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Wage Compensation for S Corporation Officers
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| S corporations are corporations that elect to pass corporate income, losses,
deductions, and credits through to their shareholders for federal tax
purposes. Shareholders of S corporations report the flow-through of income
and losses on their personal tax returns and are assessed tax at their
individual income tax rates. The Internal Revenue Code establishes that any officer of a corporation, including S corporations, is an employee of the corporation for federal employment tax purposes. S corporations should not attempt to avoid paying employment taxes by having their officers treat their compensation as cash distributions, payments of personal expenses, and/or loans rather than as wages. |
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This fact sheet clarifies information that small business taxpayers should understand regarding the tax law for corporate officers who perform services.
Generally, an officer of a corporation is an employee of the corporation.
The fact that an officer is also a shareholder does not change the
requirement that payments to the corporate officer be treated as wages.
Courts have consistently held that S corporation officer/shareholders who
provide more than minor services to their corporation and receive or are
entitled to receive payment are employees whose compensation is subject to
federal employment taxes.
The Treasury Regulations provide an exception for an officer of a
corporation who does not perform any services or performs only minor
services and who neither receives nor is entitled to receive, directly or
indirectly, any remuneration. Such an officer would not be considered an
employee.
The instructions to the Form 1120S, U.S. Income Tax Return for an S
Corporation, state "Distributions and other payments by an S corporation to
a corporate officer must be treated as wages to the extent the amounts are
reasonable compensation for services rendered to the corporation."
The amount of the compensation will never exceed the amount received by the
shareholder either directly or indirectly. However, if cash or property or
the right to receive cash and property did go the shareholder, a salary
amount must be determined and the level of salary must be reasonable and
appropriate.
There are no specific guidelines for reasonable compensation in the Code or
the Regulations. The various courts that have ruled on this issue have based
their determinations on the facts and circumstances of each case.
Some factors considered by the courts in determining reasonable
compensation:
• Training and experience
• Duties and responsibilities
• Time and effort devoted to the business
• Dividend history
• Payments to non-shareholder employees
• Timing and manner of paying bonuses to key people
• What comparable businesses pay for similar services
• Compensation agreements
• The use of a formula to determine compensation
The health and accident insurance premiums paid on behalf of the greater
than 2 percent S corporation shareholder-employee are deductible by the S
corporation as fringe benefits and are reportable as wages for income tax
withholding purposes on the shareholder-employee’s Form W-2. They are not
subject to Social Security or Medicare (FICA) or Unemployment (FUTA) taxes.
Therefore, this additional compensation is included in Box 1 (Wages) of the
Form W-2, Wage and Tax Statement, issued to the shareholder, but would not
be included in Boxes 3 or 5 of Form W-2.
A 2-percent shareholder-employee is eligible for an AGI deduction for
amounts paid during the year for medical care premiums if the medical care
coverage is established by the S corporation. Previously, “established by
the S corporation” meant that the medical care coverage had to be in the
name of the S corporation.
In Notice 2008-1, the IRS stated that if the medical coverage plan is in the
name of the 2percent shareholder and not in the name of the S corporation, a
medical care plan can be considered to be established by the S corporation
if: the S corporation either paid or reimbursed the 2percent shareholder for
the premiums and reported the premium payment or reimbursement as wages on
the 2percent shareholder’s Form W-2.
Payments of the health and accident insurance premiums on behalf of the
shareholder may be further identified in Box 14 (Other) of the Form W-2.
Schedule K-1 (Form 1120S) and Form 1099 should not be used as an alternative
to the Form W-2 to report this additional compensation.
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