Business Income Tax Calculator for Entity Selection including QBI — S‑Corp — C‑Corp LLC Taxation

Business Income Tax Calculator for Entity Selection

Choos­ing the right tax struc­ture for your busi­ness can make a sig­nif­i­cant dif­fer­ence in how much you pay in fed­er­al income tax, self-employ­ment tax, pay­roll tax, and over­all busi­ness tax­es.

This cal­cu­la­tor is designed to help busi­ness own­ers and tax pro­fes­sion­als com­pare the poten­tial tax impact of oper­at­ing as a:

  • Sole pro­pri­etor
  • Sin­gle-mem­ber LLC
  • Part­ner­ship or mul­ti-mem­ber LLC
  • S cor­po­ra­tion
  • C cor­po­ra­tion

A busi­ness enti­ty income tax cal­cu­la­tor is inher­ent­ly not exact for any giv­en busi­ness. I could­n’t find one to obtain a quick and rough esti­mate of tax lia­bil­i­ty of var­i­ous enti­ty options so I made my own that you’re wel­come to use. It’s a mis­take to assume the answer with­out greater infor­ma­tion will allow a busi­ness own­er to decide between enti­ty options because tax­a­tion is not just a form-fil­ing deci­sion. The right answer depends on prof­it, own­er com­pen­sa­tion, pay­roll tax­es, QBI, state tax­es, retire­ment plan­ning, and long-term busi­ness goals includ­ing the next few years.

Use this cal­cu­la­tor as a start­ing point. Then sched­ule a tax plan­ning con­sul­ta­tion to review whether your cur­rent busi­ness struc­ture is cost­ing you more tax than nec­es­sary.

 

How to Use This Business Entity Tax Calculator

This cal­cu­la­tor is intend­ed to give busi­ness own­ers a start­ing point for com­par­ing dif­fer­ent tax struc­tures. It is espe­cial­ly use­ful for own­ers of prof­itable small busi­ness­es who are try­ing to decide whether they should con­tin­ue oper­at­ing as a sole pro­pri­etor or LLC, elect S cor­po­ra­tion tax­a­tion, or con­sid­er C cor­po­ra­tion tax­a­tion.

The cal­cu­la­tor may help answer ques­tions such as:

  • Am I pay­ing too much self-employ­ment tax as a sole pro­pri­etor?
  • Would an S cor­po­ra­tion elec­tion reduce my tax bur­den?
  • How much salary should I assume for S cor­po­ra­tion plan­ning?
  • Does the qual­i­fied busi­ness income deduc­tion affect the com­par­i­son?
  • Would a C cor­po­ra­tion be bet­ter if I plan to retain prof­its in the busi­ness?
  • Is my busi­ness income high enough to jus­ti­fy the extra cost of an S cor­po­ra­tion?

The results should be reviewed as a plan­ning esti­mate, not as a final tax rec­om­men­da­tion.


Why Entity Selection Matters

Enti­ty selec­tion is one of the most impor­tant tax plan­ning deci­sions for a busi­ness own­er. The same busi­ness prof­it can pro­duce very dif­fer­ent tax results depend­ing on how the busi­ness is taxed.

A busi­ness earn­ing $150,000 may have a very dif­fer­ent tax out­come if it is taxed as a sole pro­pri­etor­ship com­pared to an S cor­po­ra­tion or C cor­po­ra­tion. The dif­fer­ence may come from self-employ­ment tax, pay­roll tax, QBI deduc­tion lim­i­ta­tions, rea­son­able com­pen­sa­tion rules, div­i­dend tax­a­tion, and state tax rules.

The main issue is that dif­fer­ent enti­ties tax busi­ness prof­its in dif­fer­ent ways.

A sole pro­pri­etor gen­er­al­ly pays income tax and self-employ­ment tax on net busi­ness income. Self-employ­ment tax cov­ers Social Secu­ri­ty and Medicare tax­es for indi­vid­u­als who work for them­selves. The IRS describes self-employ­ment tax as sep­a­rate from income tax, and the gen­er­al self-employ­ment tax rate is 15.3%, made up of 12.4% Social Secu­ri­ty tax and 2.9% Medicare tax.However, for mar­ried cou­ples where both spous­es work for the busi­ness, it may be supe­ri­or to have one spouse work­ing for the own­er spouse if health insur­ance deductibil­i­ty is impor­tant.

