How Founders in Taiwan Can Open a Mercury Account for a U.S. Business
Mar 02, 2026Arnold L.
How Founders in Taiwan Can Open a Mercury Account for a U.S. Business
If you are based in Taiwan and want a modern U.S. business banking experience, Mercury can be a practical option for managing dollar payments, card spending, and online financial operations. The key point is simple: Mercury is designed for U.S.-registered companies, so the path to opening an account starts with forming the right U.S. business entity and preparing the documents Mercury expects during review.
For founders in Taiwan, that often means setting up a U.S. LLC or corporation first, then applying for Mercury once the company is active and ready for banking. Zenind helps founders take that first step by streamlining U.S. company formation, registered agent service, EIN support, and ongoing compliance tasks that often sit between an idea and a bank-ready business.
What Mercury Is and Why Founders in Taiwan Consider It
Mercury is a fintech platform built for business banking workflows. Many international founders choose it because the platform is digital-first, easy to manage remotely, and well suited for cross-border teams that invoice U.S. customers or pay U.S. vendors.
Founders in Taiwan commonly look at Mercury for reasons such as:
- Receiving payments from U.S. customers in USD
- Paying contractors, software tools, and suppliers online
- Separating business and personal finances
- Managing cards, transfers, and account activity remotely
- Creating a banking setup that works well with U.S. incorporation
The practical advantage is not just convenience. A U.S. business entity with a clean banking setup can also make your company look more organized when you work with clients, processors, marketplaces, and service providers.
The Core Requirement: A U.S.-Registered Business
Before you can open a Mercury account, your business must be formed and registered in the United States or a U.S. territory. That is the first filter most Taiwan-based founders need to pass.
In practice, this means you generally need:
- A U.S. LLC or corporation
- A valid Employer Identification Number, or EIN
- A real business description
- Business ownership information for any required beneficial owners
- A physical business address that meets Mercury’s requirements
- Supportive company documents, depending on your entity type
If you do not already have a U.S. company, start there. Zenind can help founders form a U.S. business remotely, which is often the most important step before a Mercury application can move forward.
Step-by-Step: How to Open a Mercury Account from Taiwan
1. Form a U.S. company
Choose the entity structure that fits your business model. Many founders start with an LLC because it is flexible and easier to manage. Others prefer a corporation when planning to raise investment or build a more traditional startup structure.
When you form the company, make sure you have the basic records Mercury will expect later, including:
- Legal company name
- State of formation
- Formation documents
- Ownership details
- Operating agreement or bylaws
Zenind can help with these formation steps and provide the registered agent support many states require.
2. Get an EIN
An EIN is the company’s federal tax ID. It is commonly needed for banking, tax reporting, hiring, and vendor setup.
Without an EIN, your application may stall or require additional follow-up. Having the EIN ready before applying makes the process smoother and helps your company look more complete.
3. Prepare a legitimate business address
Mercury requires a physical address tied to your business operations. A registered agent address is usually not enough. A P.O. box is also not a substitute.
The address can be commercial or residential in some cases, but it must reflect an actual place where the business operates or maintains a real presence.
4. Gather ownership and business details
Mercury will ask for information about the company and its owners. Be ready to explain:
- What your business does
- Who owns and controls the company
- Where the company operates
- Where revenue comes from
- How funds will move through the account
If any individual owns 25% or more of the company, that person may need to be disclosed as a beneficial owner.
5. Submit the application online
Mercury’s application is digital, which is convenient for founders in Taiwan. You will typically upload documents, answer business questions, and wait for review.
Accuracy matters. Inconsistencies between your formation documents, EIN records, address, and application answers can slow approval or trigger additional verification.
6. Respond quickly to follow-up requests
If Mercury requests more information, respond promptly and clearly. Common follow-up requests can include:
- Formation documents
- Proof of ownership
- A more detailed business description
- Additional identity verification
- Clarification on expected transactions or source of funds
Fast, consistent responses usually help keep the process moving.
Documents You Should Have Ready
While requirements can vary, a strong application package often includes:
- Articles of organization or incorporation
- EIN confirmation letter
- Operating agreement or bylaws
- Passport or government-issued ID for owners
- Proof of business activity, if requested
- Website, pitch deck, invoices, or contracts for operating businesses
If your company is new, you may not yet have invoices or revenue history. In that case, be prepared to explain your business model clearly and show that the company is real, active, and intended for legitimate use.
Common Reasons Applications Get Delayed
A Mercury account application from Taiwan is usually straightforward when the business is properly formed, but problems often come from avoidable mistakes.
Common issues include:
- Applying before forming the U.S. entity
- Missing EIN documentation
- Using a registered agent address as the business address
- Inconsistent ownership information
- Unclear business descriptions
- Applying for restricted business categories
- Failing to explain real U.S. operations or planned U.S. activity
The best way to avoid delay is to treat the Mercury application as the second step, not the first. Build the company properly, then apply with complete records.
How Zenind Helps Founders in Taiwan
For many Taiwan-based founders, the hardest part is not the bank application itself. The real challenge is getting the company ready for banking.
Zenind helps at the formation stage by supporting:
- U.S. LLC and corporation formation
- Registered agent service in all 50 states and the District of Columbia
- EIN support
- Compliance services
- Formation documents needed for banking readiness
That matters because a strong Mercury application starts with a clean, organized company structure. If your business is already set up correctly, you spend less time untangling paperwork and more time operating the business.
What Types of Businesses Tend to Fit Mercury Better
Mercury is generally better suited for digital-first, software-driven, service-based, and e-commerce businesses than for heavily regulated or cash-intensive industries.
Examples of businesses that often fit well include:
- SaaS companies
- Agencies and consultants
- E-commerce brands
- Marketplaces
- Remote service businesses
- Venture-backed startups
Mercury does not support every business type. Some industries may be restricted or require additional review, so it is always smart to check current eligibility before you invest time in the application.
Best Practices for Founders in Taiwan
If you want the smoothest path to opening a Mercury account, follow these best practices:
- Form the U.S. company before applying
- Keep all company names and addresses consistent
- Get the EIN early
- Use a real operating address, not a mailbox service
- Prepare a clear business summary
- Disclose ownership accurately
- Be ready to explain why the company needs a U.S. account
These steps do not guarantee approval, but they improve the quality of your application and reduce unnecessary delays.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a founder living in Taiwan open a Mercury account?
Yes, if the founder is applying on behalf of a U.S.-registered company that meets Mercury’s eligibility requirements.
Do I need to travel to the U.S.?
Not necessarily. Mercury’s application process is online, which is one reason international founders often consider it.
Do I need a U.S. company first?
Yes. A U.S.-registered business is the starting point.
Can Zenind help with the setup?
Yes. Zenind can help with company formation, registered agent service, EIN support, and compliance needs that often come before a banking application.
Final Takeaway
Opening a Mercury account from Taiwan is possible, but the real requirement is not your location alone. The deciding factor is whether your U.S. business is properly formed, documented, and ready for review.
If you start with the right entity, gather your records, and present a clear business profile, the application process becomes much more manageable. For many founders, Zenind is the practical place to begin because it helps turn a business idea into a U.S.-ready company that can move on to banking.
No questions available. Please check back later.