You’ve spent years accumulating digital assets. Maybe you got in early on Bitcoin, or you saw the potential in XRP before the rest of the market caught on. Now you’re sitting on a portfolio that represents real wealth. And here’s the uncomfortable question nobody wants to ask: what happens to those assets if you get sued?
A car accident. A business dispute. A slip-and-fall on your property. These things happen to people every single day. If your crypto sits in a wallet tied to your personal name, a judgment creditor can come after it just like they’d come after your house or your bank account. That’s not fear-mongering. That’s just how the law works.
Which brings us to Wyoming.
The State That Actually Wants Your Crypto Business
Wyoming wasn’t always the blockchain capital of America. That story starts around 2015 when Caitlin Long, a Wall Street veteran with 22 years under her belt, tried to donate Bitcoin to her alma mater, the University of Wyoming. The legal roadblocks she encountered sparked something. She teamed up with state legislators like Representative Tyler Lindholm, and together they built what would become the most progressive crypto regulatory framework in the country.
The Wyoming Blockchain Task Force emerged from that collaboration. Between 2018 and 2019 alone, Wyoming passed 13 blockchain-enabling laws. The state created Special Purpose Depository Institutions (SPDIs) for blockchain banking. It exempted cryptocurrencies from property taxes. It recognized digital assets as property under the Uniform Commercial Code.
No other state comes close. Texas and Florida get mentioned in crypto circles, but they lack the statutory infrastructure that Wyoming built. Delaware has its corporate advantages, but Delaware also charges $300 in annual taxes and doesn’t have Wyoming’s digital asset-specific protections.
Charging Order Protection: The Real Reason Wyoming Matters
Here’s where things get interesting from a legal strategy perspective.
Wyoming provides what attorneys call “sole remedy” charging order protection for single-member LLCs. To understand why this matters, picture a scenario. Someone wins a lawsuit against you personally, and they now hold a judgment for $500,000. In most states, that creditor could potentially force the liquidation of your LLC assets to satisfy the debt. They could seize control of the company. They could compel distributions.
Not in Wyoming.
Under Wyoming law, a creditor who wins a judgment against you personally can only obtain a charging order against your LLC interest. That’s it. The charging order acts as a lien on distributions. The creditor sits there waiting for the LLC to pay out money. If no distributions happen, the creditor gets nothing. Meanwhile, the assets inside the LLC remain untouched. The creditor cannot force a sale, cannot seize control, and cannot liquidate the company.
This makes pursuing a judgment against someone who holds assets inside a properly structured Wyoming LLC deeply unattractive for creditors and their attorneys. Why spend money litigating when the pot of gold at the end might be empty?
For digital assets specifically, this protection carries extra weight. Crypto is volatile. A creditor holding a charging order against your LLC would need to wait for distributions that might never come, while watching the underlying asset values swing wildly. Most creditors don’t have that patience. Most contingency-fee attorneys won’t take that case.
“Most people don’t realize that holding crypto in their personal name is like leaving cash on the kitchen table with the front door unlocked. A Wyoming LLC with charging order protection changes everything, because creditors can’t touch what they can’t reach.”
— Jake Claver, CEO, Digital Ascension Group
Privacy and Anonymity: Keeping Your Name Off the Radar
Wyoming LLCs offer another layer of protection that matters more than many people realize: privacy.
When someone files an LLC in Wyoming through a professional service, the organizer’s name appears on public records rather than the owner’s. Wyoming does not require an annual list of members or managers to be disclosed publicly. This stands in contrast to Delaware or Nevada, which often require more disclosure than people expect.
For digital asset holders, this anonymity matters. Crypto wealth attracts attention. It attracts lawsuits. It attracts people looking for targets. Having your name show up in a public database as the owner of an LLC holding significant digital assets is like painting a target on your back.
Using a nominee manager adds another layer of separation. The family name stays out of searchable databases entirely. The IRS and courts can still subpoena records when legally required, of course. This isn’t about hiding from legitimate legal process. But it does mean that someone doing casual research won’t find your name connected to your digital asset holdings.
That protection against identity theft, doxxing, and targeted lawsuits has real value. Especially as crypto holdings become more significant.
The Holding Company Structure: Simple but Effective
The structure itself is straightforward. A Wyoming LLC acts as a holding company for alternative investments, with digital assets as the primary focus. The LLC owns the hard wallet. The individual owns the LLC. The chain of ownership creates separation between personal liability and the assets themselves.
