Meet Marcus. He is 34. He runs a SaaS business doing $2M ARR out of Austin. About 60% of his net worth is in Bitcoin, most of it held long. He is paying more in US tax than he wants to, he has no passport other than his US one, and he has the uncomfortable feeling that his entire life runs on one country’s rails.
He does not need a product. He needs a plan.
Month 1. Foundation.
BitWY forms his Wyoming LLC. His SaaS revenue starts flowing through an entity with anonymous ownership and the strongest charging-order protection in the country. His personal name comes off the public record. Banking gets set up with a Bitcoin-friendly institution that does not flinch at his activity.
Month 4. Mobility.
21 CBI places him in a Caribbean CBI program that fits his timeline and due-diligence profile. Four months later, he holds a second passport. He could leave the US on 48 hours’ notice without losing legal status somewhere he can land.
Month 6 onward. Compounding.
Bitcitizen runs his first quarterly review. We restructure his ownership of the SaaS. We coordinate with his CPA on a Puerto Rico Act 60 relocation. We map a 5-year plan that assumes the US tax regime tightens twice and US banking for Bitcoin gets worse before it gets better.
Today.
Marcus has optionality he did not have a year ago. His business is protected. His family has a second passport. His tax strategy compounds. Nothing about his life is locked to a single country’s policy.