Many small firms are structured as S-corporations, and federal law requires an S-corporation’s owner-managers to pay themselves at least a “reasonable” salary. But by converting to a limited liability company, or L.L.C., owners can set their salaries to zero and take all of their income from the company as profits, thus avoiding any Kansas tax. Guess what all the S-corps in Kansas are now doing.
Originally Posted by BigLouie
I would be really interested in where you think a "S" corp pays tax and an LLC does not. Seeing has how the earnings of an "S" corp are passed to the shareholder and are taxed at the shareholder's tax rate.
An LLC is not an taxable entity in the eyes of the IRS. Depending on elections made by the LLC and the number of members, the IRS will treat an LLC as either a corporation, partnership, or as part of the LLC’s owner’s tax return (a “disregarded entity”). Specifically, a domestic LLC with at least two members is classified as a partnership for federal income tax purposes unless it files Form 8832 and affirmatively elects to be treated as a corporation. And an LLC with only one member is treated as an entity disregarded as separate from its owner for income tax purposes (but as a separate entity for purposes of employment tax and certain excise taxes), unless it files Form 8832 and affirmatively elects to be treated as a corporation.
The main advantage associated with the
S Corporation is that the income passes through to the shareholer , therefore avoiding a perceived double taxation of a C-Corporation.
http://www.residual-rewards.com/kans...rporation.html
http://www.irs.gov/Businesses/Small-...ty-Company-LLC
So the only tax that might be effected here is social security not income. And just so you know. Detroit has been under democratic rule for 52 years and it was not republican agendas that bankrupted Detroit.
My Guess is that the S corp is staying the way they are, keeping salaries low to reduce the amount of SS tax paid by the owner-manager and the corporation increasing the the profits the shareholders get which are taxed at their regular rate.