Taxes & Payroll

S-Corp Tax Savings Calculator

Estimate the payroll-tax savings of electing S-Corp taxation, and see how your reasonable salary changes the result.

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The IRS does not use a universal salary-to-profit percentage. Reasonable compensation depends on the services performed, experience, responsibilities, time devoted to the business, and comparable compensation. This percentage is an educational planning reference only — not an IRS rule or safe harbor.

How to think about reasonable salary

The IRS expects an S-Corp owner-employee to be paid reasonable compensation for the work they actually do, before taking distributions. There is no magic percentage. Instead, think about what you would have to pay someone else to do your job:

  • The duties and services you personally perform.
  • Your training, experience, and responsibilities.
  • Time and effort devoted to the business.
  • What comparable businesses pay for similar work.

A salary set too low to inflate distributions is a common audit trigger. Document how you arrived at your figure, and confirm it with a tax professional.

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Editable planning assumption covering payroll service, additional tax preparation, and bookkeeping/compliance. Adjust to your quotes.

Advanced options
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Some states charge an annual franchise tax or S-Corp fee (for example, California's 1.5% tax with an $800 minimum). Enter your state's figure if it applies.

Estimated Net Annual S-Corp Savings
Gross payroll-tax savings
Additional S-Corp costs
Monthly net savings
Proposed salary
Estimated distributions
Savings as % of profit
Estimated break-even profit The approximate annual profit at which savings would cover the additional S-Corp costs, assuming your proposed salary. Estimate only.

    Salary what-if

    Move the salary slider above to see these update. A lower salary is not automatically better — the figure must reflect the work you perform.

    Side-by-side comparison

    Item Current (self-employed) S-Corp

    Educational estimate only. This calculator does not provide tax, legal, payroll, or accounting advice. Reasonable compensation depends on individual facts and circumstances. It compares payroll/self-employment taxes only and does not calculate your full federal or state income tax.

    Tax year used: 2026 Last reviewed: 2026-07-10 IRS: S-Corp compensation guidance

    How This S-Corp Tax Savings Calculator Works

    This calculator estimates one specific thing: the payroll-tax savings you might get by electing S-Corp taxation instead of being taxed as a sole proprietor or single-member LLC. You enter your business net profit before owner salary, a proposed reasonable salary, your filing status, any other W-2 wages, and your expected annual S-Corp costs. It then compares self-employment tax under your current setup against the payroll taxes on an S-Corp salary — and shows your estimated net savings after costs.

    It is deliberately focused. It does not calculate your full federal or state income tax return, and it is not tax advice — it is a fast, transparent way to see whether an S-Corp election is worth a conversation with a tax professional.

    How S-Corp Tax Savings Work

    As a sole proprietor, your entire net profit is subject to self-employment tax — 15.3% (12.4% Social Security up to the annual wage base, plus 2.9% Medicare) on 92.35% of profit. When you elect S-Corp taxation, you split your profit into two parts: a reasonable salary that runs through payroll and is subject to the same Social Security and Medicare taxes, and distributions of the remaining profit that are not subject to those payroll taxes.

    That difference is the entire savings mechanism. Take the calculator's default: $120,000 of profit with a $60,000 salary. As a sole proprietor, self-employment tax applies to roughly $110,800 of net earnings. As an S-Corp, payroll tax applies only to the $60,000 salary, and the remaining $60,000 of distributions avoids the 15.3% — producing several thousand dollars of gross payroll-tax savings before costs. The lower your salary relative to profit, the larger the payroll-tax savings — which is exactly why reasonable compensation rules exist.

    What Is a Reasonable Salary?

    A reasonable salary is what you would have to pay someone else to do the work you personally perform for the business. The IRS requires S-Corp owner-employees to pay themselves reasonable compensation before taking distributions. Critically, the IRS does not use a universal salary-to-profit percentage. Reasonable compensation depends on the services performed, your experience, your responsibilities, the time you devote to the business, and what comparable businesses pay.

