Who owns it?
Map beneficial ownership, family interests, cap table, and succession before choosing the jurisdiction or entity type.

A passport moves a person. A company holds operations. Combining them without separating ownership, management, banking, and tax creates the risk the structure was meant to reduce.
A passport moves you. A company holds what you build. In most stacks the operating entity is a separate decision from the citizenship, and it belongs to a separate specialist: OffshoreGuy handles company formation across 34 jurisdictions for Bitcoiners, and 21 CBI keeps the citizenship architecture coherent around it. One line worth stating plainly: OffshoreGuy forms entities; it does no tax work, and neither structure nor formation is a substitute for advice from your own enrolled agent or tax counsel. On payment, the ecosystem is consistent end to end. BTC, Lightning, and USDT are our payment rails. Credit cards and bank transfers also accepted as needed. Fees settle via BitSettle.
Map beneficial ownership, family interests, cap table, and succession before choosing the jurisdiction or entity type.
The place of real decision-making can matter more than the registration address. Record the operational facts honestly.
Test banking, payment, custody, customer, and counterparty requirements against the proposed structure.
Keep tax analysis with qualified counsel or an enrolled agent. Formation is not a tax service.
Choose the operating facts before the jurisdiction: customers, currencies, payment rails, owners, signatories, staff, banking, and reporting. Then compare entity types and service providers.
Citizenship can influence the available options, but it should not be used as a shortcut around substance, ownership disclosure, or tax obligations.
The settlement rail moves the fee. It does not decide the citizenship, entity, or tax position. Keep those decisions separate even when one Bitcoin-native payment layer serves the wider work.
BTC, Lightning, and USDT are our payment rails. Credit cards and bank transfers also accepted as needed. Fees settle via BitSettle.
Not automatically. A company belongs in the Stack only when it solves an operating, ownership, banking, or succession need. A travel-document objective may need no entity at all.
The facts decide. Existing operations may require the entity first; a planned relocation or ownership change may require the citizenship and residence sequence first. Map both before filing either.
Not by itself. Ownership, management, residence, controlled-foreign-company rules, permanent establishment, and domestic law can all matter. Consult a qualified tax advisor regarding your specific situation.
The exact invoice depends on the provider and engagement. For 21 CBI, BTC, Lightning, and USDT are the payment rails; credit cards and bank transfers are also accepted as needed, and fees settle via BitSettle.
One paid hour with Adam Juchniewicz, CEO. $500, or 5% less when you settle via BitSettle ($475). The amount paid credits toward professional fees on retention. No obligation to proceed beyond the Session.
Adam Juchniewicz, CEO, 21 CBI