An S cor­po­ra­tion may reduce pay­roll tax expo­sure in some sit­u­a­tions because the own­er may receive both W‑2 wages and dis­tri­b­u­tions. How­ev­er, the IRS requires share­hold­er-employ­ees to receive rea­son­able com­pen­sa­tion for ser­vices pro­vid­ed to the cor­po­ra­tion before tak­ing non-wage dis­tri­b­u­tions.

A C cor­po­ra­tion gen­er­al­ly pays tax sep­a­rate­ly from the own­er. The fed­er­al cor­po­rate tax rate is gen­er­al­ly 21%, but if the cor­po­ra­tion dis­trib­utes after-tax prof­its as div­i­dends, the share­hold­er may face a sec­ond lay­er of tax.


LLC Taxation: An LLC Is Not Always the Final Tax Answer

One of the most com­mon mis­un­der­stand­ings is that form­ing an LLC auto­mat­i­cal­ly deter­mines how the busi­ness is taxed. It does not.

An LLC is cre­at­ed under state law. For fed­er­al tax pur­pos­es, the LLC may be taxed dif­fer­ent­ly depend­ing on the num­ber of own­ers and whether the LLC makes a tax elec­tion.

A sin­gle-mem­ber LLC is usu­al­ly taxed as a dis­re­gard­ed enti­ty by default. That means the own­er reports the busi­ness activ­i­ty direct­ly on the owner’s per­son­al tax return, often on Sched­ule C.

A mul­ti-mem­ber LLC is usu­al­ly taxed as a part­ner­ship by default. The LLC files a part­ner­ship tax return and issues Sched­ule K‑1s to the mem­bers. When a muli­ti-mem­ber LLC is exclu­sive­ly owned by spous­es in a com­mu­ni­ty prop­er­ty state, the IRS gen­er­al­ly treats the LLC as a sin­gle-mem­ber LLC

In some cas­es, an LLC can elect to be taxed as an S cor­po­ra­tion or C cor­po­ra­tion. This is why an LLC can be flex­i­ble, but also why busi­ness own­ers should not assume that form­ing an LLC alone com­pletes the tax plan­ning process.An LLC is gen­er­al­ly much eas­i­er for small busi­ness own­ers to com­ply with the for­mal­i­ties vis-a-vis a cor­po­ra­tion.


Sole Proprietor or Single-Member LLC Taxation

A sole pro­pri­etor or sin­gle-mem­ber LLC is often the sim­plest struc­ture for a small busi­ness own­er. It usu­al­ly has few­er fil­ing require­ments, less admin­is­tra­tive cost, and no require­ment to run pay­roll for the own­er.

This can be a good struc­ture when the busi­ness is new, has mod­est prof­it, or has incon­sis­tent income.

The down­side is that net busi­ness income is gen­er­al­ly sub­ject to both income tax and self-employ­ment tax. For a prof­itable busi­ness, self-employ­ment tax can become a major cost.

A sole pro­pri­etor or sin­gle-mem­ber LLC may make sense when:

  • The busi­ness is new or still grow­ing
  • Prof­it is rel­a­tive­ly low
  • Income is incon­sis­tent
  • Sim­plic­i­ty is more impor­tant than tax sav­ings
  • The cost of pay­roll and an addi­tion­al busi­ness tax return would out­weigh poten­tial tax sav­ings
  • The own­er does not want the admin­is­tra­tive require­ments of an S cor­po­ra­tion

This struc­ture is often best for ear­ly-stage busi­ness­es or busi­ness­es where the poten­tial tax sav­ings from an S cor­po­ra­tion elec­tion would be small.


Partnership or Multi-Member LLC Taxation

A part­ner­ship or mul­ti-mem­ber LLC can pro­vide flex­i­bil­i­ty, espe­cial­ly when there are mul­ti­ple own­ers. Part­ner­ships can allo­cate income, loss­es, deduc­tions, and dis­tri­b­u­tions under the part­ner­ship agree­ment, sub­ject to tax rules.