This differs from a trading LLC. A trading company treats activity as ordinary business income, taxed at regular rates without long-term capital gains benefits. A holding company preserves those benefits. For someone planning to hold digital assets for years, that distinction means real money.
The holding company structure also simplifies estate planning considerably. Instead of dealing with the complexity of transferring individual wallet addresses to heirs, the family transfers membership interest in the LLC. When combined with a revocable living trust holding that membership interest, assets pass to beneficiaries without probate, without public court proceedings, and without the delays that come with traditional estate administration.
From a tax reporting standpoint, a single-member LLC is treated as a disregarded entity. Income flows through to the owner’s personal tax return. No complicated partnership filings. No K-1 forms to track. The simplicity matters when you’re already dealing with the complexity of tracking crypto transactions.
What About Registration Requirements?
A common question: if you live in California or New York or Florida, do you need to register your Wyoming LLC in your home state?
The answer depends on “nexus,” which means having physical ties to a state. A physical office, employees, inventory storage, or sales exceeding certain thresholds can all create nexus. But for a digital asset holding company with no physical operations, nexus typically doesn’t apply. The assets are digital. They exist on a blockchain. They don’t occupy physical space in any particular jurisdiction.
That said, nexus analysis gets complicated quickly. A CPA or attorney familiar with multi-state operations should review any specific situation. Getting this wrong can mean fines, back taxes, and exposure to the very state laws you were trying to avoid.
The Corporate Veil: What Actually Protects the Protection
Setting up a Wyoming LLC is only half the equation. Maintaining the corporate veil determines whether that protection holds up in court.
Co-mingling funds kills more LLCs than any other mistake. Using personal credit cards for LLC expenses, depositing LLC income into personal accounts, treating the LLC bank account like a personal piggy bank, all of these behaviors give attorneys ammunition to argue that the LLC is just an “alter ego” of the individual. Once that argument succeeds, the liability protection disappears.
Proper maintenance means separate bank accounts, documented meeting minutes, annual resolutions, and keeping the LLC registered with the state. It means treating the LLC like the separate legal entity it’s supposed to be. This sounds tedious. It is tedious. But it’s the difference between protection that holds and protection that collapses under legal scrutiny.
Getting It Done Right
Filing an LLC yourself through the Wyoming Secretary of State website costs about $100. The annual report runs $60 or so. On paper, that sounds affordable. The problem is what you don’t get: privacy, a properly drafted operating agreement for digital assets, guidance on maintaining the corporate veil, and the infrastructure to actually use the protection you’re paying for.
Self-filing puts your name on public records. It leaves you drafting your own operating agreement from generic templates that weren’t designed for cryptocurrency holdings. It leaves maintenance to chance, with no systems in place to ensure the LLC stays compliant year after year.
For assets significant enough to warrant protection in the first place, that approach doesn’t make sense.
Where Digital Ascension Group Fits In
The team at Digital Ascension Group has spent years helping crypto holders structure their assets properly. Their approach involves forming Wyoming-based single-member LLCs designed specifically for digital asset holding, with operating agreements that address the unique characteristics of cryptocurrency. They handle the privacy filing, the EIN application, the registered agent services, and the ongoing corporate veil maintenance that keeps the protection intact.
The real value shows up in the details that most people wouldn’t think to ask about. The NAICS codes that keep banks from shutting down your account when you mention crypto. The capital contribution schedules that document exactly which assets transferred into the LLC and at what value. The notarization that creates a timestamped record of the transaction. The annual documentation that prevents “piercing the corporate veil” arguments down the road.
One client came to Digital Ascension Group after trying to set up their own LLC. They’d filed in Nevada because someone on YouTube said it was better. They’d added their spouse as a member because they thought that was what married couples did. They were co-mingling funds because nobody told them not to. That Nevada LLC would have provided approximately zero protection in a lawsuit. It took more work to fix than it would have taken to do it right the first time.
The Path Forward Starts With Structure
Accumulating digital assets is one thing. Protecting them is another thing entirely. Wyoming offers a legal framework that actually works for crypto holders, with charging order protection that makes creditors think twice, privacy features that keep names out of public databases, and a regulatory environment designed to accommodate rather than obstruct digital asset ownership.
The structure matters. The maintenance matters. Getting it right the first time matters more than most people realize until they need the protection to actually work.
If you’re ready to move past hoping nothing goes wrong and toward knowing your assets have real legal protection, Digital Ascension Group can help you understand your options. Contact our team to start the conversation.


