If you plan to incorporate your company, your business success might strongly depend on which corporate tax classification you choose. You have two options: an S corporation or a C corporation. The choice you make affects not just your business taxes but your personal taxes, business funding options, and ownership structure.
With all these considerations to keep in mind, how can you make the right choice when it comes to forming as an S corporation vs. a C corporation? Read on to learn more.
A C-corporation, often called a C corp, is a corporate tax classification through which the company’s income is taxed separately from the owners’ and shareholders’ income. The company’s income is taxed at corporate tax rates, while the owners’ personal income is taxed at personal income tax rates. C corporations are the most common tax classification among corporations, though other business owners may opt to classify their companies as S corporations.
An S corporation, often referred to as an S corp, is a corporate tax classification through which all the company’s income is passed on to the owners and shareholders and thus taxed as personal income. This structure, also known as a pass-through entity, means that an S corporation does not pay corporate tax. Instead, business earnings count toward the owners’ personal income, so an S corporation’s income is taxed at personal income tax rates.
Whether you wind up going with an S corporation or a C corporation, your first step toward incorporating your business is filing articles of incorporation. In these articles, which you file with your state secretary’s office, you will likely need to include the following:
Some states may require additional information or not need some of the above information. Check with your incorporating state for details.
After your articles of incorporation are approved, your company is officially a corporation. Your next step is to choose whether an S corporation or C corporation is a better tax classification for your company.
While S corporations and C corporations are both corporate tax classifications, they differ in the following ways:
Your choice of an S corporation vs. a C corporation depends on how the formation, taxation, and shareholder rules for these business entities will affect your operations. If you want to file one fewer formation document with the IRS and have unlimited shareholders, you might prefer a C corporation. If avoiding double taxation is of paramount importance to you, then you might want to register your company as an S corporation.
You should also consider how you plan to distribute your company’s profits and seek investors when deciding between an S corporation and a C corporation. The below pros and cons of each of these business entities will elucidate how you should address both of these considerations.
Registering your company as an S corporation comes with the following advantages and disadvantages:
Registering your company as a C-corporation comes with the following advantages and disadvantages:
The importance of properly choosing between an S corporation and a C corporation comes down to ownership, age, and funding sources. Here’s why:
Need funding to build your business? Don’t waste time going from bank-to-bank filling out multiple applications. SmartBiz helps you find the best financing for your unique needs whether that’s an SBA loan, Bank Term loan, or other financing. About 90% of qualified applications we refer to banks are funded and our financial professionals are on hand to answer your questions. Discover if you’re pre-qualified here without impacting your credit scores and read the SmartBiz 5-star customer service reviews on TrustPilot.