Tax

LLC vs S-corp: when the tax election pays off

Last updated: 2026-05-08

An LLC is a state law concept. S-corp is a federal tax election. You can be both. By default, a single-member LLC is taxed as a sole proprietorship (Schedule C); a multi-member LLC is taxed as a partnership (Form 1065). Either can elect S-corp tax status by filing Form 2553.

The SE-tax angle

As a sole prop or partnership, all profits flow through to the owner and are subject to self-employment tax (15.3%) on top of income tax. As an S-corp, only the "reasonable salary" you pay yourself is subject to payroll tax — the rest can come out as a distribution that skips SE tax entirely.

The break-even math

S-corp election typically pays off when net profit clears $80,000–$100,000. Below that, the savings don't cover the added cost of payroll processing ($600–$1,200/year), separate corporate tax return ($500–$1,500/year), and reasonable-salary documentation. Above that, the SE-tax savings compound.

The "reasonable salary" trap

The IRS requires S-corp owners to pay themselves a "reasonable salary" before taking distributions. Set it too low and the IRS reclassifies distributions as wages (with back-tax + penalty). Most CPAs benchmark against the BLS wage data for your role + region — typically 30–60% of net profit, depending on the business.

When NOT to elect S-corp

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