How to Open a Stripe Account in Peru: A Practical Guide for Founders Using a US Company

Dec 21, 2025Arnold L.

How to Open a Stripe Account in Peru: A Practical Guide for Founders Using a US Company

If you are based in Peru and want to accept online payments with Stripe, the first thing to know is simple: Stripe does not currently list Peru as a supported business country/region for opening a standard Stripe account.

That does not mean Peruvian founders are blocked from using Stripe entirely. It means the compliant path usually starts with creating a business structure in a country where Stripe is supported, then preparing the company, banking, tax, and verification details Stripe requires.

For many founders, that means forming a US LLC or corporation, getting the right tax and banking setup, and then applying for Stripe under that entity. Zenind helps founders do exactly that by making US company formation and compliance more straightforward.

This guide explains the practical path, the documents you will need, the most common mistakes to avoid, and how to set up the business foundation Stripe expects.

Can You Open a Stripe Account in Peru?

Not directly, in the usual self-serve sense.

Stripe’s global availability page lists the countries and regions where Stripe is supported for business accounts. Peru is not currently on that list. Stripe also states that if your business is outside a supported country or region, you generally need a supported entity and a compliant business setup before you can open an account.

For a founder in Peru, the realistic question is not “Can I open Stripe with a Peruvian business today?” but rather:

  • Can I create a business in a supported country?
  • Can I meet Stripe’s verification requirements for that business?
  • Can I keep the setup consistent with tax, banking, and legal rules?

If the answer is yes, Stripe can often become available through that structure.

Why Peruvian Founders Choose a US Company for Stripe

Many founders in Peru use a US entity because it can unlock access to payment infrastructure that is harder to obtain locally.

A US company can help when you want to:

  • Sell to customers in the United States and other global markets
  • Access a payment processor with broad ecommerce and subscription support
  • Build a business with cleaner banking, invoicing, and bookkeeping workflows
  • Create a structure that investors, marketplaces, and vendors understand easily

For digital businesses, SaaS startups, agencies, online stores, and service exporters, a US LLC is often the most practical starting point.

What Stripe Usually Requires

Stripe’s exact review process depends on the country and business type, but the core requirements are consistent. You should expect to prepare:

  • A legal entity in a supported country
  • A tax identification number for that entity
  • A physical business address, not a PO box
  • A phone number
  • A government-issued ID for the owner or beneficial owner
  • A working website that clearly explains what you sell
  • A bank account in the same country or in a permitted payout setup

Stripe may also ask for additional verification if your business model involves higher risk, international sales, subscriptions, digital goods, or faster payout patterns.

Step 1: Form a Business in a Supported Jurisdiction

For most founders in Peru, the best first step is forming a US LLC or, in some cases, a corporation.

A US LLC is popular because it is:

  • Fast to form
  • Flexible for single-founder businesses
  • Easy to use for service-based and ecommerce operations
  • Familiar to many payment processors and banks

The exact structure depends on your goals. A corporation can make sense for venture-backed startups or more complex ownership arrangements. Zenind can help you form the right US entity and keep the filing process organized.

Step 2: Get an EIN and Organize Your Records

Once your company is formed, you usually need an Employer Identification Number, or EIN, from the IRS.

An EIN is important because it is commonly used for:

  • Banking
  • Tax reporting
  • Vendor onboarding
  • Payment processor verification

Keep your formation documents, ownership information, and business purpose clear and consistent. Inconsistencies between your company name, website, bank account, and application details are one of the fastest ways to trigger delays.

Step 3: Open a Business Bank Account

Stripe needs to pay out to a real business bank account that matches your company structure.

When you choose a bank or fintech provider, check that it supports:

  • Your entity type
  • Your company’s country of formation
  • The payout currency you need
  • International transfers if you operate from Peru

Avoid using a personal account or a bank setup that does not match your legal entity. Stripe reviews payout details carefully, and mismatched records can create verification issues or payout failures.

Step 4: Build a Real Website Before Applying

Stripe wants to see that you run a legitimate business.

Before applying, make sure your website includes:

  • Your business name
  • What you sell
  • Product or service descriptions
  • Pricing or a clear explanation of how pricing works
  • Refund, shipping, privacy, and terms pages where relevant
  • Contact information
  • A professional design that looks active and credible

A basic landing page with no details is often not enough. The more transparent your website is, the easier it is for Stripe to understand your business.

