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What Not To Do With Your S Corporation
Edith was a licensed real estate agent working
as an independent contractor for Coldwell Banker. She put commissions
and other income earned as agent into the S corporation she owned.
She reported her share (all) of the S corp income, for income tax
purposes. She took no salary from her corporation. Instead, she
treated any withdrawals she made from the S corp as loans, giving
a promissory note.
This, as you will have noticed, means that she paid no employment
tax—social security or self-employment tax—on her earnings,
and IRS would have none of that. It denied that amounts Edith dropped
into her S corp were properly income of the S corp, and the court
agreed. She was assigning her personal income to the S corp. But
assigned earnings are taxable to the one who earned them. If that
earner is self-employed, the earnings are subject to self-employment
tax.
The court then spelled out how those earnings could have been made
income of the S corp:
(1) She should be an employee of the S corp. She met that test,
as president of the S corp. And—
(2) The S corp must have a contractual right to direct her services
as its employee. There was no such contract here, so earnings from
her services aren’t S corp earnings.
Note: Oral contracts to direct services are technically
okay, but professional advisors often recommend and draft written
ones. This would be especially true where corporate income derives
primarily from services by its owners. The writing is an agreement
of one person wearing two hats, signed by the individual as S corp
employee and then for the S corp by that individual as its president.
Of course, IRS will expect an S corp owner providing valuable services
to be paid reasonable compensation. That pay will be subject to
social security tax on employee owner and on S corp.
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TIP: Reasonable pay need not be everything earned.
Tax advisors can suggest what portion of the S corp’s income
the IRS or courts will likely accept as reasonable pay. That pay
reduces S corp income. The pay is subject to employment tax (social
security tax) on the S corp (the deduction for this tax reduces
S corp income further) and on the owner-employee. The balance of
S corp income, though subject to income tax (on the owner), avoids
employment tax.
Edith’s misguided path led to employment tax on all her earnings.
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"...financial statements and tax preparation completed for our business and personal needs, is done with complete accuracy and appearance of professionalism..."
Randy Kerr - President/CEO RK Marine
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