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S‑Corp Election Failures Can Cost You Without a Reasonable Compensation Study

If you oper­ate your busi­ness as an S cor­po­ra­tion or C cor­po­ra­tion, there is one issue that con­sis­tent­ly cre­ates prob­lems for oth­er­wise well-advised tax­pay­ers: rea­son­able com­pen­sa­tion.

It is not a tech­ni­cal nuance. It is not an option­al plan­ning con­cept. It is one of the most lit­i­gat­ed and enforced areas of fed­er­al tax law affect­ing close­ly held busi­ness­es.

And in my expe­ri­ence rep­re­sent­ing clients in audits and tax con­tro­ver­sy mat­ters, it is often the issue that turns a rou­tine exam­i­na­tion into a cost­ly dis­pute.

The IRS does not treat rea­son­able com­pen­sa­tion as a sug­ges­tion. They treat it as a com­pli­ance require­ment ground­ed in statute, reg­u­la­tions, and decades of case law.

What “Rea­son­able Com­pen­sa­tion” DOES NOT Mean

All too often I see prob­lems from tax­pay­er busi­ness own­ers who decid­ed on their own (or unfor­tu­nate­ly all too often), based on the advice of their tax pro­fes­sion­al, to use a sim­ple per­cent­age of the actu­al income. While the income of the busi­ness IS a com­po­nent used in the cal­cu­la­tion, you cer­tain­ly can rest assured of one impor­tant fact, doing so is like­ly going to cost you mon­ey in the long-run.

Either your per­cent­age is too high, caus­ing need­less addi­tion­al FICA tax pay­ments, OR dur­ing an audit, some or all of your distributions/dividends will get reclas­si­fied as earned income wages, sub­ject­ing the entire amount of income (up to the lim­it) to FICA tax.

Addi­tion­al­ly, the actu­al audit expense itself is gen­er­al­ly high­er due to the aggres­sive stance the IRS is like­ly to take. Gen­er­al­ly, when the IRS ques­tions the amount of wages, the IRS’s start­ing point is to make all the income wages and place the bur­den on the tax­pay­er to come into com­pli­ance with what the rules/regulations/code states pri­or to enter­tain­ing any change in the char­ac­ter of income as distributions/dividends.

Pre-plan­ning is rel­a­tive­ly cheap, audit defense is not. Even when the final result is the same, the cost of audit defense can destroy the sav­ings of tak­ing an S‑Corp elec­tion real­ly fast.

What “Rea­son­able Com­pen­sa­tion” Real­ly Means

At its core, the con­cept is sim­ple:

If you are work­ing in your busi­ness, you must be paid what some­one else would be paid to do the same work.

That sounds straight­for­ward. In prac­tice, it is any­thing but.

For S cor­po­ra­tion own­ers, the issue aris­es because dis­tri­b­u­tions are not sub­ject to pay­roll tax­es, while wages are. The IRS requires share­hold­er-employ­ees to take a rea­son­able W‑2 salary before tak­ing dis­tri­b­u­tions.

For C cor­po­ra­tion own­ers, the issue works in both direc­tions:

  • If com­pen­sa­tion is too low → the IRS may reclas­si­fy pay­ments as con­struc­tive div­i­dends (non-deductible to the cor­po­ra­tion)
  • If com­pen­sa­tion is too high → the IRS may dis­al­low the excess as unrea­son­able com­pen­sa­tion under IRC §162

Either way, the IRS is look­ing for a com­pen­sa­tion lev­el that reflects eco­nom­ic real­i­ty, not tax strat­e­gy.

Courts have con­sis­tent­ly rein­forced this posi­tion. In David E. Wat­son, PC v. Unit­ed States, the Eighth Cir­cuit made it clear that intent does not mat­ter — what mat­ters is the fair mar­ket val­ue of the ser­vices actu­al­ly per­formed.

Why This Issue Is More Important Than Ever

If you have not revis­it­ed your com­pen­sa­tion struc­ture recent­ly, now is the time.

