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What Is an S-Corp Election and When Should You Make It?

You’ve probably heard the term thrown around in conversations about business taxes—S-Corp this, S-Corp that. Maybe a fellow business owner mentioned it saved them thousands. Maybe your accountant brought it up once and you nodded along without fully tracking what it actually meant. Either way, if you’re running a profitable business and you haven’t dug into what an S-Corp election really is, you’re likely leaving a significant tax savings opportunity on the table.

This piece isn’t going to bury you in jargon. It’s going to explain exactly what the S-Corp election is, how it works, when to make it, and what happens if you wait too long or miss the deadline. By the end, you’ll know whether it’s something you should be talking to your CPA about right now.

What an S-Corp Actually Is and Isn’t

Here’s the first thing most people get wrong: an S-Corp isn’t a type of business entity. It’s a tax classification. More specifically, it’s a status granted by the IRS that changes how your business income is taxed at the federal level.

You don’t form an S-Corp the way you form an LLC. Instead, you form a legal entity, most commonly an LLC or a C-Corp, and then you elect to have it taxed as an S-Corp by filing the appropriate paperwork with the IRS. The legal structure stays the same. What changes is how the IRS treats your income.

S-Corp status gets its name from Subchapter S of the Internal Revenue Code. Businesses that qualify can pass their income, deductions, and credits directly through to their owners’ personal tax returns, avoiding corporate-level taxation while also gaining a specific advantage over standard pass-through entities when it comes to self-employment taxes.

What the S-Corp Election Actually Does for Your Taxes

When you operate as a default LLC, every dollar of profit your business generates is subject to self-employment tax, currently 15.3%. That covers Social Security and Medicare, and it applies to your entire net profit regardless of how much you actually pay yourself.

An S-Corp election changes that equation entirely. Once your business is taxed as an S-Corp, you’re required to pay yourself a reasonable salary as an employee of your own company. That salary is subject to payroll taxes. But any remaining profit you take as a distribution is not subject to self-employment tax.

That gap between your salary and your total profit—that’s where the self-employment tax savings live. For a business generating $150,000 in annual profit, the difference between default LLC taxation and S-Corp treatment can easily be $8,000 to $11,000 per year. That number repeats every year you’re operating under the right structure.

How the Election Works: Form 2553

Making the S-Corp election is done by filing Form 2553, “Election by a Small Business Corporation”, with the IRS. The form requires signatures from all shareholders and includes basic information about your business, your tax year, and your ownership structure. It’s not complicated paperwork, but the timing of when you file it matters enormously.

To qualify for S-Corp tax treatment in a given tax year, the IRS requires you to file Form 2553 by the 15th day of the third month of that tax year. For most businesses operating on a calendar year, that means the deadline is March 15. File by March 15, and your S-Corp election takes effect for that entire tax year. Miss it, and you’re waiting until next year.

The Deadline Rules and What Happens If You Miss Them

The March 15 deadline catches more business owners off guard than almost anything else in this process. They decide mid-year that an S-Corp election makes sense, look into it, and discover they’ve already missed the window for the current tax year. 

The good news is that missing the deadline doesn’t always mean you’re out of luck. The IRS offers late election relief under Revenue Procedure 2013-30, which allows businesses to retroactively elect S-Corp status if they can demonstrate reasonable cause for filing late and if the business has been operating consistently with S-Corp status since the intended effective date. It’s not a guarantee, but it’s a real option worth pursuing with the right tax professional in your corner.

Signs Your Business Is Ready to Make the Election

Not every business should rush to make an S-Corp election. The tax savings are real, but so are the compliance requirements that come with it. Here’s how to know if your business is in the right position:

  • Your business consistently generates $60,000 or more in annual net profit.
  • You actively work in the business and can establish a defensible reasonable salary.
  • Your reasonable salary is meaningfully lower than your total profit, creating room for distributions.
  • You’re prepared to run payroll, issue W-2s, and meet additional IRS compliance requirements.
  • You’re already working with a CPA who can handle the added complexity of Form 1120-S filing.
  • The cost of compliance (payroll services, additional tax prep fees) is clearly outweighed by your self-employment tax savings.

If most of those apply to you, the election is worth a serious conversation. If you’re still in early growth mode or your profit level doesn’t yet support the overhead of S-Corp compliance, an LLC with default taxation may still be the right call for now with the election as a planned next step when the numbers make sense. 

RainwaterCPA runs your numbers at no cost so you can see exactly what the election would save you, and whether the timing is right for your business.

Run My Numbers

What the Election Requires Going Forward

Making the S-Corp election isn’t a one-time move and done. It comes with ongoing obligations you need to be prepared for. Once your business is taxed as an S-Corp, you’ll need to run payroll and issue yourself a W-2 each year. You’ll file Form 1120-S, the S-Corp tax return — in addition to your personal return. And you’ll need to document that your salary is reasonable based on your industry, your role, and market rates for comparable work.

That last point matters more than most people realize. The IRS pays attention to S-Corp owners who pay themselves unusually low salaries to maximize distributions. Setting your reasonable compensation too low is a red flag that can trigger scrutiny. Getting it right requires knowing what the IRS expects, and having a tax strategist who can help you defend your number if it ever comes up.

The S-Corp Election Is a Strategy Decision, Not Just a Filing

This is where a lot of business owners get tripped up. They think about the S-Corp election as a piece of paperwork, something to file and check off the list. In reality, it’s a tax strategy decision that affects your payroll structure, your QBI deduction, your retirement contributions, and potentially your state tax liability all at once.

Done right, it’s one of the most effective ways a profitable small business owner can reduce their tax burden legally and sustainably. Done without a plan, it can create compliance headaches and unexpected tax consequences that offset the savings you were trying to capture.

At RainwaterCPA, we don’t just help you file the election—we help you determine whether it makes sense, when to pull the trigger, what salary to set, and how it fits into your full tax strategy. That’s the difference between reacting to your tax bill and actually controlling it.

Ready to Take the Next Step?

If you’re running a profitable business and you’re not sure whether you’ve made the S-Corp election. or whether you should, that uncertainty is worth resolving. The deadline comes every March 15, and missing it means waiting another full year to capture the savings.

If you want to go deeper on how the S-Corp election stacks up against default LLC taxation with real numbers, RainwaterCPA will run the numbers for free.

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