Small business owners usually minimize their taxes by
operating as a sole proprietorship, partnership or S
corporation. Or by operating as a limited liability company
taxed as a sole proprietorship, partnership or S
corporation.
However, even though C corporations may cause a business to
pay a second level of tax on business profit, a C
corporation may save the small business owner taxes in at
least three situations.
C Corporations Allow for Richer Fringe Benefits to Owners
With sole proprietorships, partnerships and S corporations,
the tax-free fringe benefits available to owners are very
limited. Sole proprietors, S corporation
shareholder-employees, and partners may typically deduct
health insurance and pension contributions. But not much
else.
In comparison, a C corporation can typically provide the
same tax-free fringe benefits to owners as it provides to
rank-and-file employees. These additional tax-free benefits
might include tax-free housing, educational assistance,
life insurance--and several other items as well.
A C corporation may also allow a business to provide better
healthcare benefits for shareholder-employees. In other
words, though this isn't true for sole proprietorships,
partnerships and S corporations, a C corporation may be
able to discriminate in favor of corporate officers or
shareholder-employees and provide them with better or more
healthcare benefits.
C Corporations May Minimize Income Taxes on Reinvested
Profits
All of the profit of a sole proprietorship, partnership or
S corporation gets allocated to the business owner or
owners and then taxed on their personal income tax returns.
This means, in effect, that the last dollars of profit the
business makes--money it's probably reinvesting in its
business--get taxed at the owners' highest marginal tax
rate.
And that rate can be crushing. The top marginal tax rate on
a small business owner can easily be forty or fifty percent
when you combine federal and state income taxes and any
self-employment taxes. A sole proprietorship, S corporation
or partnership may pay as much as $20,000 in income taxes
if it reinvests $50,000 of profit in the business.
Modest amounts of C corporation profit, however, get taxed
at modest rates. For example, the first $50,000 of a C
corporation's profit is typically taxed at rates of 15% to
20%. A C corporation reinvesting $50,000 in its operation
may pay more like $10,000 in tax on the reinvested profit.
C Corporations May Reduce Out-of-State Taxes A business
that operates in multiple states typically pays taxes not
just to its own home but also to the other states where it
employs people, holds property or provides services or
sells products.
Without going into tedious detail, businesses pay taxes to
all of the states in which they operate because tax laws
require businesses to apportion their business profits
among the states of operation.
As a practical matter, though, many small C corporations
extract most of all of their business profit in the form of
salaries and tax-free fringe benefits. That means a small C
corporation typically has less, "left-over" business
profit. And less business profit means less state income
tax.
----------------------------------------------------
Stephen L. Nelson is a tax accountant in Seattle,
Washington, the author of QuickBooks for Dummies, and the
editor of the http://www.fasteasyincorporationkits.com and
http://www.scorporationsexplained.com web sites.