Step 5: Apply for Stripe Under the Correct Entity

When everything is ready, create the Stripe account using the information that matches your company formation and banking setup.

Be consistent with:

  • Legal business name
  • Ownership details
  • Business address
  • Website domain
  • Bank account information
  • Industry description

Do not try to force a Peruvian business profile into a country Stripe does not support. If you formed a US LLC, apply as the US entity and keep the records aligned with that structure.

Step 6: Verify Your Identity and Business Details

Stripe may request identity checks for the owner, business verification documents, or additional information about your products.

Prepare to provide:

  • Passport or national ID
  • Articles of organization or incorporation
  • EIN confirmation or tax documentation
  • Ownership records
  • Proof of address if requested
  • Supporting documents for your website or revenue model

If Stripe asks follow-up questions, answer clearly and consistently. Short, precise documentation usually works better than over-explaining.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Many founders run into avoidable problems. The most common ones are:

  • Applying with a country Stripe does not support
  • Using a company name that does not match formation documents
  • Listing a bank account that does not belong to the entity
  • Launching a website that does not clearly describe the business
  • Submitting incomplete or inconsistent owner information
  • Trying to hide the real operating location or ownership structure

Stripe compliance checks are designed to protect the platform and its users. A clean setup is more important than rushing the application.

Tax and Compliance Considerations for Peruvian Founders

Opening a Stripe account is only part of the picture. You also need to think about tax and compliance in both the country where your company is formed and Peru, where you operate.

Depending on your business model, you may need to consider:

  • Where income is recognized
  • Whether your company creates tax obligations in Peru
  • How to handle VAT, sales tax, or digital service taxes
  • Whether you need bookkeeping for both US and local reporting
  • How owner distributions, salaries, or contractor payments should be documented

This is one reason many founders work with both formation support and professional tax guidance. Zenind can help with the company formation and ongoing compliance foundation, but you should still coordinate with a qualified tax advisor for your specific structure.

Best Business Types for Stripe From Peru

Stripe is often a strong fit for businesses such as:

  • SaaS companies
  • Digital agencies
  • Software products
  • Ecommerce brands
  • Marketplaces
  • Subscription services
  • Online education and digital content businesses

These models usually work well because they are easy to explain, easy to document, and naturally aligned with Stripe’s payment tools.

If your business is unusual, regulated, or high risk, review the category carefully before applying.

How Zenind Helps

Zenind is built for founders who want a practical path to forming and maintaining a US company.

If you are in Peru and want to use Stripe, Zenind can help you:

  • Form a US LLC or corporation
  • Keep formation documents organized
  • Stay on top of compliance filings
  • Build the company structure needed for banking and payment onboarding
  • Move from idea to operating business with less administrative friction

That foundation matters. Stripe is much easier to set up when the company behind it is properly formed and maintained.

Final Checklist Before You Apply

Before you submit your Stripe application, confirm that you have:

  • A supported business entity
  • An EIN or equivalent tax ID
  • A business bank account
  • A live website with clear business information
  • Matching legal and ownership records
  • Identity documents ready for verification
  • A tax plan for both US and Peru obligations

If you can check all of those boxes, your chances of a smooth approval are much higher.

Conclusion

If you are in Peru, the path to Stripe usually starts with a compliant business structure in a supported country, not with a direct local signup. For many founders, a US LLC is the cleanest route.

Once your company, bank account, website, and documentation are aligned, Stripe becomes much easier to access and use for international growth. With the right setup from the beginning, you can focus on selling, collecting payments, and scaling your business instead of fighting onboarding problems.

Disclaimer: The content presented in this article is for informational purposes only and is not intended as legal, tax, or professional advice. While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy and completeness of the information provided, Zenind and its authors accept no responsibility or liability for any errors or omissions. Readers should consult with appropriate legal or professional advisors before making any decisions or taking any actions based on the information contained in this article. Any reliance on the information provided herein is at the reader's own risk.

This article is available in English (United States) .

Zenind provides an easy-to-use and affordable online platform for you to incorporate your company in the United States. Join us today and get started with your new business venture.

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