Sole Proprietor with W-2

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  • lenboush
    Senior Member
    • Jan 2007
    • 107

    #1

    Sole Proprietor with W-2

    I have a new client who is a single member LLC who has NOT elected to be an S-Corp. He has been paying himself and reporting the income on a W-2 since 2007. I am having difficulty convincing him that this is not the right way to report sole proprietor income.

    I have searched every resource I can think of and can find nothing from an authoritative source to show him that specifically states that a sole proprietor should not treat himself as an employee.

    Can anyone here provide a specific cite for this situation?

    Also, how have you handled such a situation if you have run into it before?

    THANKS!
    Lennox C. (Len) Boush, EA, FNTPI
    Heritage Income Tax Service, Inc.
    Portsmouth, VA
  • Roland Slugg
    Senior Member
    • Aug 2006
    • 1860

    #2
    I have seen partners of partnerships do the same thing. I don't know what else you can do other than keep telling him that a business's owner is NOT an employee, and that a W-2 for himself is improper. If he reported his "wages" on F-941 and F-940, he's going to have a mess straightening it all out.
    Roland Slugg
    "I do what I can."

    Comment

    • Larmil
      Senior Member
      • Dec 2006
      • 621

      #3
      Originally posted by lenboush
      I have a new client who is a single member LLC who has NOT elected to be an S-Corp. He has been paying himself and reporting the income on a W-2 since 2007. I am having difficulty convincing him that this is not the right way to report sole proprietor income.

      I have searched every resource I can think of and can find nothing from an authoritative source to show him that specifically states that a sole proprietor should not treat himself as an employee.

      Can anyone here provide a specific cite for this situation?

      Also, how have you handled such a situation if you have run into it before?

      THANKS!
      I have had the same situation for several years (10+). I take the wage deduction on the Sched. C and report the W-2 income since inherited client would not budge. No problems thus far.

      Comment

      • RitaB
        Senior Member
        • Jul 2008
        • 1382

        #4
        You might try this

        Originally posted by lenboush
        Also, how have you handled such a situation if you have run into it before?
        I ran several articles I found online. Also, I pointed out that he was paying SUTA and FUTA unnecessarily.
        If you loan someone $20 and never see them again, it was probably worth it.

        Comment

        • Burke
          Senior Member
          • Jan 2008
          • 7068

          #5
          And that can be a substantial expense depending on your state's rates. So, is he paying SE tax on the net LLC profit as well as his W-2 income?

          Comment

          • taxea
            Senior Member
            • Nov 2005
            • 4292

            #6
            Originally posted by RitaB
            I ran several articles I found online. Also, I pointed out that he was paying SUTA and FUTA unnecessarily.
            If SUTA and FUTA are non-profits he could write it off as donations...I can only imagine cleaning up this mess and trying to get his money back
            Believe nothing you have not personally researched and verified.

            Comment

            • S T
              Senior Member
              • Jun 2005
              • 5053

              #7
              Found maybe

              Lenboush
              Take at look at this thread post from another forum - It might give you the material you looking for - you have to go about 2/3 of the way down on the thread.



              See Pub 334 and Pub 15 as well

              Sandy

              Comment

              • MilTaxEA
                Senior Member
                • Mar 2011
                • 203

                #8
                Quote



                "You cannot deduct your own salary or any personal withdrawals you make from your business. As a sole proprietor, you are not an employee of the business."

                (I got the reference from the TaxAlmanac link above)
                Michael

                Comment

                • Burke
                  Senior Member
                  • Jan 2008
                  • 7068

                  #9
                  Think about it. If someone deducts his salary from a Sche C business, he most likely is also deducting the 1/2 of employer-paid SE taxes he is paying on behalf of himself from the gross business income, which lowers the SE tax when you get to that point. Wrong.

                  Comment

                  • joanmcq
                    Senior Member
                    • Jun 2007
                    • 1729

                    #10
                    Not only is he paying SUTA & FUTA unnecessarily, he wouldn't be able to file unemployment if his biz went under.

                    Stupid stupid stupid.

                    Comment

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