Sev­er­al devel­op­ments have sig­nif­i­cant­ly increased enforce­ment risk:

Increased IRS Enforcement and Data Analytics

The IRS is no longer rely­ing sole­ly on tra­di­tion­al audit selec­tion meth­ods. They are using data ana­lyt­ics and AI-dri­ven mod­els to iden­ti­fy S cor­po­ra­tions with:

  • High dis­tri­b­u­tions
  • Low offi­cer wages
  • Indus­try-incon­sis­tent com­pen­sa­tion pat­terns

Rea­son­able com­pen­sa­tion has become a tar­get­ed enforce­ment cat­e­go­ry with­in employ­ment tax audits. If you don’t think this is a big deal, con­sid­er this, as stat­ed, the IRS looks, or increas­ing­ly so, the IRS AI sys­tem looks close­ly at the records between a tax­pay­er’s Form K‑1, 1040, and 1120/1120S returns and the wages paid to the own­er flags an audit. As a result of the wage audit, both the busi­ness and the busi­ness own­er then is exposed to a full audit. Even if the wages ulti­mate­ly result in a adjust­ment that caus­es a rel­a­tive­ly small adjust­ment to tax oblig­a­tion, open­ing up both the busi­ness and per­son­al returns to audit can cause the busi­ness own­er to spend lots of time and effort, along with thou­sands of dol­lars in audit defense, and that’s the best case sce­nario.

It’s not uncom­mon that once the IRS has the busi­ness and busi­ness own­er in focus, oth­er tax issues may arise that result in a much larg­er tax oblig­a­tion com­pared to the wage adjust­ment.

Rising Payroll Tax Thresholds

The Social Secu­ri­ty wage base con­tin­ues to increase (e.g., $176,100 for 2025), which direct­ly impacts:

  • The pay­roll tax cost of com­pen­sa­tion
  • The plan­ning trade­off between wages and dis­tri­b­u­tions

This changes the “opti­miza­tion” cal­cu­la­tion year over year.

Increased Audit Activity in Payroll Tax Exams

Many tax­pay­ers are sur­prised to learn that rea­son­able com­pen­sa­tion issues often arise inci­den­tal­ly dur­ing:

  • Pay­roll tax audits
  • Employ­ment tax exam­i­na­tions
  • Gen­er­al busi­ness audits

Even when not ini­tial­ly tar­get­ed, it becomes part of the audit scope.

The Section 199A (QBI) Interaction

This is where many tax­pay­ers — and even advi­sors — get it wrong.

Set­ting com­pen­sa­tion too low may:

  • Reduce W‑2 wages
  • Trig­ger QBI wage lim­i­ta­tions
  • Elim­i­nate or reduce the 20% Qual­i­fied Busi­ness Income deduc­tion

In many cas­es, pay­ing more salary results in low­er total tax, not high­er.

This is why rea­son­able com­pen­sa­tion is not just a com­pli­ance issue — it is a strate­gic plan­ning issue.

How the IRS Actually Determines “Reasonable”

There is no safe har­bor.

No per­cent­age rule. Let me repeat that for the CPAs and Tax pro­fes­sion­als in the back, THE IRS DOES NOT USE OR ACCEPT A SIMPLE PERCENTAGE RULE. And there is NO safe har­bor amount, oth­er than maybe one could argue 100% is a safe har­bor for S‑Corps, albeit cer­tain­ly NOT for C‑Corps.

No “30% of prof­it” or “60/40 split” guide­line.

Those approach­es are repeat­ed­ly reject­ed by IRS exam­in­ers and because the Tax and Fed­er­al Courts con­sis­tent­ly rule against sim­ple per­cent­ages it’s a los­ing posi­tion from the start.

Instead, the IRS applies a facts-and-cir­cum­stances analy­sis, focus­ing on what a third par­ty would earn under sim­i­lar con­di­tions.

Key fac­tors include:

  • Edu­ca­tion, cre­den­tials, and expe­ri­ence
  • Actu­al duties per­formed (not just job title)
  • Time devot­ed to the busi­ness
  • Indus­try com­pen­sa­tion data
  • Geo­graph­ic loca­tion
  • Busi­ness size, rev­enue, and com­plex­i­ty
  • Employ­ee head­count and struc­ture
  • His­tor­i­cal com­pen­sa­tion pat­terns
  • Ratio of wages to dis­tri­b­u­tions

The cen­tral ques­tion is always:

What would it cost to replace you for all the activ­i­ties you per­form for our busi­ness?

The Three Accepted Methodologies

A prop­er analy­sis is not guess­work. It relies on rec­og­nized val­u­a­tion approach­es.

1. The Cost Approach (“Many Hats Method”)

This is the most appro­pri­ate method for most small and mid-sized busi­ness­es. Because so many small busi­ness own­ers wear “many hats” includ­ing every­thing from strate­gic plan­ning to tak­ing out the garbage, using this approach gen­er­al­ly works well for the small busi­ness own­ers due to ‘tak­ing out the garbage’ and oth­er low­er-val­ue work per­formed in keep­ing the com­pa­ny mov­ing for­ward.

