Synopsis
Corporations are unique among business legal structures in that they issue stock and pay dividends. They are also the most complex structure to administer, given the laws governing them. Because of this greater administrative overhead, encore entrepreneurs do not tend to choose a corporate structure for their startup. However, there are distinct advantages which corporations provide. For instance, raising capital is usually easier if your business is structured as a corporation. And C-Corps are can pay certain tax-free benefits to owner-managers that are not permitted (at least on a tax-free basis) with other legal structures.Author: Mike Armour
Disclaimer
Even though this tutorial examines legal and tax issues faced by small business owners, it should not be construed as legal, accounting, or tax advice. Always seek competent professional counsel in addressing issues and questions raised in this tutorial.Quick Links to Other Sections in this Tutorial
Introduction Sole Proprietorships Limited Liability Companies Partnerships
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Your Startup — What Legal Structure Is Best? Part 3 of a Four-Part Tutorial
Corporations
What sets corporations apart from other business structures is that they issue stock and have shareholders. Technically it's the shareholders en masse, not the founders, who are the owners of a corporation. For the purposes of this discussion, however, we will use the term "owner" to refer to founders who retain enough shares to have controlling interest in the company.
There are two types of corporations in the U.S., and they take their name from the section of the IRS Code which governs them. The most common corporate form is the C-Corp. But smaller businesses often prefer being an S-Corp.
These designations — C-Corp and S-Corp — are merely tax classifications. They have no other legal meaning. When a new corporation files documents of formation with a state, the state neither cares nor asks whether the corporation will function as an C-Corp or an S-Corp. In the eyes of state the matter is inconsequential. Under the state's corporate code, all corporations are treated alike.
With the IRS, however, it's a different matter. The moment a corporation comes into existence it is answerable to the IRS as a C-Corp. The company can then notify the IRS that it wants to be taxed as an S-Corp. But until the company declares itself an S-Corp, it is treated as a C-Corp by default.
Reporting Federal Taxes as a Corporation
This declaration is significant in terms of how the corporation pays its taxes. C-Corps pay corporate income tax. S-Corps do not.
S-Corps are "pass-through" entities, much like sole proprietorships, LLCs, and partnerships. An S-Corp's net profit passes directly to the shareholders, who shoulder the tax burden for the company's earnings. They report their tax liability by using Schedule E when filing their personal tax return.
A C-Corp, by contrast, is a standalone taxable entity, separate from its owner and any other investors. Its earnings are subject to a corporate tax rate that is different from the rate paid by individuals.
In any given year, the owner of a C-Corp may or may not have a tax liability based on the company's operations. The determination of the owner's tax liability depends on two factors. First, is the owner salaried as an employee of the company? And second, did the company distribute dividends after paying its corporate taxes?
Any wages paid to the owner as an employee are tax-deductible expenses for the company. The owner receives a W-2 for these wages, reports them when filing his or her 1040, and pays taxes on them as ordinary income.
The owner may also have non-ordinary income from the company in the form of dividends. There is no mandate for C-Corps to issue dividends. They may instead choose to retain their after-tax earnings to fund growth, expansion, new capital equipment, or acquisitions.
If a C-Corp decides to forego dividends in a given year, its owners and investors incur no personal tax liability for these retained earnings. This distinguishes C-Corps from S-Corps, whose owners and investors do pay taxes on retained earnings.
In the years when a C-Corp does distribute dividends, owners report their portion of the dividends in the same way as any other shareholder. On the owner's 1040 tax return the dividends are declared on Schedule B and taxed at a rate which is normally lower than the rate for regular income.
By contrast, the operations of an S-Corp create tax liabilities for its owners every year, even when the owner is not a salaried employee. By law the S-Corp's profits must be apportioned each year to every shareholder and the shareholders must pay tax on that apportionment. Even if the S-Corp did not actually distribute its profits, opting instead to retain them, the shareholder still must pay tax on his or her share of the profits.
Which Should You Choose? A C-Corp? Or an S-Corp?
Your business does not have to be huge in order to be a corporation. A small home-based business can be organized as a corporation. Even if you are your company’s only employee, your business can structure itself as a corporation.
In general, startups which choose a corporate structure opt to be treated as an S-Corp. This gives them all of the advantages of a corporation without the level of record-keeping and administrative complexity of a C-Corp. S-Corps do not pay dividends, since all of the company’s profits are passed through to the shareholders as taxable income. And as we have noted, the corporation does not have the responsibility for filing an income tax report.
There are some unique limitations on S-Corps, however. As we shall see below, tax-free benefits that can be paid to owner-employees in a C-Corp are treated as taxable income to an owner-employee who holds more than 2% of the stock in an S-Corp. Also, unlike any of the other legal structures that are available to you, all shareholders in an S-Corp must be natural persons. That is, you cannot sell shares in an S-Corp to an LLC or to another corporation.
Pros and Cons of Incorporating
So, what considerations might lead you to form a corporation instead of an LLC? One reason is to provide an opportunity to sell shares in the company to raise capital. In general, corporations find it easier to raise capital than do sole proprietorships, LLCs, and partnerships, in part because the corporation can offer stock to investors.
For small business owners, the major disadvantage of a corporation, whether a C-Corp or an S-Corp, is the compliance burden with corporate regulations. While there are compliance burdens with any business, they are notably more complex with a corporation, especially a C-Corp.
You must have annual meetings of the shareholders. Directors, too, must hold annual meetings, along with intervening meetings whenever the company is undertaking an initiative that in a large corporation would require board approval. And minutes and records of all of these meetings must be maintained.
The important thing is to create such records of decisions and keep them up to date. Otherwise in a legal action the courts could conclude that the company was not indeed functioning as a corporation, but was merely an extension of your persona and therefore not entitled to the liability protection that a corporation normally provides.
For a handful of professions there is another pitfall with a C-Corp. It’s commonly referred to as the "personal services corporation trap." The IRS treats certain types of C-Corps as Personal Services Corporations (PSCs) and taxes them at a flat 35% tax rate. That’s a particularly punitive rate, especially when you consider that a corporation must otherwise show considerable profit before it would be taxed at nearly that percentage.
Professions which are susceptible to being treated as PSCs are those in health, law, engineering, accounting, actuarial science, consulting, and performing arts.
The IRS applies two tests to determine if a C-Corp is indeed a Personal Services Corporation. First, does at least 95% of the corporation’s activity fall within one of the categories just listed. (Note that the test is not 95% of the company’s profits, but 95% of its activity.)
The second test is whether substantially all of the corporation’s outstanding stock is directly or indirectly held by the individual who delivers the corporation’s services. "Indirect" ownership refers to shares held by a spouse, lineal ancestors or descendents, or legal entities (such as an LLC) that are controlled by any of these people.
There are common workarounds to escape the PSC classification. The simplest is to add enough diversification to your income stream that you fail the 95% activity rule. The other is to pay out all of the company’s earnings in salaries, bonuses, and fringe benefits to the owner-employees, so that there are no profits to be taxed.