← Back to Calculator
Resources
S-Corp vs LLC What Is Reasonable Compensation? How to File Form 2553

S-Corp vs LLC: Which Is Better for Tax Savings?

If you're a self-employed business owner earning over $50,000 per year, you've probably heard that electing S-Corp status can save you thousands in taxes. But what exactly is the difference between an LLC and an S-Corp, and when does the switch actually make sense?

Here's the key insight most people miss: an S-Corp is not a business structure — it's a tax election. Your LLC stays exactly the same. You're only changing how the IRS taxes your income.

The Core Difference: How You're Taxed

As a Standard LLC (Sole Proprietor)

All of your net business income is subject to self-employment (SE) tax at 15.3% (12.4% Social Security + 2.9% Medicare). This is on top of your regular income tax. For example, on $100,000 net income, you pay approximately $14,130 in SE tax alone.

As an LLC with S-Corp Election

You split your income into two buckets:

On $100,000 net income with a $50,000 salary, only the $50,000 salary gets hit with payroll taxes. That's roughly $7,000+ saved per year.

Side-by-Side Comparison

FeatureStandard LLCLLC + S-Corp Election
Business StructureLLCLLC (unchanged)
IRS Tax TreatmentSole Proprietor (Schedule C)S-Corporation (Form 1120-S)
SE Tax Applies ToAll net incomeSalary only
Payroll RequiredNoYes (for yourself)
Annual Tax FormsSchedule C, Schedule SEForm 1120-S, W-2, K-1
Extra Annual CostsNone~$600 payroll + ~$500 CPA
Break-Even PointN/A~$40,000-$50,000 net income
Best ForIncome under $50K/yrIncome over $50K/yr

When Should You Elect S-Corp Status?

S-Corp election generally makes sense when:

When Should You Stay as a Standard LLC?

The Bottom Line

For most profitable single-owner LLCs, S-Corp election is the single biggest tax optimization available. It doesn't change anything about your business — it just changes how the IRS taxes your profits, and it can save you $5,000-$20,000+ every single year.

See Your Exact Savings in 30 Seconds

Our free calculator shows you exactly how much you'd save with S-Corp election, including the optimal salary/distribution split.

Calculate My Savings →