Side-by-side comparison for Alaska owners considering Wyoming.
Cost comparison
Wyoming: $100 state filing + $60/yr Wyoming annual report = $160 year-one, $60/yr after. Alaska: $250 state filing + $100/yr annual report = $350 year-one, $100/yr after. If you form in Wyoming AND operate in Alaska, add foreign-LLC qualification (~$250 initial + ongoing Alaska fees) — TWO sets of compliance.
Asset protection
Wyoming: charging-order designated as the SOLE remedy against an LLC member by statute, including for single-member LLCs. Deep case-law track record. Alaska: standard charging-order protection under the state LLC statute; SMLLC case law less developed.
Privacy / anonymity
Wyoming: no member or manager disclosure on Articles of Organization. Only the Registered Agent appears on the public record. Alaska: requires manager/member disclosure on the Articles or annual report (varies by state).
Foreign-LLC overhead
If you form in Wyoming but actually operate in Alaska, you must register the Wyoming LLC as a foreign LLC in Alaska. That means ANOTHER $250 Alaska state fee + ongoing Alaska compliance. Your savings on Wyoming's low fees usually evaporate in Alaska's foreign-LLC costs.
When Wyoming wins
You want maximum public-record privacy. You want the strongest possible charging-order asset protection. You are forming a HOLDING entity that has no operations anywhere (so no foreign-LLC overhead). You are a real estate investor using Wyoming as the named member of Alaska operating LLCs to keep your name off the Alaska public deed record.
When Alaska wins
You actually operate a business in Alaska (employees, lease, customers physically there). Forming in Alaska avoids the dual-state cost. For most operating businesses, forming in your home state is the right answer despite Wyoming's perks.
A clean handoff, in 5 steps.
Define your goal
Privacy, asset protection, lower fees, all of the above? The right answer depends entirely on what you are optimizing for.
Identify where you actually operate
If you have employees, a lease, or customers physically in Alaska, you do business in Alaska for foreign-LLC purposes. You cannot avoid Alaska registration by forming in Wyoming.
Run the dual-state math
Wyoming formation ($100 + $60/yr) + Alaska foreign LLC qualification (typical $250 fee + ongoing Alaska compliance) = TWO sets of state filings and fees. Compare to single Alaska formation (${state_fee} + 100/yr ongoing).
Consider the holding-company workaround
Form a Wyoming holding LLC, then form a Alaska operating LLC and name the Wyoming holding LLC as the sole member. The Alaska public record shows the Wyoming LLC, not your name. Best of both worlds for asset-protection + operations.
Pick and form
If Wyoming: we form your WY LLC + Wyoming Registered Agent. If Alaska: we form your Alaska LLC. Either way our service fee is $0; state fees pass through.
Formation is free. Everything else is optional.
We do not charge a service fee to form your LLC or Corporation. State filing fees still apply and pass through at cost. Add the Compliance Bundle to handle the year-one filings everyone needs.
- LLC or Corporation formation (any state)
- EIN application with the IRS
- Articles of Organization or Incorporation drafted and filed
- Free BOS dashboard for ongoing visibility
- Filing receipts to your document vault
- Everything in Free Formation (no add-on fee)
- Registered Agent service in your state (1 entity)
- Annual Report AutoFile, filed every year on time
- Certificate of Good Standing (1 included per year)
- 1 Amendment included per year (address, member, name)
- Operating Agreement (LLC) or Bylaws (Corp)
- Deadline monitoring across all your filings
Common questions.
Should I form my LLC in Wyoming or Alaska?
Form in Alaska if you actually operate there (employees, lease, customers in Alaska). Form in Wyoming if you specifically want anonymity, maximum asset protection, or are setting up a pure holding entity with no operations anywhere.
Is Wyoming really cheaper than Alaska?
On Wyoming-only formation, yes: $100 + $60/yr is below most states. But if you operate in Alaska, you ALSO have to register as a foreign LLC in Alaska (~$250 fee + ongoing Alaska compliance). Two sets of costs.
Can I form in Wyoming and avoid Alaska state income tax?
No, unless you genuinely have no nexus in Alaska. If you live in Alaska and operate from Alaska, you owe Alaska state income tax on your share of LLC income regardless of where the LLC is formed. The IRS and state tax authorities tax based on where you live and operate, not where the entity is registered.
What if my Alaska LLC just sits and holds assets — does Wyoming still help?
If the LLC truly has no operations in Alaska (just owns securities, IP, or holds title to property elsewhere), forming in Wyoming and skipping Alaska foreign-LLC registration is reasonable. Get tax counsel to confirm your nexus position.
Is Wyoming asset protection actually stronger than Alaska?
Yes, by statute and case law. Wyoming designates charging order as the SOLE remedy against an LLC member, including for single-member LLCs — a level of protection only ~4 states match (NM, NV, DE, WY). Most other states honor charging orders but with less aggressive single-member protection.
Can I move my existing Alaska LLC to Wyoming?
Yes via domestication (where Alaska allows outbound domestication) or merger (always available). See our domesticate-llc and redomesticate-to-delaware guides; same patterns apply for Wyoming.
Does Wyoming have anonymous LLC formation?
Yes. Wyoming does not require member or manager disclosure on the Articles of Organization. Only the Registered Agent appears on the public record. This is the main privacy advantage Wyoming has over most states.
What is the holding-company workaround?
Form a Wyoming holding LLC (no operations, just owns equity). Form a Alaska operating LLC for your actual business. Name the Wyoming LLC as the sole member of the Alaska LLC. The Alaska public record then shows the Wyoming LLC as the member, not your individual name. You get Alaska operational legitimacy + Wyoming privacy.
How much will the dual-state structure cost annually?
Wyoming: $60/yr Wyoming annual report + $99/yr Wyoming Registered Agent. Alaska: $100/yr annual report + $99/yr Alaska Registered Agent + Alaska foreign-LLC compliance. Typical total: $300-$500/yr ongoing across both states.
Where to next?
Every filing connects into your File.Business operating system. Pick where to go from here — we keep the rest tracked.