Short answer
Some foreign-owned US disregarded entities encounter the phrase pro forma Form 1120 because the IRS Form 5472 instructions describe attaching Form 5472 to a pro forma Form 1120 in certain cases. WYOM does not prepare or file tax forms, but founders should know this topic exists.
Plain-language explanation
A pro forma Form 1120 is often discussed as a technical cover return for certain foreign-owned disregarded entities filing Form 5472. It does not mean the founder should casually treat the LLC as a normal C corporation without professional advice.
The filing details are tax-specific and should be handled by a qualified tax professional using current IRS instructions.
Where WYOM fits
WYOM keeps the formation, EIN request workflow, official mail, documents, and dashboard context organized. That is the company foundation layer a founder can later share with a tax professional.
WYOM does not provide tax classification advice, prepare Form 1120, prepare Form 5472, or determine whether a filing is required.
Useful founder habit
- Store the EIN confirmation with company documents.
- Keep clear records of ownership and company activity.
- Save official mail and IRS correspondence.
- Use qualified tax advice before filing or deciding not to file.
FAQ
Does WYOM file pro forma Form 1120?
No. WYOM organizes the company foundation. Pro forma Form 1120 and related tax filings should be handled by qualified tax professionals.
Why does pro forma Form 1120 matter for some non-US founders?
The IRS Form 5472 instructions discuss pro forma Form 1120 for certain foreign-owned disregarded entities, so non-US founders should ask a tax professional if it applies.