How­ev­er, part­ner­ship tax­a­tion can become com­plex. Own­ers may need to con­sid­er guar­an­teed pay­ments, cap­i­tal accounts, basis, dis­tri­b­u­tions, self-employ­ment tax, and spe­cial allo­ca­tions.

A part­ner­ship or mul­ti-mem­ber LLC may make sense when:

  • There are mul­ti­ple own­ers
  • The own­ers want flex­i­bil­i­ty in allo­cat­ing prof­its or loss­es
  • The busi­ness involves real estate or invest­ment activ­i­ty
  • The own­ers want pass-through tax­a­tion
  • The busi­ness does not want to be restrict­ed by S cor­po­ra­tion own­er­ship rules

Part­ner­ship tax­a­tion can be pow­er­ful, but it should be han­dled care­ful­ly. Poor­ly draft­ed oper­at­ing agree­ments and unclear tax allo­ca­tions can cre­ate prob­lems lat­er.


S Corporation Taxation

An S cor­po­ra­tion is one of the most com­mon tax plan­ning struc­tures for prof­itable small busi­ness­es. An S cor­po­ra­tion gen­er­al­ly does not pay fed­er­al income tax at the enti­ty lev­el. Instead, income pass­es through to the share­hold­ers, who report the income on their per­son­al tax returns. The IRS describes S cor­po­ra­tions as pass-through enti­ties where share­hold­ers report the flow-through income and loss­es on their per­son­al returns.

The main tax plan­ning ben­e­fit is that an S cor­po­ra­tion share­hold­er-employ­ee may receive both wages and dis­tri­b­u­tions.

The wages are sub­ject to pay­roll tax­es. The remain­ing busi­ness prof­it may be dis­trib­uted to the share­hold­er and gen­er­al­ly is not sub­ject to self-employ­ment tax.

That can cre­ate tax sav­ings, but only if the own­er is paid rea­son­able com­pen­sa­tion.


Reasonable Compensation Is the Key S Corporation Issue

An S cor­po­ra­tion own­er who works in the busi­ness can­not sim­ply take all prof­it as dis­tri­b­u­tions and avoid pay­roll tax­es. The IRS requires an S cor­po­ra­tion to deter­mine and report an appro­pri­ate and rea­son­able salary when a share­hold­er receives or has the right to receive cash or prop­er­ty from the cor­po­ra­tion.

Rea­son­able com­pen­sa­tion depends on the facts. Fac­tors may include:

  • The owner’s role in the busi­ness
  • Duties and respon­si­bil­i­ties
  • Time spent work­ing in the busi­ness
  • Train­ing and expe­ri­ence
  • Com­pa­ra­ble salaries for sim­i­lar work
  • Busi­ness size and prof­itabil­i­ty
  • Pay­ments to non-own­er employ­ees
  • The amount dis­trib­uted to the share­hold­er
  • The company’s com­pen­sa­tion his­to­ry

The low­er the salary and the high­er the dis­tri­b­u­tions, the more impor­tant it is to have a defen­si­ble rea­son­able com­pen­sa­tion analy­sis.

An S cor­po­ra­tion may be use­ful when there is enough prof­it left after pay­ing the own­er a rea­son­able salary to jus­ti­fy the addi­tion­al cost and com­plex­i­ty.


When an S Corporation May Make Sense

An S cor­po­ra­tion may be worth con­sid­er­ing when the busi­ness has con­sis­tent prof­it above what would be con­sid­ered rea­son­able own­er com­pen­sa­tion.

For exam­ple, if a busi­ness earns $175,000 and a rea­son­able salary for the owner’s work is $90,000, there may be $85,000 of remain­ing prof­it that could poten­tial­ly be treat­ed as an S cor­po­ra­tion dis­tri­b­u­tion. That dis­tri­b­u­tion may avoid self-employ­ment tax or pay­roll tax, although it remains sub­ject to income tax.

