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S Corp vs. LLC: Which Structure is Right for Your Business?
Determining the type of legal structure for a new business can be daunting for entrepreneurs and small business owners. Learn about the differences between an S corp and an LLC to decide which entity is right for you.
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by Chrissie Mould www.MyNewVenture.com

Determining the type of legal structure for a new business can be daunting for entrepreneurs and small business owners. Corporations and limited liability companies ("LLCs") are preferred business structures because, unlike sole proprietorships and partnerships, both offer liability protection. This means that the owner of a company cannot be held personally responsible for the company’s debts. The personal assets of an owner are shielded from company liabilities.

In researching the various business structures, one inevitably comes across the S corporation. S corps and LLCs are similar in that they are both "pass-through" entities for tax purposes; the income of these companies are passed through to their owners and reported on the owners’ personal income tax returns, thereby eliminating the double taxation incurred by owners of a standard corporation, or C corporation. (With a C corporation, the net business income is subject to corporate income tax, and the monies remaining after the corporate income tax are taxed a second time when they are distributed as dividends to its owners who must then pay personal income tax.)

So what is the difference between an S corp and an LLC? And which structure is right for you?

The answer depends on your own unique situation. If operational ease and flexibility are important to you, an LLC is a good choice. If you are looking to save on employment tax and your situation warrants it, an S corp could work for you.

Business Ownership & Operation

There are restrictions on who can be owners (called "shareholders") of an S corporation. An S corp can have no more than 75 shareholders. None of the shareholders can be nonresident aliens. And shareholders cannot be other corporations or LLCs.

An S corp is operated in the same way as a traditional C corp. An S corp must follow the same formalities and record keeping procedures. The directors or officers of an S corp manage the company. And an S corp has no flexibility in how profits are split up amongst its owners. The profits must be distributed according to the ratio of stock ownership, even if the owners may otherwise feel it is more equitable to distribute the profits differently.

LLCs offer greater flexibility in ownership and ease of operation. There are no restrictions on the ownership of an LLC. An LLC is simpler to operate because it is not subject to the formalities by which S corps must abide. An LLC can be member-managed, meaning that the owners run the company; or it can be manager-managed, with responsibility delegated to managers who may or may not be owners in the LLC.

And the owners of an LLC can distribute profits in the manner they see fit.

Let’s say, for example, you and a partner own an LLC. Your partner contributed $40,000 for capital. You only contributed $10,000 but you perform 90% of the work. The two of you decide that, in the interest of fairness, you will each share the profits 50/50. As an LLC you could do that; with an S corp, however, you could only take 20% of the profits while your partner would take the other 80%.

Employment Tax: Savings vs. Paperwork

A major factor that differentiates an S corp from an LLC is the employment tax that is paid on earnings. The owner of an LLC is considered to be self-employed and, as such, must pay a "self-employment tax" which goes toward Social Security and Medicare. The entire net income of the business is subject to this tax at a rate of 15.3%.

In an S corp, only the salary paid to the employee-owner is subject to employment tax. The remaining income that is paid as a distribution is not subject to employment tax under IRS rules. Therefore, there is the potential to realize substantial employment tax savings. Case in point:

Mary owns a print shop. In keeping with the industry standard, Mary decides that a reasonable salary for a print shop manager is $35,000 and pays herself accordingly. Mary’s total earnings for the year are $60,000: $35,000 paid in salary and the remaining $25,000 paid as a distribution from the S corp. Mary’s total employment tax is $5,355 (15.3% of $35,000).

If Mary were the owner of an LLC, she would have to pay employment tax on the entire $60,000, equaling $9,180. But as an S corp, she realizes savings of $3,825 in employment tax.

One might assume that these savings could be further manipulated by reducing the salary to an extremely low amount and attributing the rest of one’s earnings to distributions—but this would be an incorrect assumption. In practice, the IRS is careful to notice whether a salary is reasonable by industry standards. If it determines a salary to be unreasonable, the IRS will not hesitate to reclassify distributions as salary.

Still, while the potential employment tax savings may make the S corp an attractive structure for your business, bear in mind that you would then have to deal with all the paperwork associated with payroll tax. The payroll tax is a pay-as-you-go tax that must be paid to the IRS regularly throughout the year--on time, or you will incur interest and penalties. The paperwork alone can be an overwhelming task for someone who is not familiar with this; and if you expect to incur losses or otherwise experience a cash flow crunch during the year that would hinder you from paying the payroll tax when due, this could present a problem.

Owners of LLCs pay their self-employment tax once a year on April 15 when income taxes are normally due. Income tax filings are also relatively easy for the owners of an LLC: A single-member LLC files the same 1040 tax return and Schedule C as a sole proprietor; partners in an LLC file the same 1065 and Schedule C as do owners of traditional partnerships.

The comparison chart below sums up the similarities and differences between the two business structures:
  S Corporation Limited Liability Company
Liability Protection Yes Yes
Operational Control Board of Directors/Officers May be member-managed or manager-managed
Federal Income Tax Pass-through Pass-through
Flexibility/Ease of Operation No; subject to same formalities and record-keeping rules as C corps Yes
Ownership Restrictions Yes No
Flexibility in Profit-Sharing No Yes
Employment Tax Employment/payroll tax on salary; no employment tax on dividends paid to shareholders Self-employment tax on total net income

There is no one, magical entity that works for everyone. A CPA or a specialized tax attorney can assist you in choosing the right structure for your business. The important thing is to consider the operational, legal and tax aspects of each structure as they apply to your unique situation.


