An S corporation is a small business entity that is treated as a regular corporation for all purposes other than its treatment under tax law. To make a “subchapter S election,” a corporation must satisfy a number of requirements:
- All shareholders must consent to the S corporation status
- The number of shareholders is limited to 100 (25 for tax years beginning prior to 2004)
- The corporation can issue only one class of stock
- The S corporation must be a domestic corporation, and its shareholders must be citizens or residents of the United States
- Only individuals, estates, S corporations, and certain trusts can be shareholders of the S corporation
How is an S Corporation Taxed?
In effect, an S corporation conducts business as a regular corporation but is taxed similar to a partnership. Unlike a C corporation, the S corporation does not pay a corporate tax on income. Rather, the S corporation passes items of income, loss, deductions, and credits through to its shareholders, who report the items and calculate the tax on their individual returns. Thus, the burden of taxation is shifted from the corporation to the individual shareholders.
Unlike a C corporation, an S corporation pays no regular income tax, alternative minimum tax, accumulated earnings tax, or personal holding company tax.
What About Double Taxation?
One major advantage of the S corporation is that it avoids double taxation. The term double taxation is often used in reference to a C corporation because a C corporation’s corporate income is taxed once to the corporation when earned and again to the shareholders when distributed to them as dividends. In other words, the business profits are taxed twice, once at the corporate level and once at the individual level. Also, it is important to note that the corporation does not get a tax deduction when it distributes dividends to its shareholders.
Tip: Several pieces of legislation relieve some of the double taxation burden of C corporations by providing that dividends received by an individual shareholder from domestic corporations (and qualified foreign corporations) are taxed at long-term capital gains tax rates for taxable years beginning in 2003 through 2012. For tax years prior to 2003, dividends were taxed as ordinary income. Absent further legislative action, dividends will again be taxed as ordinary income beginning in 2013.
Example(s):Assume ABC Corporation is in the 35 percent tax bracket and that its only shareholder, Jack, pays tax on qualifying dividends at the rate of 15 percent. The corporate tax on $1,000 worth of profits amounts to $350. The remaining $650 will incur a tax of $97.50 when distributed to Jack, leaving only $552.50 in after-tax profits. This is an effective 44.75 percent combined tax rate.
In contrast, the income of an S corporation is generally only taxed once when it flows through to the individual shareholders. However, if the S corporation was originally a C corporation with accumulated earnings and profits, it may be liable for a 35 percent flat tax on excess net passive income, certain capital gains, and any built-in gains. For more information, contact an accountant or tax attorney.
How is Taxable Income Determined?
Yearly Tax Return Must be Filed
Every corporation must file a yearly tax return, regardless of the amount of income or loss experienced. Filing ends only when the corporation has been totally dissolved. S corporations must file Form 1120S by the 15th day of the 3rd month following the close of the corporation’s tax year.
Subject to Individual Income Rules—and Sometimes Partnership Rules, Too
Computation of gross income for an S corporation is similar to the computation of gross income for an individual taxpayer, although partnership rules will sometimes come into play. Each shareholder must report his or her proportionate share of separately and nonseparately stated items of income, loss, deduction, or credit.
Separately Stated Items
Because the S corporation is a conduit (pass-through) entity, it is required to separately list certain items that require separate reporting by the individual shareholders. The reason is that these items could affect the tax liability of different shareholders, depending on their particular tax situations. These items include:
• Long-term capital gain or loss
• Short-term capital gain or loss
• Charitable contributions
• Interest
• Dividends
• Royalty income
Corporation Taxable Income or Loss
All other items (e.g., operating income) are combined at the corporate level and passed through to the shareholders. Thus, the S corporation must compute taxable income or loss, which consists of everything except the aforementioned separately stated items. Taxable income is determined by subtracting allowable deductions from gross income.
How Are Items Allocated to Shareholders?
Per Share, Per Day Basis
An S corporation must apportion each item of income, deduction, credit, etc., to its shareholders on a per share, per day basis using a weighted average. The corporation assigns an equal portion of the items to each day of the taxable year and then divides that portion pro rata among the shares outstanding on such day. The formula is as follows:
(S Corporation Item) x (% of Stock Owned) x (% of Year Stock Owned)
The calculation is easy if there was no change in shareholdings during the taxable year.
Example(s): Assume an S corporation has a 60 percent shareholder and a 40 percent shareholder. It has $70,000 in ordinary income, $20,000 in long-term capital gains, and $5,000 in dividend income. The 60 percent shareholder will report 60 percent of each item, and the 40 percent shareholder will report 40 percent of each item.
Corporation Reports Required
The S corporation’s ordinary income and deductions from its principal business activity are netted on Form 1120S, page 1. Other items are reported on Schedule K. All income, loss, deduction, and credit information is reported to the shareholders on Schedule K-1. The S corporation must provide Schedule K-1 to each shareholder. The corporation must report the weighted average of the shares owned by each shareholder on Schedule K-1. In most cases, these averages will correspond to the portion of each line item allocated to the shareholders.
How Is a Shareholder’s Stock Basis Affected by Pass-Through Items?
Unlike a C corporation, where the basis of stock remains constant unless additional shares are purchased or sold, basis in S corporation stock will increase or decrease frequently. A shareholder’s basis in the S corporation’s stock is important in determining the amount of losses and deductions that can be passed through to the shareholder.
A shareholder’s stock basis is increased by separately and nonseparately stated items of income and gain and by additional stock purchases (and capital contributions). It is decreased by separately and nonseparately stated items of loss and deduction, certain corporate distributions, and nondeductible corporate expenses. Basis cannot be reduced below zero.
Example(s):Assume Lisa has an initial $10,000 basis in her S corporation stock (she owns all of the stock). If the corporation has a net operating loss of $5,000, Lisa’s stock basis will be reduced to $5,000.
What Taxes Are Unique to S Corporations?
In particular, there are three additional federal taxes that might apply to an S corporation: (1) the excess net passive income tax, (2) the capital gains tax, and (3) the built-in gains tax. Note, however, that if the corporation was an S corporation from its inception, it is not subject to any of these taxes. Contact your accountant, attorney, or financial planning professional for information about these taxes.
How Are Losses Treated?
Losses are passed through to the shareholders. With S corporations, pass-through losses and deductions are limited in a given year to the amount of a shareholder’s actual investment in the corporation (i.e., the sum of the shareholder’s stock basis and debt owed to the shareholder by the corporation).
Example(s):Rob paid $5,000 for 100 percent of the stock in his S corporation. In its first year of business, Rob’s company lost $7,000, which was reported on the corporate income tax return and on Rob’s Schedule K-1. Of this amount, Rob can claim only $5,000 as a loss, because this is the amount of his investment (basis) in the stock.
Additionally, at-risk and passive loss rules place additional limitations on an S corporation shareholder’s ability to deduct losses passed through from the corporation. For more information, contact the Business Experts at Henssler Financial:experts@henssler.com or 770-429-9166.