The IRS now says that S corporations represent the most popular incorporation choice for small businesses. Yet that's perhaps logical. An S corporation delivers big tax savings for businesses and their owners - especially for shareholder-employees. Unfortunately, the S corporation's extra accounting complexity sometimes means that small business owners don't get all the savings they're legally entitled to. To make sure that you don't miss out on savings, be sure to apply the following tips:
S corporation profits get paid out to the business owners either in the form of salary or profits. In other words, an S corp owner typically receives two types of checks from the business: payroll checks representing wages and dividend checks representing a share of the business profits.
The most important thing an S Corporation can do to minimize the tax burden shouldered by the owners is pay shareholder-employees a low though reasonable salary. Here's why: Paying out profit as wages subjects that money to Social Security taxes and Medicare taxes. In comparison, paying out profits as dividends doesn't subject the money to Social Security and Medicare taxes.
Example: An S Corporation that makes, say, $100,000 in profit before paying wages or salary to the owner would pay roughly $15,000 in Social Security and Medicare taxes if all the profit is paid out as wages or salary. If only $50,000 is paid as wages, however, the corporation reduces the Social Security and Medicare tax bill from $15,000 to $7,500.
When a small business makes the election to have a corporation or limited liability company treated as an S corporation--both corporations and LLCs can be treated as S corps--the IRS warns about setting shareholder-employee wages too law. That warning also alerts the business about what happens when the salary does happen to be set too low: The IRS can re-categorize distributions made to shareholders (what people commonly refer to as dividends) as wages.
Note: Business owners commonly call the distributions of profit paid out to S corporation shareholders "dividends." However, to be nit picky, under the corporate tax law rules, dividends typically get paid by regular C corporations rather than by by S corporations. S corporations (and partnerships, too) make "distributions" of the profit. But back to the tip of minimizing distributions...
The IRS ability to re-categorize distributions as wages means that, to the extent possible, you may as well minimize distributions of profit to shareholders. In other words, don't distribute money to shareholders simply because you can. For example, if shareholders will save the money (say for working capital purposes or for a new business investment), just save the money inside the S corporation--not outside the corporation.
Example: If a corporation makes a $100,000 profit and pays out half of this money, or $50,000 as wages and the other half or $50,000 as distribution, the IRS may be able to re-categorize some or all of the $50,000 distribution as wages. If the corporation pays a shareholder $30,000 of distributions, the Internal Revenue Service can probably only reclassify the $30,000 as salary or wages.
In the end, by minimizing distributions, the S corporation minimizes the money that can theoretically be reclassified as shareholder-employee wages.
A final easy tip can often be employed by the small business corporation using the Sub chapter S rules. You can sometimes move personal tax deductions from the shareholder's personal tax return to the corporate tax return.
Moving deductions from an individual tax return to the corporation tax return may not save the shareholder-employee and S corporation owner income taxes. After all, the deduction represents a deduction on both tax returns. But the benefit of moving a tax deduction to the corporation return is that deduction then naturally reduces the distributions made to shareholders.
Example: Suppose an S corporation makes $100,000 in profits before paying the shareholder-employee wages. Further suppose that the shareholder-employee annually purchases $10,000 of health insurance for his family, saves $5,000 for retirement and contributes $5,000 to a charity. If these deductions are paid by the corporation rather than by the individual, the shareholder finds himself in the same economic position. But now the S corporation is paying out $80,000 in wages and distributions to the shareholder-employee rather than $100,000.