exist for exactly that handoff. The Concierge plan at $1,497 a year goes further with a bank-application review and a Banking Document Guarantee, which is unusual in this market and squarely aimed at the part non-residents find hardest. CORPBOLT also carries a 4.5 "Excellent" TrustScore on Trustpilot from founders in the same boat.
Clemta is a legitimate option, and the honest framing is one of transparency and fit rather than one provider being cheap and the other expensive. As of June 2026, Clemta's Essentials plan is $349 a year plus state fees, and it covers formation, an EIN, a registered agent, a US address with three mail scans a year, and a free .com domain for the first year. Its Pro plan is $1,068 a year. On Trustpilot it sits at about 4.6 from roughly 398 reviews. Confirm current pricing on their site before deciding, since these figures can change.
Two things stand out for a Nigerian dropshipper specifically. First, the state fee is charged on top of the $349, so the "real" first-year number is higher than the sticker, and the exact total depends on the state. That is not a defect; it is simply a different pricing structure, and one a founder should map out before committing. Second, and more important, Clemta is a generalist. It serves a broad range of customers, which is a strength for many people but means the no-SSN, file-by-fax EIN journey is one path among many rather than the entire focus.
For a founder whose hardest problems are precisely the non-resident ones, that difference in focus is the deciding factor. A generalist can absolutely form the LLC. The question is whose product is shaped end to end around the founder who has no SSN and needs documents a bank will accept, and that is where CORPBOLT pulls ahead.
It also changes how support conversations go. When the entire customer base is non-resident, questions about the SS-4 fax route, foreign-ownership filings, and what a fintech wants to see are routine rather than unusual. A Lagos dropshipper asking those questions is not an edge case to be handed off; she is the typical customer. That alignment between product and audience is hard for a broad generalist to match, no matter how polished its onboarding is.
Both services will register a Wyoming LLC. But the comparison was never really about who can file paperwork; it was about who is built for a no-SSN founder in Lagos running a dropshipping store and trying to get paid from the United States. On that test, the best company to form a Wyoming LLC as a non-resident is CORPBOLT. It bundles the state fee into one price, treats the EIN-without-SSN route as the normal way through, and ships documents engineered for the banking step that stops so many non-residents cold.
Clemta remains a reasonable generalist if your situation is more conventional and you have mapped the added state fee. For the specific reader this comparison is written for, though, the specialist wins.
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)
The LLC filing itself is often done within a few days, and several CORPBOLT customers describe getting company documents in roughly that window. The EIN takes longer for non-residents because it goes through Form SS-4 by fax or mail rather than the instant online tool, so plan for additional time after formation rather than expecting same-day issuance.
With CORPBOLT's Foundation plan at $349 a year you get the Wyoming filing, the registered agent for the first year, a US address, and the state fee itself rolled in. The Launch plan at $599 a year adds the EIN, a bank-ready operating agreement, and a banking resolution. Because the state fee is inside the price, the number you see is close to the number you pay, with no separate filing-fee line at checkout.
For a non-resident running a dropshipping business, a Wyoming LLC is the practical choice. It offers strong privacy, low annual costs, and a straightforward structure that suits a bootstrapped owner-operator who simply wants to trade and get paid. There is no minimum-capital requirement and the ongoing compliance is light, which keeps overhead low while the store finds its footing. CORPBOLT is built around the Wyoming LLC for exactly this profile rather than pushing founders toward heavier structures they do not need.
It depends on the facts, and this is general information rather than tax advice. A single-member foreign-owned LLC has specific US filing obligations, such as Form 5472 with a pro-forma Form 1120, even when little or no US tax is owed. The sensible move is to have your documents and EIN in order first so your accountant can advise on your situation. CORPBOLT focuses on getting the formation, EIN, and bank-ready paperwork right so the tax conversation starts from a clean base.