An S cor­po­ra­tion may make sense when:

  • The busi­ness is con­sis­tent­ly prof­itable
  • The own­er active­ly works in the busi­ness
  • Prof­it exceeds a rea­son­able salary
  • The busi­ness can afford pay­roll and tax fil­ing costs
  • The own­er is will­ing to main­tain bet­ter books and records
  • The expect­ed pay­roll tax sav­ings exceed the added admin­is­tra­tive costs
  • The own­er wants to use pay­roll-based retire­ment plan­ning strate­gies

An S cor­po­ra­tion may not make sense when:

  • The busi­ness has low prof­it
  • The busi­ness has incon­sis­tent income
  • The own­er would need to take near­ly all prof­it as rea­son­able salary
  • Pay­roll and account­ing costs would exceed tax sav­ings
  • The own­er does not want added com­pli­ance oblig­a­tions
  • The busi­ness has own­er­ship that does not qual­i­fy for S cor­po­ra­tion sta­tus

The S cor­po­ra­tion deci­sion should usu­al­ly be based on a tax pro­jec­tion, not a guess.


C Corporation Taxation

A C cor­po­ra­tion is a sep­a­rate tax­pay­ing enti­ty. The cor­po­ra­tion pays tax on its own income. If the cor­po­ra­tion dis­trib­utes prof­its to share­hold­ers as div­i­dends, the share­hold­ers may also pay tax on those div­i­dends.

This is com­mon­ly called dou­ble tax­a­tion.

The 21% cor­po­rate tax rate can look attrac­tive when com­pared to high­er indi­vid­ual tax brack­ets. How­ev­er, the com­par­i­son is incom­plete unless you also con­sid­er the sec­ond lay­er of tax when mon­ey is dis­trib­uted to the own­er.

A C cor­po­ra­tion may make sense when:

  • The busi­ness plans to retain prof­its for growth
  • The com­pa­ny expects out­side investors
  • The busi­ness may issue stock
  • The own­er wants cer­tain cor­po­rate fringe ben­e­fit options
  • The busi­ness is plan­ning for a pos­si­ble sale or expan­sion
  • The own­er may qual­i­fy for qual­i­fied small busi­ness stock plan­ning
  • The busi­ness does not need to dis­trib­ute most annu­al prof­its to the own­er

A C cor­po­ra­tion may be less attrac­tive when:

  • The own­er wants to with­draw most prof­its every year
  • The busi­ness is a per­son­al ser­vice busi­ness
  • The own­er wants sim­ple pass-through tax­a­tion
  • Dou­ble tax­a­tion would cre­ate a worse over­all tax result
  • State cor­po­rate tax­es reduce the ben­e­fit of the fed­er­al cor­po­rate rate

For many close­ly held small busi­ness­es, a C cor­po­ra­tion should be con­sid­ered care­ful­ly before mak­ing the elec­tion.


Qualified Business Income Deduction and Entity Selection

The qual­i­fied busi­ness income deduc­tion, often called the QBI deduc­tion or Sec­tion 199A deduc­tion, can be one of the most impor­tant fac­tors in enti­ty selec­tion.

The QBI deduc­tion may allow eli­gi­ble own­ers of pass-through busi­ness­es to deduct up to 20% of qual­i­fied busi­ness income. The IRS explains that the deduc­tion is avail­able to eli­gi­ble own­ers of pass-through busi­ness­es, includ­ing sole pro­pri­etor­ships, part­ner­ships, S cor­po­ra­tions, and some trusts and estates.

The QBI deduc­tion gen­er­al­ly does not apply to C cor­po­ra­tion income.

This can make pass-through tax­a­tion more attrac­tive in some cas­es. How­ev­er, the deduc­tion is sub­ject to sev­er­al lim­i­ta­tions, includ­ing:

  • Tax­able income thresh­olds
  • Spec­i­fied ser­vice trade or busi­ness rules
  • W‑2 wage lim­i­ta­tions
  • Qual­i­fied prop­er­ty lim­i­ta­tions
  • Whether the income is actu­al­ly qual­i­fied busi­ness income
  • Whether the own­er has suf­fi­cient tax­able income

For 2025, the IRS Form 8995 instruc­tions pro­vide tax­able income thresh­olds of $394,600 for mar­ried fil­ing joint­ly and $197,300 for oth­er returns for pur­pos­es of the sim­pli­fied QBI com­pu­ta­tion and cer­tain lim­i­ta­tion rules.

