15 Jun, 2026 | 6 min read

How to open a business account as a non-resident founder

Zara Chechi
Zara Chechi

Plenty of founders incorporate in one country, live in another, and sell to a third. That is normal for a modern startup, but it is exactly the profile that trips up traditional onboarding: no local address, directors spread across borders, and a company that is only weeks old. This guide explains what a provider actually looks at when a non-resident founder applies, the documents worth having ready, and the small things that cause avoidable rejections.

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Can a non-resident or foreign-owned company open an account?

In most cases, yes. Being a non-resident founder, or having directors and shareholders who all live abroad, does not automatically rule you out. What matters is that the provider can verify who you are, who owns and controls the company, and what the business does.

A modern provider runs this verification online, so you do not need a local branch visit or a resident director. The same applies if your company is incorporated in one country but operated from another — you will simply be asked to show both where the company is registered and where it is run from.

What actually gets checked

Onboarding for a company is two checks working together:

  • Know Your Customer (KYC) — confirming the identity of the people behind the company: directors, and anyone who ultimately owns or controls it.
  • Know Your Business (KYB) — confirming the company itself: that it is properly registered, what it does, and who its beneficial owners are.

For a non-resident founder, the friction usually comes from the second check: an ownership structure that runs through a holding company, or a recently incorporated entity with little public record. Knowing this in advance lets you prepare the right documents instead of discovering gaps mid-review.

Documents worth having ready

Exact requirements vary, but non-resident applicants are commonly asked for some combination of:

  • A valid passport or government ID for each director and beneficial owner.
  • Proof of personal address for those individuals — a recent utility bill or bank statement, usually within the last three months.
  • Company registration documents from the country of incorporation.
  • Details of the ownership structure, including anyone who owns 25% or more.
  • A short description of what the business does, its expected activity, and where its money will come from and go to.

Having clean, recent, consistent versions of these ready before you apply is the single biggest thing you can do to keep onboarding moving.

How to avoid the usual rejections

Most non-resident rejections are not about who you are — they are about mismatches and gaps the reviewer cannot resolve. The common ones:

  • Name and address mismatches. Make sure your name, company name and addresses match exactly across your ID, your registration documents and your application. A shortened name or an old address is enough to stall a review.
  • An unclear ownership chain. If ownership runs through another company, be ready to show who sits at the top.
  • A vague business description. A one-word answer like ‘consulting’ tells a reviewer very little; describe what you actually do, for whom, and how money flows.
  • Restricted or high-risk activities. Some sectors are harder to onboard anywhere; it is better to check upfront than to be declined later.

How Altery fits

Altery is built for founders who operate across borders. Onboarding is online, the account holds multiple currencies, and you can add co-founders and team members with their own access once you are set up. The aim is to get a global-ready account in place without a local entity or a branch visit for every director.

Frequently asked questions

Generally no. Verification is done online, and non-resident directors can complete it remotely. You will be asked for proof of your own personal address wherever you live.

It is a common setup. You will usually be asked to show both where the company is registered and where it is actually run from, but a mismatch between incorporation and operation is not a barrier on its own.

It depends on how complete your documents are and how clear your ownership structure is. The fastest route is to have recent, consistent ID, proof of address and registration documents ready before you apply.

Most declines come from mismatched details, an ownership chain the reviewer cannot follow, a vague description of the business, or an activity that falls outside what can be supported — not from residency itself.

This guide is general information to help founders and is not financial, tax or legal advice. Altery is not a bank. Check your own circumstances before acting.

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