What is reasonable compensation for a shareholder in an S Corp?
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Reasonable Compensation for S Corp
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In a nutshell....
... it is the value of the officer contribution to the net profit of the corporation. Don't forget the other issues like working capital, equipment, inventory, other employees, financing, and I guess the list can go on and on. That is why coming up with reasonable compensation can be difficult to come up with. As long as you have a reasonable reason for setting an officers compensation you should have no problem with the IRS.
Having no officer payroll is inviting the IRS and possibly asking for all the net profits to be converted to officer payroll. Although, any strong posistion by the client rep should get some good results.
A good preparer would not let officer payroll be zero.This post is for discussion purposes only and should be verified with other sources before actual use.
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Originally posted by BOBA good preparer would not let officer payroll be zero.
Also, at least in the past the IRS was only interested in officer salary if the officer was taking cash distributions instead of salary. If there is no distributions Is that no longer looked at?
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Originally posted by OldJackWhat about a S-corp that has no profit but incurrs a large loss with no funds for officer payroll?
Also, at least in the past the IRS was only interested in officer salary if the officer was taking cash distributions instead of salary. If there is no distributions Is that no longer looked at?
There are a lot of criteria, but the one that's relied upon the most is the independent investor test. What would an independent investor who had no connection pay under the same circumstances for the same work?
The IRS doesn't care about distributions, because distributions don't affect taxable income (unless the distributions go above the shareholder's basis). What they do care about is reporting income as S corporation earnings instead of wages assuming the earnings are the result of personal services.
In the past the IRS has only gone after S corporations that paid little or no wages and had relatively high S corporation earnings. An S corporation could pay very little in wages and get by with it, even when it was obvious that the earnings were from personal services. Everything I've read about this from the IRS says they're going to take a much closer look at the issue of S corporation wages. I think the days might be over where a sole proprietor in a service business can change to an S corp and then pretend that 90% of their income is from something other than personal services.
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Shelby
I have a question related to this issue. I frequently have new clients with S-Corps who have never wanted to go through all of the headaches related to payroll and their prior CPA's have allowed them to take their "reasonable compensation" using a 1099-Misc and then claiming it on a Sch C on their personal. While I do not recommend this, particularly for years forward, is this a problem for year's past? Or for year's future for that matter?
The prior CPA's have maintained that all of the taxes were paid so no harm was done. Incidentally, they have always put the amount paid on the 1099-Misc on the "Paid to Officers" line.
What say you?
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Old Jack
No profits......... That is why I started my original reply with "Officer's contribution to Net Profits". If profits are zero no Officer Payroll is needed. If you choose, some officers may want SS credit instead of their annual SS report being zero.This post is for discussion purposes only and should be verified with other sources before actual use.
Many times I post additional info on the post, Click on "message board" for updated content.
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Originally posted by ShelbyI have a question related to this issue. I frequently have new clients with S-Corps who have never wanted to go through all of the headaches related to payroll and their prior CPA's have allowed them to take their "reasonable compensation" using a 1099-Misc and then claiming it on a Sch C on their personal. While I do not recommend this, particularly for years forward, is this a problem for year's past? Or for year's future for that matter?
The prior CPA's have maintained that all of the taxes were paid so no harm was done. Incidentally, they have always put the amount paid on the 1099-Misc on the "Paid to Officers" line.
What say you?
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Good point....
.. here in NY SUTA (NYDOL) it is almost an automatic audit when Officer wages are below $8,500. If there are officer loan repayments or no distribution, they will not change the filed reports. Otherwise, they go back three years.This post is for discussion purposes only and should be verified with other sources before actual use.
Many times I post additional info on the post, Click on "message board" for updated content.
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Cpa
Originally posted by JONThose darn prior CPAs .................. Never do what they did...
I have single owner S-Corps taking 12,000 or 18,000/year wages. Reasonable? You may think not, however, lets look at an arguement to prove that it is.
Minimum wage is $5.15/hr x 40 hrs/wk x 52 wks/yr = $10,712 per year. If the gov't calls 5.15/hr reasonable then 12k/year is above that amount. Aggressive? Sure it is. Does not mean that it is incorrect.
MattI would put a favorite quote in here, but it would get me banned from the board.
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Originally posted by Matt SovaAs a CPA I am offended by these types of remarks. There are lots of theories on reasonable wage, but the fact of the matter is there is nothing in the tax law that defines reasonable. That said, if someone is given a 1099-MISC that is just plain incorrect. I have seen EA's, CPA's and unlicensed preparers do it. By law if you are an officer of a corporation you are an employee and therefore you cannot get a 1099.
I have single owner S-Corps taking 12,000 or 18,000/year wages. Reasonable? You may think not, however, lets look at an arguement to prove that it is.
Minimum wage is $5.15/hr x 40 hrs/wk x 52 wks/yr = $10,712 per year. If the gov't calls 5.15/hr reasonable then 12k/year is above that amount. Aggressive? Sure it is. Does not mean that it is incorrect.
Matt
I believe you're really stretching here. You can't just throw out numbers and determine whether the numbers amount to reasonable compensation. Just as with most things in tax law, there are facts and circumstances that, by law, need to be considered.
No, the government does not call $5.15 an hour "reasonable." They call it "minimum." But it doesn't matter because minimum wage is irrelevant. I've never seen minimum wage cited in any of the court cases I've read regarding reasonable compensation.
You could argue that a reasonable wage for a heart surgeon or the CEO of a major medical supply company is $5.15 an hour and call it "aggressive." Of course, it's not aggressive, it's simply ... unreasonable.
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