Tips & Tricks for Setting Low S Corp Shareholder Salaries
Posted: Monday, March 16, 2009
by Stephen Nelson
Stephen L. Nelson, CPA
Small S corporations save their owners taxes by reducing payroll taxes on shareholder-employee wages. Lower a shareholder-employee salary by $10,000, for example, and the shareholder often saves about $1,500--even when that cut in wages probably gets made up with larger distributions.
You need to be cautious about setting low S corporation shareholder salaries, however. Choose a low salary and the Internal Revenue Service can recategorize shareholder distributions or dividends as wages. That reclassification allows the IRS to clawback tax savings and assess penalties and interest.
S Corp Salary Tip #1: Use Government Data for Backup
The big requirement concerning S corporation shareholder salaries is that the compensation be reasonable. Reasonableness, in some ways, is in the "eye of beholder."
But a good starting point concerning reasonableness is the Bureau of Labor Statistics web site at www.bls.gov. The site provides a wealth of conservative data about what different jobs really pay.
S Corp Salary Tip #2: Learn About Any Local Safe Harbors
Another tip related to setting a low shareholder salary: Talk with a knowledgeable local tax practitioner about the possibility that there's an unofficial safe harbor.
Now let me be clear: Publicly, no IRS official will provide a safe harbor amount--a salary level which, if you're over, you're officially safe.
However, numerous tax practitioners (CPAs, attorneys, and enrolled agents) report that in many areas, Internal Revenue Service examiners have an unofficial salary which they'll accept as reasonable. An S corporation which pays its shareholder-employees at least this amount seems to be very unlikely to be challenged or penalized...
S Corp Salary Tip #3: Treat Shareholder Health Insurance Correctly
The S corporation tax return itself makes it really easy to spot when an S corporation pays its shareholders low salaries: The first business deduction on page 1 of the corporate tax return, for example, shows officer compensation!
You should, therefore, verify that you're handling shareholder health insurance correctly. Here's why: Shareholder health insurance gets added to the shareholder-employee compensation amounts. If a shareholder-employee earns, say, $30,000 in wages and in addition receives $10,000 of health insurance, the shareholder-employee's W-2 should show $40,000 of wages.
The shareholder medical insurance premiums added to the employee's wages is not subject to social security or medicare payroll taxes. Using the previous paragraph's example numbers, the shareholder-employee's W-2 would show the wages subject to social security and medicare taxes as being $30,000. Furthermore, the $10,000 of health insurance is allowed as a deduction on the shareholder's individual tax return.
S Corp Salary Tip #4: Save for Retirement Inside Corporation
Another easy idea related to setting a low yet reasonable S corporation salary: If you're saving money for retirement, you may as well do that saving inside the S corporation. In other words, rather than have the shareholder-employee contribute money into an Individual Retirement Account, the S corporation should probably consider making a pension fund contribution such as for a SEP-IRA. Why? The pension contribution appears as an expense on the S corporation's tax return.
In effect, this increases by shareholder-employee's wages by as much as 25%. Yet this increase in wages does not increase the payroll taxes. Current tax regulations say pension contributions aren't subject to social security or medicare taxes.
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Stephen L. Nelson CPA practices public accounting in Seattle, Washington. A former tax professor at Golden Gate University's tax school, Nelson edits the Forming an S Corporation web site and authored the Setting S Corporation Salaries ebook.
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