It breaks the owner’s role into mul­ti­ple func­tions:

  • CEO / man­age­ment
  • Sales
  • Oper­a­tions (think garbage and oth­er low­er cost activ­i­ties)
  • Admin­is­tra­tive work (com­plet­ing forms and push­ing paper­work)
  • Tech­ni­cal or pro­fes­sion­al ser­vices

Each func­tion is assigned a mar­ket rate based on wage data, then weight­ed by time allo­ca­tion.

Why this mat­ters:
Most busi­ness own­ers are not just “exec­u­tives” — they per­form mul­ti­ple roles, and this method reflects real­i­ty.

The Market Approach (Comparable Compensation)

This method com­pares com­pen­sa­tion to sim­i­lar roles in sim­i­lar busi­ness­es.

Best suit­ed for:

  • Larg­er com­pa­nies with many employ­ees per­form­ing var­i­ous tasks that an own­er of a small­er busi­ness would have to per­form
  • Own­ers act­ing pri­mar­i­ly as exec­u­tives
  • Busi­ness­es with estab­lished man­age­ment teams

The key ques­tion becomes:

What would a non-own­er exec­u­tive be paid to run this com­pa­ny?

The Income Approach (Independent Investor Test)

This is a more advanced and less com­mon­ly used method.

It eval­u­ates whether an inde­pen­dent investor would receive a rea­son­able return after pay­ing the owner’s com­pen­sa­tion.

If prof­its remain unusu­al­ly high after pay­ing min­i­mal wages, it sug­gests com­pen­sa­tion is arti­fi­cial­ly low.

This approach is often used:

  • In lit­i­ga­tion
  • As a sec­ondary val­i­da­tion tool

What a Defensible Study Looks Like

From an audit defense per­spec­tive, doc­u­men­ta­tion is every­thing.

A prop­er rea­son­able com­pen­sa­tion study should include:

  • A detailed break­down of duties and respon­si­bil­i­ties
  • Time allo­ca­tion across roles
  • Expla­na­tion of method­ol­o­gy used
  • Reli­able wage data from cred­i­ble sources
  • Geo­graph­ic and indus­try adjust­ments
  • Finan­cial analy­sis of the busi­ness
  • A clear­ly sup­port­ed com­pen­sa­tion fig­ure
  • Doc­u­men­ta­tion of assump­tions and adjust­ments

Most impor­tant­ly:

The study should be com­plet­ed before set­ting com­pen­sa­tion — not after the fact.

From a legal stand­point, con­tem­po­ra­ne­ous doc­u­men­ta­tion is sig­nif­i­cant­ly more defen­si­ble than retroac­tive jus­ti­fi­ca­tion.

Common Mistakes I See in Practice

These are the pat­terns that con­sis­tent­ly trig­ger IRS scruti­ny:

1. Paying Little or No Salary

If you are work­ing in the busi­ness and tak­ing dis­tri­b­u­tions, this is the fastest way to invite an audit.

Using Arbitrary Percentages

There is no legal author­i­ty sup­port­ing fixed ratios. As stat­ed (and hope­ful­ly bring­ing the point home) using arbi­trary per­cent­ages is a LOSING strat­e­gy, espe­cial­ly dur­ing an audit

Courts have reject­ed them repeat­ed­ly and there’s no rea­son to believe any change in the out­come is remote­ly in the future.

Misrepresenting Job Roles

Call­ing your­self a “CEO” does not make it so.

Your com­pen­sa­tion must reflect actu­al duties, not titles. While this may seem counter-intu­itive, some­times the spe­cial­ist makes more than a ‘CEO’ for a small busi­ness. This becomes (often painful­ly so) when the busi­ness own­er is gen­er­al­ly a high­ly com­pen­sat­ed spe­cial­ist in their area of work.

Failing to Update Annually

Com­pen­sa­tion is not sta­t­ic.

  • Mar­kets change, includ­ing local­ly, region­al­ly, and nation­al­ly regard­ing com­pen­sa­tion for any giv­en work.
  • Busi­ness­es grow and not grow­ing your com­pen­sa­tion rel­a­tive to your duties and income is a fast path to audit hell.
  • Roles evolve, and hir­ing peo­ple to per­form some of the ‘small­er’ or less com­pen­sat­ed acts the own­er used to per­form requires changes in com­pen­sa­tion to con­tin­ue the rea­son­able­ness of the own­ers’ com­pen­sa­tion

An out­dat­ed study pro­vides lim­it­ed pro­tec­tion. Now, does that mean a rea­son­able com­pen­sa­tion study must be per­formed for all own­ers every year? No, albeit when the facts change, so does the opin­ion of the IRS. In short, ‘it depends’ as most legal answers are when asked a gen­er­al ques­tion. This gen­er­al­ly means a rea­son­able com­pen­sa­tion study per­formed this year, absent mate­r­i­al changes, is like­ly valid for the fol­low­ing year, sub­ject to maybe infla­tion and/or oth­er small­er fac­tors when income and work per­formed haven’t changed mate­ri­al­ly. Does this mean a rea­son­able com­pen­sa­tion study is good and valid 10 years after the fact, not like­ly as busi­ness­es tend to evolve, and of course there’s the fact the busi­ness own­er 10 years lat­er has that much more expe­ri­ence, which gen­er­al­ly means they should receive greater com­pen­sa­tion all else being equal.