For high­er-income busi­ness own­ers, espe­cial­ly pro­fes­sion­als and ser­vice busi­ness own­ers, QBI plan­ning can become very impor­tant.


Entity Selection Is Not Just About the Lowest Tax This Year

A com­mon mis­take is choos­ing an enti­ty based only on the cur­rent year’s esti­mat­ed tax sav­ings. That approach can miss the big­ger pic­ture.

Good enti­ty selec­tion should con­sid­er:

  • Cur­rent-year income tax
  • Self-employ­ment tax
  • Pay­roll tax
  • State tax­es
  • QBI deduc­tion
  • Admin­is­tra­tive costs
  • Pay­roll costs
  • Book­keep­ing require­ments
  • Retire­ment plan options
  • Health insur­ance treat­ment
  • Lia­bil­i­ty pro­tec­tion
  • Own­er­ship struc­ture
  • Future sale or exit plan­ning
  • Whether prof­its will be dis­trib­uted or retained
  • Whether the busi­ness may add own­ers or investors

The best tax struc­ture is not always the one with the low­est tax in a sin­gle year. It is the struc­ture that best fits the owner’s income, risk, admin­is­tra­tive capac­i­ty, and long-term goals.


General Entity Selection Guidance

A sole proprietorship or default single-member LLC may be best when simplicity matters

This struc­ture is often appro­pri­ate for a new busi­ness, side busi­ness, or busi­ness with mod­est income. It is sim­ple, inex­pen­sive, and easy to main­tain.

How­ev­er, once income grows, the own­er should review whether self-employ­ment tax is becom­ing too expen­sive.

An S corporation may be best when the business has strong recurring profit

An S cor­po­ra­tion may be a good fit when the busi­ness has enough income to pay the own­er a rea­son­able salary and still have mean­ing­ful prof­it left over.

The tax sav­ings should be large enough to jus­ti­fy pay­roll, book­keep­ing, tax return prepa­ra­tion, and com­pli­ance costs.

A partnership or multi-member LLC may be best when there are multiple owners who need flexibility

Part­ner­ship tax­a­tion can work well for busi­ness­es with mul­ti­ple own­ers, real estate ven­tures, or busi­ness­es that need flex­i­ble eco­nom­ic arrange­ments.

How­ev­er, part­ner­ship tax rules can be more com­plex than many busi­ness own­ers expect.

A C corporation may be best when profits will stay in the business

A C cor­po­ra­tion may be use­ful when the com­pa­ny is rein­vest­ing prof­its, seek­ing investors, or build­ing toward a future sale. It is usu­al­ly less attrac­tive when the own­er plans to dis­trib­ute most prof­its each year.

The QBI deduction can change the answer

Because QBI can reduce tax­able income for eli­gi­ble pass-through busi­ness own­ers, it should be part of the enti­ty com­par­i­son. A struc­ture that looks bet­ter before QBI may look worse after QBI is includ­ed.


Practical Examples

Example 1: New consultant with $40,000 of profit

A new con­sul­tant earn­ing $40,000 may not ben­e­fit much from an S cor­po­ra­tion elec­tion. The addi­tion­al pay­roll cost, book­keep­ing, and cor­po­rate tax return may exceed the tax sav­ings.

A sole pro­pri­etor­ship or sin­gle-mem­ber LLC may be more prac­ti­cal.

Example 2: Service business with $180,000 of profit

A busi­ness own­er earn­ing $180,000 may want to review S cor­po­ra­tion tax­a­tion. If a rea­son­able salary is $90,000 to $110,000, the remain­ing prof­it may poten­tial­ly be dis­trib­uted with­out self-employ­ment tax.

This is the type of sit­u­a­tion where an S cor­po­ra­tion analy­sis may be worth­while.