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Chrissie Mould has over a decade of experience in corporate and small business administration and startup business consulting. She is an incorporation specialist and CEO of New Ventures, LLC. The company provides low-cost incorporation services to entrepreneurs and small businesses. Visit www.MyNewVenture.com to incorporate or form an LLC.


Member Comments

Posted: Wed Sep 15, 2004 08:18:09 PM by Brian
Nice Write Up
Clear Consice and to the point.

Thanks for the Great Explaination!

Posted: Tue Feb 15, 2005 08:30:27 PM by Phil
Great Examples
I just thought that it was great for author to write a segment, and immediately following each segment give a real life example.

Posted: Thu Apr 28, 2005 07:44:11 PM by Brian
Great Job!
I've spoken with several attorneys and none of them explained it this well or this concise.

Thanks!

Posted: Sat May 07, 2005 07:48:03 AM by Ben
Very Understandable
Thanks for keeping it simple so that us beginners could understand

Posted: Thu Aug 11, 2005 08:37:22 AM by Addicted
Greateful
This is very well written. A kid in preschool can understand. Great job. Your writtings are addictive.

Posted: Mon Aug 29, 2005 11:14:09 AM by Metal
God job! Thanks very much!
God job! Thanks very much!

Posted: Thu Sep 08, 2005 09:20:27 AM by Dmarcelo
Ditto on the great writing style
Only one small complaint though. In your examples, sometimes you had multiple owners and others had single owners. I wasn't always sure that the same rules applied. For example, is the same self-employment tax applicable when there are mutiple owners in an LLC and S Corp? Specifically, if there are multiple owners in an S corporation would they each really be considered self-employed? That is sort of implied (to me) by your example.

Posted: Mon Oct 31, 2005 08:12:11 PM by Trisha
Very informative!!
This was probably the most informative explanation I have yet to see. The examples provided and clear, concise examples were extremely helpful!!

Posted: Mon Dec 12, 2005 07:52:44 AM by Varaprasad
Good info with LLC
This site has cleared very good my doubts and very understandable even for lay man. It's great job what tehy done to build up this site.

Posted: Fri Dec 30, 2005 07:34:14 AM by Ryan
very good
This is a very descriptive article. This really helps me make a decision. What really helped were the examples.

Posted: Mon Jan 02, 2006 09:38:21 AM by Chuck Hayes
Only First $87K of LLC owner subject to SE Tax
Good summary, except according the IRS, only the first $87,000 of net income for an LLC owner is subject to the the full 15.3% self employment tax. You had mentioned more than once that the ENTIRE net income of LLC owner is subject to the tax, which is not correct.

Posted: Wed Jan 11, 2006 01:09:18 AM by Bill
Great article
Cleverly written. With regard to the SE tax, all of the income from an LLC is in fact subject to the tax in one way or another: the first $90k of net income is subject to the full 15.3% for both social security and medicare, and the entire net income is subject to the medicare part of the SE tax.

Posted: Wed Jun 28, 2006 05:18:51 AM by Marty
Excellent breakdown of the S-corp vs LLC
Thank you! Now I get it...I just wish my CPA would have explained it to me this well!

Posted: Tue Oct 17, 2006 02:21:11 PM by Jack
Further questions
Overall, I think it was a great article. However, I am still not clear on the employment/payroll tax with an S-corp and LLC if the company losses money for the year. For example, if my revenue from sales is $50K and my overhead expenses was $60K, would I still need to pay myself a salary and then pay the 15.3 tax in the case of an S-corp? In the case of an LLC, since my net income is -$10K, does that mean I don't pay any SE tax?

Posted: Wed Jan 31, 2007 10:49:44 PM by Tax Attorney
Somewhat misleading...
This is well written, but it's oversimplified to the point of being inaccurate. For example, "S-Corp" is not a type of entity, but a tax classification, while "LLC" only a type of entity and NOT a tax classification. In other words, you can have an entity that is BOTH an LLC and an S-Corp.

Posted: Fri Mar 07, 2008 08:46:24 PM by Tania
LLC Vs S Corp
This is very easy to read and understand.now, when you said that on the S corp "None of the shareholders can be nonresident aliens. And shareholders cannot be other corporations or LLCs" are permanent residents able to be a member of a S Corp or they have to be US Citizen? also only "one" corporation per person?


Posted: Tue Nov 04, 2008 02:17:52 PM by Mr. Tech
New Business - S-corp or LLC
Great stuff.. and am happy that my decision to go with S-corp v/s LLC worked in my favor.

Posted: Thu Nov 13, 2008 12:26:04 AM by JeffJ
One small point(s).
LLC has self employment tax of 15.3% up to when you get past the threshold of the $90K ceiling, then it is just the Medicare component. Got it. With an S-corp you pay yourself what is industry standard for your type of job. Got it. If you net out anything else in the S-corp then it isn't subject to those self-employment taxes. Got that too. BUT what IS it subject to? If you pay it out as dividends, then you get stung with the 15% rate on Dividends right? So that being the case, I saved a whopping 0.3% in taxes for all that extra paperwork hassle?

Posted: Thu Nov 13, 2008 12:26:43 AM by JeffJ
Small Points (continued)
Are there more ownership benefits that you have with an S-corp that you don't have with an LLC? Can you fund a pension plan, provide a company car, and pay for your full health care costs inside the S-corp and you couldn't do that with the LLC? IF you don't take out the net profits as dividends at the end of the year and just leave it in as retained earnings to help the business grow, do those get taxed somehow? Please post a part 2 of your article to cover some of these questions !


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