If you’re a business owner making decent money, you’ve probably heard someone say, “You need to set up an S-Corp.” Maybe it was your accountant, a friend, or someone on social media. But what does that actually mean — and is it the right move for you?
Let’s break it down in plain English.
What Is An S-Corp?
An S-Corp isn’t actually a type of business entity — it’s a tax election. You form an LLC or corporation, then file Form 2553 with the IRS to be taxed as an S-Corporation. The business itself doesn’t change. What changes is how the IRS treats your income.
As a sole proprietor or single-member LLC, every dollar of profit gets hit with self-employment tax — that’s 15.3% on top of your regular income tax. With an S-Corp election, you split your income into two buckets: a reasonable salary (which gets taxed normally) and distributions (which avoid self-employment tax).
That split is where the savings come from.
A Simple Example
Say your business nets $200,000 in profit. As a sole proprietor, you’d owe roughly $30,600 in self-employment tax alone. With an S-Corp, you might pay yourself a $90,000 salary and take the remaining $110,000 as a distribution. Now you’re only paying self-employment tax (via payroll taxes) on the $90,000 — saving yourself around $16,800 per year.
That’s real money back in your pocket, every single year.
When Does An S-Corp Make Sense?
An S-Corp election generally starts making sense when your business is consistently netting $60,000 or more per year in profit. Below that threshold, the added costs of payroll processing, tax filings, and bookkeeping can eat into the savings.
Here are a few signs it might be the right time:
- Your net business income is consistently above $60K–$80K
- You’re tired of getting crushed by self-employment tax
- You have stable, predictable revenue
- You’re reinvesting in the business and don’t need every dollar as personal income
What Are The Downsides?
An S-Corp isn’t free money. There are real costs and responsibilities that come with the election:
- Payroll requirements: You must pay yourself a “reasonable salary” and run payroll, which means payroll taxes, W-2s, and filings.
- Additional tax filings: S-Corps file their own tax return (Form 1120-S), which adds complexity and cost.
- Reasonable compensation rules: The IRS watches S-Corp owners closely. If your salary is too low relative to what you do, you could face penalties.
- State-level taxes: Some states impose additional franchise taxes or fees on S-Corps.
The Biggest Mistake Business Owners Make
The number one mistake we see? Waiting too long. Business owners leave tens of thousands of dollars on the table because they assume the S-Corp conversation is “for later” or “too complicated.” In most cases, the election can be set up in a matter of weeks — and the tax savings start immediately.
The second biggest mistake is doing it without a strategy. An S-Corp is just one piece of a larger tax plan. It works best when combined with retirement contributions, proper entity structuring, and year-round planning — not just a last-minute decision during tax season.
Bottom Line
An S-Corp election can be one of the most powerful tax-saving tools available to business owners. But it’s not a one-size-fits-all solution. The right move depends on your income level, your business structure, your state, and your long-term goals.
If you’re not sure whether an S-Corp makes sense for your situation, that’s exactly what we help with. At Tulip Financial Planning, we look at the full picture — not just one piece — and build a plan that actually saves you money.
Ready to find out how much you could save? Book a free 30-minute tax consult and let’s talk numbers.