Ignoring Tax Strategy Interactions

Focus­ing sole­ly on pay­roll tax sav­ings often leads to:

  • Reduced QBI deduc­tion
  • Poor over­all tax out­comes. There’s no get­ting around the fact that tax­a­tion is rel­a­tive­ly com­plex for busi­ness own­ers with sub­stan­tial income. Addi­tion­al­ly, when viewed from the van­tage point of our pro­gres­sive tax sys­tem in place com­bined with a seri­ous­ly high tax bur­den, poor plan­ning should only be expect­ed to result in a poor out­come. To assume any­thing oth­er calls into ques­tion the busi­ness own­ers’ man­age­ment capac­i­ty.

A Real-World Perspective

In audit rep­re­sen­ta­tion, It’s not that uncom­mon to see cas­es where:

  • A tax­pay­er saved $15,000 in pay­roll tax­es due to poor advice and/or ignor­ing real­i­ty only to lose $50,000+ in QBI ben­e­fits they could have oth­er­wise received. To add salt into the wound, the IRS has no hes­i­ta­tion in also apply­ing penal­ties and inter­est after reclas­si­fi­ca­tion. Even when some or all of the penal­ties are reduced or abat­ted, the cost of rep­re­sen­ta­tion through the audit process and appeals is an added expense few if any busi­ness own­ers wish to spend their hard-earned mon­ey on.

Rea­son­able com­pen­sa­tion is one of the few areas where:

Try­ing to be aggres­sive often results in worse over­all out­comes.

The Bottom Line

Rea­son­able com­pen­sa­tion is not just a tech­ni­cal require­ment — it is a cor­ner­stone of defen­si­ble tax plan­ning for S cor­po­ra­tions and C cor­po­ra­tions. And busi­ness own­ers ignore this prin­ci­ple at their own per­il.

When rea­son­able com­pen­sa­tion is man­aged, cal­cu­lat­ed and han­dled cor­rect­ly, it:

  • Pro­tects against IRS reclas­si­fi­ca­tion
  • Sup­ports audit defense, AND often results in quick less-cost­ly audits. A care­ful­ly craft­ed and well-per­formed rea­son­able com­pen­sa­tion study can poten­tial­ly END the dis­cus­sion on own­er com­pen­sa­tion by sim­ply pro­vid­ing the appro­pri­ate doc­u­men­ta­tion show­ing com­pen­sa­tion due dili­gence was per­formed and rea­son­able giv­en the facts and cir­cum­stances.
  • Opti­mizes over­all tax out­comes, espe­cial­ly when audit defense is fac­tored as part of the over­all sav­ings.
  • Aligns with statu­to­ry and case law stan­dards which also leads to less sleep­less nights wor­ry­ing about ‘what will hap­pen.’

Han­dled incor­rect­ly, it can result in:

  • Pay­roll tax assess­ments
  • Dis­al­lowed deduc­tions
  • Penal­ties and inter­est
  • Extend­ed audits and lit­i­ga­tion

If you are active­ly work­ing in your busi­ness, this is not option­al and it is part of prop­er­ly and pro­fes­sion­al­ly oper­at­ing your busi­ness prop­er­ly under the cur­rent income tax law.

Final Thought

The most effec­tive approach is not to min­i­mize com­pen­sa­tion — it is to sup­port it.

A well-doc­u­ment­ed, defen­si­ble com­pen­sa­tion strat­e­gy gives you some­thing far more valu­able than a short-term tax reduc­tion:

Cer­tain­ty, and for busi­ness own­ers, there are few things that pro­vide as much.

This arti­cle is for infor­ma­tion­al pur­pos­es only and does not con­sti­tute legal or tax advice. You should con­sult with a qual­i­fied tax pro­fes­sion­al regard­ing your spe­cif­ic sit­u­a­tion. I am a tax pro­fes­sion­al and tax attor­ney, albeit with­out an active engage­ment, I’m not YOUR tax attor­ney. If you wish to engage my ser­vices for either audit defense or to get ahead of the risk, sched­ule a meet­ing to see if we’re a good fit.