Example 3: Business reinvesting most of its profit

A grow­ing busi­ness that earns sub­stan­tial prof­it but rein­vests most of it into expan­sion may want to com­pare pass-through tax­a­tion with C cor­po­ra­tion tax­a­tion.

The C cor­po­ra­tion rate may be attrac­tive, but the own­er must con­sid­er dou­ble tax­a­tion, future div­i­dends, sale plan­ning, and state tax con­se­quences.

Example 4: High-income professional service business

A high-income attor­ney, accoun­tant, con­sul­tant, physi­cian, or finan­cial pro­fes­sion­al may face QBI lim­i­ta­tions because of spec­i­fied ser­vice trade or busi­ness rules.

For these tax­pay­ers, enti­ty selec­tion should include not only pay­roll tax analy­sis, but also QBI plan­ning, retire­ment con­tri­bu­tions, and tax­able income man­age­ment.


Questions to Ask Before Changing Your Entity Tax Structure

Before mak­ing an S cor­po­ra­tion elec­tion, C cor­po­ra­tion elec­tion, or oth­er enti­ty change, con­sid­er these ques­tions:

  • What is the business’s expect­ed annu­al prof­it?
  • How sta­ble is the income?
  • What would be a rea­son­able salary for the own­er?
  • How much prof­it would remain after that salary?
  • How much would pay­roll ser­vice cost?
  • How much would the addi­tion­al tax return cost?
  • Would QBI be reduced or improved?
  • Does the busi­ness qual­i­fy for S cor­po­ra­tion tax­a­tion?
  • Are there mul­ti­ple own­ers?
  • Will prof­its be dis­trib­uted or retained?
  • Does the busi­ness oper­ate in mul­ti­ple states?
  • Are retire­ment con­tri­bu­tions part of the plan­ning?
  • Is the own­er plan­ning to sell the busi­ness?
  • Would the enti­ty choice affect financ­ing, licens­ing, or con­tracts?

Enti­ty changes should be made care­ful­ly because the wrong struc­ture can cre­ate tax costs, admin­is­tra­tive prob­lems, or unin­tend­ed con­se­quences.


Common Mistakes Business Owners Make

Forming an LLC but never reviewing tax classification

An LLC is often a good legal struc­ture, but the default tax clas­si­fi­ca­tion may not be the best long-term tax struc­ture.

Electing S corporation status too early

An S cor­po­ra­tion can save tax, but if income is too low, the added cost may not be worth it.

Taking an unreasonably low S corporation salary

This is one of the biggest S cor­po­ra­tion risks. The IRS expects share­hold­er-employ­ees to receive rea­son­able com­pen­sa­tion.

Ignoring QBI

The QBI deduc­tion can mate­ri­al­ly affect the tax com­par­i­son between sole pro­pri­etor­ships, part­ner­ships, S cor­po­ra­tions, and C cor­po­ra­tions.

Looking only at federal tax

State income tax, fran­chise tax, annu­al report fees, and state-lev­el enti­ty tax­es can change the result.

Choosing a C corporation only because of the 21% rate

The cor­po­rate rate is only one part of the analy­sis. Div­i­dend tax and dou­ble tax­a­tion must also be con­sid­ered.


When to Review Your Business Entity Structure

A busi­ness own­er should con­sid­er review­ing enti­ty selec­tion when:

  • Annu­al prof­it has increased sig­nif­i­cant­ly
  • The busi­ness is con­sis­tent­ly prof­itable
  • The own­er is pay­ing sub­stan­tial self-employ­ment tax
  • The busi­ness added employ­ees
  • The busi­ness added anoth­er own­er
  • The own­er is con­sid­er­ing retire­ment plan con­tri­bu­tions
  • The busi­ness is expand­ing into anoth­er state
  • The own­er is con­sid­er­ing sell­ing the busi­ness
  • The busi­ness has changed from part-time to full-time
  • The own­er formed an LLC but nev­er reviewed tax elec­tions

Enti­ty selec­tion is not a one-time deci­sion. A struc­ture that was appro­pri­ate when the busi­ness start­ed may not be the best struc­ture after the busi­ness becomes more prof­itable.