The short answer: If your business nets more than $80,000/year, an S-Corp election could save you $5,000–$15,000 annually in self-employment taxes. Below $60,000, the LLC is usually better. In between? Run the numbers — we'll show you how.
Every small business owner eventually faces this question: Should I stay as an LLC or elect S-Corp status?
The answer depends on your profit level, your willingness to run payroll, and a few IRS rules that trip up a lot of business owners. Here's the 2026 breakdown — no jargon, just the math.
First: LLC Is a Legal Structure. S-Corp Is a Tax Election.
This is the most common misconception. You don't have to dissolve your LLC to become an S-Corp. An LLC can elect to be taxed as an S-Corp by filing IRS Form 2553. Your LLC continues to exist — only how you're taxed changes.
| Standard LLC | LLC with S-Corp Election | |
|---|---|---|
| Legal entity | LLC | Still an LLC |
| Self-employment tax | 15.3% on all net profit | 15.3% on salary only |
| How you get paid | Owner draws (simple) | W-2 salary + distributions |
| Payroll required? | No | Yes — must run payroll for yourself |
| Tax filing | Schedule C (simple) | Form 1120-S + K-1s (more complex) |
| Annual compliance cost | ~$500–$1,000 | ~$2,000–$4,000 (payroll + CPA) |
The Math: How S-Corp Saves You Money
The magic of the S-Corp is simple: you split your income into salary (taxed at 15.3% for FICA) and distributions (not subject to FICA). Here's a concrete example:
Scenario: $150,000 Net Profit
| LLC (No Election) | S-Corp Election | |
|---|---|---|
| Net profit | $150,000 | $150,000 |
| Reasonable salary | N/A | $70,000 |
| Distributions | N/A | $80,000 |
| SE tax (15.3%) | ~$21,194 | ~$10,710 (salary only) |
| Payroll + CPA costs | $0 | ~$3,000 |
| Net savings | — | ~$7,484/year |
That's $7,484 back in your pocket every year — and the savings grow as your profit increases.
The Breakeven Chart
Here's when the S-Corp election starts making financial sense, accounting for ~$3,000/year in added compliance costs:
| Net Profit | SE Tax Saved | After Costs | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|
| $40,000 | ~$1,500 | -$1,500 | ❌ Stay LLC |
| $60,000 | ~$3,000 | ~$0 | ⚠️ Breakeven zone |
| $80,000 | ~$5,000 | +$2,000 | ✅ S-Corp wins |
| $120,000 | ~$8,000 | +$5,000 | ✅ S-Corp wins big |
| $200,000 | ~$14,000 | +$11,000 | ✅ Significant savings |
2026 Tax Numbers You Need
- Social Security rate: 6.2% employer + 6.2% employee = 12.4% (applies to first $184,500 of wages)
- Medicare rate: 1.45% employer + 1.45% employee = 2.9% (no wage cap)
- Additional Medicare: 0.9% on wages above $200,000 (single) or $250,000 (married filing jointly)
- Total self-employment tax: 15.3% (12.4% + 2.9%) on the first $184,500, then 2.9% above that
- Form 2553 deadline: March 15 of the tax year (or within 2 months + 15 days of formation for new businesses)
The "Reasonable Salary" Rule: Don't Get This Wrong
The IRS's biggest enforcement target with S-Corps is owners who pay themselves an artificially low salary to minimize payroll taxes. If you run a $500K business and pay yourself $25,000, the IRS will reclassify your distributions as wages — plus penalties and interest.
What counts as "reasonable?"
- What someone with your skills and experience would earn doing the same job at another company
- Industry benchmarks for your role (use BLS data or salary surveys)
- Time you spend working in the business
- Revenue and complexity of the business
Rule of thumb: Most tax professionals recommend setting your S-Corp salary at 40–60% of net profit for owner-operators. If your business nets $150K, a salary of $60K–$90K is typically defensible.
What You Need to Run S-Corp Payroll
If you elect S-Corp status, you must run payroll — even if you're the only employee. This means:
- Payroll processing: Regular pay periods (typically bi-weekly or monthly) with proper withholding
- Quarterly Form 941 filing: Report withheld income taxes and FICA to the IRS
- EFTPS deposits: Deposit withheld taxes on time (monthly or semi-weekly depending on your liability)
- Annual W-2: Issue yourself a W-2 by January 31
- Form 1120-S: File the S-Corp income tax return by March 15
- K-1 distribution schedules: Report shareholder distributions
This is where most S-Corp owners get in trouble — they elect the status but don't run proper payroll. The savings evaporate if the IRS reclassifies your distributions or you get hit with late filing penalties.
Should You Switch? The Decision Framework
✅ Elect S-Corp If:
- Net profit consistently exceeds $80,000/year
- You're comfortable running payroll (or outsourcing it)
- You plan to reinvest profits or keep them in the business
- You have a CPA who understands S-Corp compliance
❌ Stay as LLC If:
- Net profit is under $60,000/year
- You value simplicity over tax optimization
- Your income fluctuates wildly year to year
- You're a single-member LLC and want the simplest possible filing
FAQ
At what income level does an S-Corp election make sense?
Most tax professionals recommend the S-Corp election once net business profit consistently exceeds $60,000–$80,000 per year. Below that, administrative costs (payroll, CPA, Form 1120-S) typically eat up the tax savings.
Can an LLC elect S-Corp tax status?
Yes. File IRS Form 2553 by March 15 of the tax year you want the election to take effect. Your LLC continues to exist — only the tax treatment changes. New businesses have 2 months and 15 days from formation to file.
What is a reasonable salary for S-Corp owners?
A reasonable salary is based on what the open market would pay for your role, skills, and responsibilities. Most owner-operators set salary at 40–60% of net profit. An owner running a $500K business might pay $60K–$90K. The IRS actively audits S-Corp salaries that seem artificially low.
Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute tax or legal advice. Tax situations vary — consult a qualified CPA or tax attorney before making an S-Corp election.
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