arjawn's comments

arjawn | 1 year ago | on: Bench accounting services shutting down

Hey, Arjun here, CEO of doola (Business-in-a-Box for LLCs) (YC S20)

If you are a solopreneur or run an Ecom business and are looking for support with dedicated bookkeeping (including a human bookkeeper), check out https://www.doola.com/bookkeeping/

Happy to support anyone looking for help with bookkeeping + business tax filings for their business going into the new year (we support Non-US tax filings as well if you are a Non-US founder)

arjawn | 3 years ago | on: Show HN: Get a US Company and US Bank Account. Remotely. No SSN Required

Hey! We're beginning to onboard customers, it's not completely "self-serve" yet and even in future, we will have to see if we can bank certain types of companies (ie we can only do LLCs, C Corps, DAO LLCs, no sole props / trusts) and we can't serve money service businesses, adult entertainment, gambling etc!

arjawn | 4 years ago | on: Ask HN: Strategies to land fully remote $250k+ job

Thanks Jack You are 100% correct, people don't really want an LLC, they want a way to transact globally in the US dollar and to do that they need a US bank account + US payments.

We work with many different banking and payment partners (https://www.doola.com/rewards) and not only help folks go from 0 -> bank account but also keep the LLC compliant in the background (annual compliance, IRS tax filings, and more!)

arjawn | 4 years ago | on: Ask HN: Strategies to land fully remote $250k+ job

Hi! Arjun here from doola. This is spot on, we have worked with 1000s of customers and we believe we're experts BUT that doesn't justify not having enough value in our offering and we are always on the lookout / prowl to add additional services/products to our suite to truly provide a "one-stop-shop" offering!

arjawn | 4 years ago | on: Ask HN: Strategies to land fully remote $250k+ job

Hey! Responded to steves comment above with more color on what is included in our plan (tldr we do include IRS tax filing + annual compliance and more) but it is again very valuable for us to see that we are not messaging this clearly enough on our pricing page!

arjawn | 4 years ago | on: Ask HN: Strategies to land fully remote $250k+ job

Hey steve, arjun here from doola, this is really valuable feedback because *we do your taxes (form 5472/1120) AND your annual compliance as part of our plan! Our messaging / copy clearly doesn't indicate this / message this properly so we are going to implement a fix asap that improves this.

As to justifying the cost for our plan, if you factor in the cost of having a lawyer/CPA do your IRS filings (there can be heavy fines up to $25K for not filing or incorrectly filing form 5472 https://www.doola.com/blog/filing-requirements-for-foreign-o...) and certain CPAs can charge well upwards of $1000 for this filing alone + your annual report with the state + registered agent, US address, our entire perks and rewards database (https://www.doola.com/rewards), and access to us on a monthly bases for free tax consultations, LLC amendments etc, we've heard there is lots of value BUT we are always on the lookout to add more and as a little sneak peek, stay tuned for some bookkeeping, payroll + banking stuff we have in the works (note we can help with all three of these things now but we do it through partners, we have some ideas to more tightly integrate / embed this in to our offering to provide even more value and a better customer experience).

arjawn | 4 years ago | on: Ask HN: Strategies to land fully remote $250k+ job

Hey biztos, arjun here from doola, you're 100% correct here. A common mistake people make is form an LLC in a state that they don't live in. They then have to "foreign qualify" in the state they "do business in" = the state they live in. The definition of "do business in" is essentially you have a physical presence there = you live and work there, have a physical office there, W2 employees etc.

The best advice to "what state should I form my LLC in?" is: - IF you live in the US: form in the state you live in (to avoid the foreign qualification in another state). - IF you don't live in the US: you can choose any state. The most popular states we see at doola are Delaware and Wyoming but Wyoming is the most popular due to the lower ongoing annual fees ($50 to WY vs $300 to DE) and Wyoming has demonstrated it's willingness to innovate when it comes to regulation (like the DAO LLC legislation passed on 7/1/21.)

For more on DAOs check out this blog post: https://www.doola.com/blog/what-is-a-dao-llc-your-complete-g...)

And for a complete answer to "Best state to form an LLC in" check out this blog post: https://www.doola.com/blog/what-is-the-best-state-to-form-my...

arjawn | 4 years ago | on: Why do so many companies incorporate in Delaware?

Great q, I can see if a CPA in my network has a good answer to this (feel free to shoot me an email, link in bio, with more context as well)

And yes we can help with these filings but the circumstance above where a previous filing wasn't completed is an interesting case so will have to see what the best option is give that!

arjawn | 4 years ago | on: Why do so many companies incorporate in Delaware?

California actually started to waive this fee in year 1. "As of June 2020, the $800 franchise tax fee has been waived in the first year in California."

However even with this fee waived it still makes A TON OF SENSE to file your LLC in the beginning of the year vs the end (OR do a delayed effective filing https://www.startpack.io/blog/what-is-an-llc-delayed-effecti...)

Otherwise, you end up paying the annual fees twice in ~ 1 year.

Here's an example before CA started to waive this fee of how brutal this could be in CA for LLC owners:

California has an annual franchise fee tax of $800. This fee is due every calendar year, not every 12 months.

Calendar Year: January - December

Every 12 Months: 12 months from Today

So this means if you were to start an LLC that was "born" or "officially created" on December 31st, 2020, you would be responsible for paying the full $800 franchise tax fee for the year of 2020!

Fast forward to January 1st, 2022, one year and one day later, even though essentially only one year has passed by, instead of owing $800 to the state of California... you would owe $1600!

To make things worse, the first annual franchise tax fee payment is due within the first 3-4 months from when your LLC is formed, and from then on, due by April 15th each year. So if you were to create a California LLC that went in to existence on December 31st, 2020, you would have to pay $1600 in the first 5 months!

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