An S-corporation is not a type of business entity - it is a tax election. Both Florida LLCs and Florida corporations can elect to be taxed as an S-corporation by filing IRS Form 2553. This election can provide significant tax savings, but it comes with strict eligibility requirements and ongoing compliance obligations.
Here are the six most common questions Florida business owners ask about S-corporations.
1. What Is an S-Corporation and How Does It Work?
An S-corporation is a tax classification recognized by the IRS under Subchapter S of the Internal Revenue Code. When a corporation or LLC elects S-corp status, the entity itself does not pay federal income tax. Instead, income and losses pass through to the owners' personal tax returns, similar to a partnership or sole proprietorship.
The key advantage: S-corporation owners who actively work in the business pay themselves a reasonable salary (subject to employment taxes), and distribute remaining profits as pass-through income not subject to self-employment tax. This can result in substantial savings compared to a standard LLC where all net income is subject to self-employment tax (15.3%).
2. Who Qualifies for S-Corporation Status?
To be eligible for S-corporation election, the entity must meet all of the following requirements:
- Be a domestic corporation or LLC (formed in the U.S.)
- Have no more than 100 shareholders/members
- All shareholders/members must be U.S. citizens or resident aliens
- Have only one class of stock (for corporations) or one class of economic interest (for LLCs)
- Shareholders/members cannot include corporations, partnerships, or non-resident aliens
- Certain types of trusts and estates are permitted shareholders
If your LLC or corporation has foreign owners, multiple classes of stock/interests, or more than 100 owners, you cannot elect S-corporation status. A C-corporation or standard LLC tax treatment is required.
3. How Much Can I Save with an S-Corporation Election?
The savings come from reducing self-employment tax. Here is a simplified example:
Scenario: Your Florida LLC earns $150,000 in net profit. You actively work in the business.
Without S-corp election: You pay self-employment tax (15.3%) on the full $150,000 = approximately $21,068 in self-employment tax alone.
With S-corp election: You pay yourself a $70,000 salary (employment taxes apply to salary only) and take $80,000 as a distribution (no self-employment tax). Employment taxes on $70,000 = approximately $10,710. Savings: approximately $10,358.
The IRS requires that S-corporation owner-employees pay themselves a "reasonable salary" for their role. Setting the salary too low to maximize distributions is a common audit trigger. Work with a tax professional to determine the right salary.
4. Should My LLC Elect S-Corporation Status?
S-corporation election generally makes sense when:
- Net business income consistently exceeds $50,000-$60,000 per year
- You are actively working in the business (not passive income)
- The self-employment tax savings outweigh the cost of running payroll
- All members are U.S. citizens or residents
- There is only one class of economic interest
S-corporation election may NOT make sense when:
- Net income is below $50,000 (payroll costs offset the savings)
- The business is primarily passive income (rental properties typically do not benefit)
- You plan to take venture capital (VCs prefer C corporations)
- The entity has multiple classes of ownership or foreign owners
5. How Do I Elect S-Corporation Status for My Florida LLC?
- Step 1: File IRS Form 2553. This is the "Election by a Small Business Corporation" form. It must be filed within 75 days of the beginning of the tax year in which the election is to take effect, or at any time during the prior tax year.
- Step 2: Set up payroll. As an S-corporation, you must pay yourself a reasonable salary through a formal payroll system, including withholding and quarterly payroll tax filings.
- Step 3: File Form 1120-S annually. The S-corporation files an informational tax return (Form 1120-S) and issues K-1 schedules to each owner reporting their share of income and losses.
Note: Your LLC remains an LLC under Florida law. The S-corporation election only changes how the IRS taxes the entity. You do not need to file anything with the Florida Division of Corporations.
6. Can I Revoke or Lose S-Corporation Status?
Yes. S-corporation status can end in two ways:
- Voluntary revocation: Shareholders/members owning more than 50% of shares/interests can revoke the election by filing a revocation statement with the IRS. After revocation, you generally cannot re-elect S status for 5 years.
- Involuntary termination: If the entity ceases to meet the eligibility requirements (e.g., gains a foreign owner, exceeds 100 shareholders, or issues a second class of stock), the S election is automatically terminated.
Frequently Asked Questions
Questions About S-Corporation Elections?
FL Patel Law helps Florida business owners evaluate and implement S-corporation elections for their LLCs and corporations. Call (727) 279-5037 to discuss whether an S-corp election is right for your business.
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