If you own a small business and have spent any time around other business owners, you have probably heard someone mention the S-Corp election. Maybe a colleague told you it saved them thousands of dollars in taxes. Maybe your current accountant brought it up once and never followed through. Maybe you searched it online and came away more confused than when you started.
The S-Corp election is one of the most powerful tax strategies available to small business owners — and one of the most misunderstood. This article explains what it actually is, who qualifies, how the tax savings work, and what you need to consider before making the election.
What Is an S-Corp?
First, an important clarification: an S-Corporation is not a legal entity. It is a tax classification. You cannot form an S-Corp at the state level the way you form an LLC or a corporation. What you can do is elect S-Corp tax treatment for an existing entity — most commonly an LLC or a C-Corporation — by filing Form 2553 with the IRS.
When you make the S-Corp election, your business becomes a pass-through entity for federal income tax purposes. This means the business itself does not pay federal income tax. Instead, profits and losses pass through to the shareholders — in most small business cases, that is you — and are reported on your personal tax return.
This is similar to how a sole proprietorship or a single-member LLC is taxed. So what makes the S-Corp election valuable? The answer is self-employment tax.
The Self-Employment Tax Problem
If you operate as a sole proprietor or a single-member LLC with no special tax election, all of your net business profit is subject to self-employment tax — currently 15.3% on the first $168,600 of net earnings, and 2.9% above that. This is in addition to your regular federal income tax. For a profitable business, that is a significant additional tax burden.
The self-employment tax exists because sole proprietors and single-member LLC owners are considered self-employed — they pay both the employee and employer portions of Social Security and Medicare taxes.
Self-employment tax is often the single largest tax burden for profitable small business owners — and it is the one the S-Corp election is specifically designed to reduce.
How the S-Corp Election Reduces Self-Employment Tax
Here is where the tax savings come from. When your business is taxed as an S-Corp, you are required to pay yourself a reasonable salary for the work you perform in the business. That salary is subject to payroll taxes — which function similarly to self-employment tax. But here is the key: only the salary is subject to payroll taxes. Any remaining profit you take out of the business as a distribution is not.
A simple example illustrates the point:
- Business net profit:$200,000
- Without S-Corp: The entire $200,000 is subject to self-employment tax — approximately $28,000+
- With S-Corp: You pay yourself a reasonable salary of $100,000. Payroll taxes apply to the $100,000 salary. The remaining $100,000 is taken as a distribution — no payroll tax.
- Estimated payroll tax savings:$14,000+annually
The savings compound as your business becomes more profitable. At higher income levels, the S-Corp election can save tens of thousands of dollars per year.
The Reasonable Salary Requirement
The IRS is well aware of the S-Corp strategy and has one primary safeguard against abuse: the reasonable salary requirement. If you make the S-Corp election, you cannot pay yourself a token salary of $1 and take everything else as a distribution. The IRS requires that you pay yourself a salary that is reasonable and consistent with what someone in your role, in your industry, in your market, would be paid for the same work.
Getting the reasonable salary right is one of the most important parts of S-Corp compliance — and one of the areas where having a knowledgeable CPA makes the biggest difference. Too low, and you risk an IRS audit and recharacterization of distributions as wages. Too high, and you are paying more payroll tax than necessary.
Who Qualifies for the S-Corp Election?
Not every business can elect S-Corp tax treatment. The IRS imposes several eligibility requirements:
- The business must be a domestic corporation or LLC
- It cannot have more than 100 shareholders
- All shareholders must be U.S. citizens or permanent residents
- There can only be one class of stock
- Certain types of businesses — financial institutions, insurance companies, and domestic international sales corporations — are ineligible
For most small businesses, these requirements are not an obstacle. The most common scenario is a single-owner LLC that elects S-Corp status once the business reaches a level of profitability where the election makes financial sense.
When Does the S-Corp Election Make Sense?
The S-Corp election is not right for every business at every stage. There are real costs and administrative requirements associated with it — payroll processing, additional tax filings, and the need to maintain proper corporate formalities. At lower income levels, those costs can outweigh the tax savings.
As a general rule, the S-Corp election tends to make financial sense when your business net profit consistently exceeds $40,000 to $50,000 per year. Below that threshold, the payroll costs and administrative burden often offset the tax savings. Above it, the savings typically justify the additional complexity.
That said, every business situation is different. The right threshold depends on your industry, your salary requirements, your state tax treatment of S-Corps, and a number of other factors. This is exactly the kind of analysis a CPA should be doing with you — not just at tax time, but proactively, as your business grows.
How to Make the Election — and When
To elect S-Corp tax treatment, you file Form 2553 with the IRS. The timing matters. To be effective for a given tax year, the election generally must be filed by March 15 of that year for existing businesses, or within two months and fifteen days of the business’s formation date for new entities.
Missing the deadline does not mean you cannot make the election — the IRS has provisions for late elections in certain circumstances — but it does mean the election may not take effect until the following tax year. That is a potentially costly delay if your business is already generating significant profit.
If you are considering the S-Corp election, the conversation with your CPA should happen well before year-end — not in March when it may already be too late.