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Can A S corporation pay a reasonable shareholder salary?

If your S corporation does the same thing to its only shareholder without an accompanying reasonable shareholder wage, then it is considered self-employment income and subject to the gaggle of taxes with that type of income. Moving on… There are several factors to consider when coming up with a reasonable shareholder salary.

Who is an active shareholder of a S corporation?

In effect, an active shareholder in a S corporation wears at least two hats: as a shareholder (owner) of the corporation, and as an employee of that corporation. This allows for savings on Social Security and Medicare taxes because such taxes need not be paid on distributions of earnings and profits from the corporation to its shareholders.

How are shareholders treated as employees in a corporation?

In this regard the shareholder is treated like any other employee. The salary amount should be approved by the board of directors of the corporation. Benefits paid to a shareholder/employee who owns more than 2% of the stock of the corporation generally will be taxable compensation.

How much should an S Corp pay an officer?

In other words, if your S corporation earned $150,000 before shareholder salaries, and you wanted to maximize your 401k contribution, you might pay $150,000 as reasonable officer compensation which would be 100% of your business income.

How much does C corporation pay its shareholders?

In addition to the shareholder compensation, Johnson made a modest annual dividend payment of $50,000 in 2003 and $100,000 in 2004.

How does a shareholder get paid as an employee?

If you want to pay a shareholder for work the shareholder has performed as an employee, you pay the shareholder just like you pay any other employee. This means, if you’re using a payroll service like ADP or Paychex, that you add the shareholder-employee to the payroll system and pay the shareholder-employee just like any other employee.

How are shareholder distributions taxed in a S corporation?

S corp shareholder distributions are the earnings by S corporations that are paid out or “passed through” as dividends to shareholders and only taxed at the shareholder level. Unlike a partnership, an S corporation is not subject to personal holding company tax or accumulated earnings tax.

How to pay yourself from an S Corp?

But let’s say he operates his business as an S Corp and pays himself a salary of $50,000 while taking $50,000 as a shareholder distribution. In this scenario, he’ll only pay payroll tax on his $50,000 salary. And that means he saves thousands in payroll taxes each year! This sounds amazing! But, why would I want to take an employee salary?

What should you know about S Corp dividends?

Dividend history (IRS nomenclature, really this should be shareholder distributions- however back in the day it was C corporations who later elected to be taxed an S corporation, so dividend history still has some historical merit). Payments to non-shareholder employees. Timing and manner of paying bonuses to key people.

How often should s Corp pay out in shareholder distributions?

All shareholders should receive a distribution on the same date and in proportion to their stock ownership. Record the name of each shareholder and the dollar amount of the distribution. Decide how many times per year you want to make distributions — for example, monthly or semimonthly — and try to keep to that schedule.

Can a company force a shareholder to pay wages?

Here’s why: The IRS can’t force you process payroll. They can only re-categorize amounts (like distributions) that you’ve paid out to a shareholder as wages if you haven’t paid reasonable compensation.

Can a shareholder refuse to pay reasonable compensation?

A shareholder-employee who does not want to take any Reasonable Compensation can refuse all compensation (distribution), and play ‘catch up’ in a later year. Reasonable Compensation is derived from the value of the services provided, not the profit or loss of the business.

Can a shareholder give an employee a distribution?

Depending on the company’s financial condition and business strategy, a shareholder-employee may be able to take Reasonable Compensation plus a distribution, just Reasonable Compensation, or neither. What the shareholder-employee can’t do take a distribution instead of Reasonable Compensation.