Plug in your business’ profit and see how taking part of it as a salary (and the rest as a distribution) could reduce your tax bill. Spoiler alert: The savings might surprise you.
An S Corporation isn’t a new type of legal entity—it’s just a different way to have your existing business (likely an LLC or PLLC) taxed. But that small change can have a big impact on how much tax you pay as a business owner.
With an S Corp election, you still own your business as usual. But instead of taking 100% of your profits as self-employment income—and paying self-employment tax on all of it—you split that income. You pay yourself a reasonable salary as an owner, and take the rest as a distribution.
Here’s the kicker: Distributions aren’t subject to self-employment tax. That’s where the savings come in.
Let’s say your business nets $300,000 in profit. If you’re taxed as a regular LLC, you could owe around $30,000 in self-employment tax. If you elect S Corp status, and pay yourself a salary of $90,000 while taking the other $210,000 as a distribution, your self-employment tax might drop to around $14,000.
You pay around
in self-employment tax
You pay around
in self-employment tax
Enter your estimated yearly income and see a side-by-side comparison of taxes as a sole proprietor vs. an S Corp—including your potential savings.
We’ll handle the paperwork to elect S Corp status with the IRS, so you can start saving on taxes.
Get help setting up a compliant payroll system, paying yourself a reasonable salary the right way.