Deciding whether to form a C corporation or an S Corporation? BizFilings, the trusted leader in online incorporation, makes forming a corporation easy.
When entrepreneurs consider starting a business, or when existing small business owners consider changing their business structure, one of the most common options they evaluate is whether to form an S corporation or C corporation. These are the two most common ways to incorporate a business online, the choice is dependent on the goals you have for your business.
The C corporation is the standard corporation. The S corporation is a standard corporation that has elected a special tax status with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). It gets its name because it is defined in Subchapter S of the Internal Revenue Code. In order to elect S corporation status, Form 2553 must be filed with the IRS and all S corporation guidelines met.
Similarities
While the C corporation and S corporation have many similarities, they also have distinct differences.
Differences
1. Taxation
2. Corporate ownership
3. S corporation election
Pass-through Taxation
As mentioned above, electing S corporation status with the IRS allows for pass-through taxation of the corporation’s profits. S corporations must still file corporate tax returns, but they do not pay taxes at the corporate level. The corporation’s profits are passed-through to the individual tax returns of the shareholders, and taxes are paid on those profits at the individual tax rate. If the corporation is reporting a loss, the loss is passed-through to the shareholders as well. Because S corporations do not pay taxes at the corporate level, this eliminates the potential double tax C corporations face when profits are issued as dividends to shareholders.
As you determine which business structure is the best for you to incorporate as, there are both online and professional resources to assist you. BizFilings’ Incorporation Assistant can help you compare different entities based on a number of considerations that are important to you. For advice on which structure to choose, you should contact an attorney or accountant.
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