    The percentage bands in the calculator (below 30%, 30–60%, above 60%) are only an educational planning reference to show how salary affects savings. They are not IRS rules, safe harbors, or guarantees of reasonableness. Document how you arrived at your figure and confirm it with a professional.

    Why the Lowest Salary Is Not Automatically Best

    It is tempting to minimize salary to maximize distributions and payroll-tax savings. But an unreasonably low salary is one of the most common S-Corp audit triggers. If the IRS reclassifies distributions as wages, you can owe back payroll taxes, penalties, and interest — wiping out the savings and then some.

    A low salary also has real trade-offs: it can reduce your Social Security benefit basis, limit retirement plan contributions tied to W-2 wages, and weaken loan or mortgage applications. The goal is a defensible salary that reflects your actual work — not the lowest number a spreadsheet allows.

    The Costs of Running an S-Corp

    An S-Corp is not free to operate, and those costs come straight out of your savings. Budget for a payroll service to run your salary and file employment tax returns, additional tax preparation for the separate 1120-S corporate return, and bookkeeping or compliance help to keep clean records. Many owners spend somewhere in the low four figures a year combined; the calculator defaults to an editable $1,400 so you can drop in your own quotes.

    Some states add their own cost — a franchise tax, an S-Corp fee, or a minimum tax (California, for example, charges a 1.5% tax with an $800 minimum). Enter your state figure in the advanced options so your net savings reflect reality.

    When an S-Corp May Not Save Money

    An S-Corp election is not always worth it. It tends to underperform when:

    • Profit is low, so the payroll-tax savings are too small to cover the added costs — check the estimated break-even profit.
    • A reasonable salary would consume most of the profit, leaving little as distributions.
    • You already have other W-2 wages near or above the Social Security wage base, which shrinks the Social Security portion of the savings.
    • Your state charges high S-Corp fees or franchise taxes.

    Use the break-even estimate and the salary what-if tool to pressure-test your own numbers before deciding.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How much can an S-Corp save in taxes?

    The savings come from the profit you take as distributions instead of salary, which avoids the 15.3% Social Security and Medicare payroll taxes. On $120,000 of profit with a $60,000 salary, roughly $60,000 of distributions escapes payroll tax, producing several thousand dollars of gross savings before S-Corp costs. Your exact figure depends on your salary, profit, and other wages — the calculator estimates it instantly.

    What is a reasonable salary for an S-Corp owner?

    It is the amount you would pay someone else to perform the services you do for the business, based on your duties, experience, responsibilities, time devoted, and comparable pay. There is no official salary-to-profit percentage. The IRS evaluates reasonableness on the facts and circumstances, so document your reasoning and confirm it with a tax professional.

    Should I just pay myself the lowest possible salary?

    No. An unreasonably low salary is a leading S-Corp audit trigger and can lead to reclassified wages, back taxes, and penalties. A low salary can also reduce Social Security benefits, retirement contributions, and borrowing power. Aim for a defensible salary that reflects the work you actually perform.

    How does the calculator handle other W-2 wages?

    Social Security tax only applies up to an annual wage base. If you already have other W-2 wages, those consume part of that base, so the calculator reduces the remaining Social Security-taxable amount accordingly. High existing wages can significantly shrink the Social Security portion of your estimated S-Corp savings.

    What is the break-even profit for an S-Corp?

    It is the approximate business profit at which your payroll-tax savings would just cover the additional annual S-Corp costs (payroll, tax prep, bookkeeping, and any state fee), assuming your proposed salary. Below that profit, the costs of running an S-Corp may outweigh the savings. The calculator estimates this figure for your inputs.

    Is this a substitute for tax advice?

    No. This is an educational estimate that compares payroll and self-employment taxes only. It does not calculate your full income tax, model every state rule, or account for your complete financial picture. Reasonable compensation and the S-Corp decision depend on individual facts — always confirm with a qualified tax professional.

    What tax year and figures does the calculator use?

    It uses a centralized tax-year configuration for the Social Security wage base and the Social Security and Medicare rates, selectable in the advanced options. The 2026 wage base is a projection pending the final IRS release; the 2025 figure is official. The tax year used and last-reviewed date are shown beneath the calculator.

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