S-Corp vs. LLC: Which Structure Saves Most on Self-Employment Tax?

<span id="hs_cos_wrapper_name" class="hs_cos_wrapper hs_cos_wrapper_meta_field hs_cos_wrapper_type_text" style="" data-hs-cos-general-type="meta_field" data-hs-cos-type="text" >S-Corp vs. LLC: Which Structure Saves Most on Self-Employment Tax?</span>

For many small business owners, the transition from a "side hustle" to a "serious business" is marked by one thing: the first time they see their self-employment tax bill.

In 2026, with the One Big Beautiful Bill (OBBB) making many small business tax cuts permanent, choosing between a standard LLC and an S-Corp election is one of the most important financial decisions you will make.

The Problem: The 15.3% "Self-Employment Tax"

If you operate as a standard Single-Member LLC or a Sole Proprietor, the IRS treats you and your business as one entity. This means you pay a 15.3% self-employment tax on every dollar of net profit you earn.

  • 12.4% goes to Social Security (up to the 2026 wage base of $176,100).
  • 2.9% goes to Medicare (no limit).

If your business clears $100,000 in profit, you are looking at roughly $15,300 in self-employment taxes before you even get to your regular income tax.

The Solution: The S-Corp "Split"

When you elect to be taxed as an S-Corp (using Form 2553), you become an employee of your own company. This allows you to split your income into two buckets:

  1. Reasonable Salary: You pay yourself a W-2 wage. This is subject to the 15.3% tax.
  2. Distributions: The remaining profit is paid to you as a "shareholder distribution." Distributions are NOT subject to self-employment tax.

The 2026 Math: A Side-by-Side Comparison

Imagine your business earns $120,000 in net profit this year.

Tax Item LLC (Default) S-Corp Election
W-2 Salary $0 $65,000 (Reasonable Salary)
Shareholder Distribution $120,000 $55,000
Income Subject to SE Tax $120,000 $65,000
Self-Employment Tax (15.3%) $18,360 $9,945
ESTIMATED SAVINGS $0 $8,415

Note: Even after accounting for the extra costs of payroll and S-Corp tax filing (Form 1120S), this owner still walks away with thousands in extra profit.

What the IRS Watches for in 2026

You can't just pay yourself a $1 salary to avoid taxes. The IRS requires "Reasonable Compensation." In 2026, the IRS is using advanced data matching to flag S-Corps in which distributions significantly exceed salaries.

To stay safe, your salary should reflect what you would have to pay someone else to do your job. For most service-based businesses, we look at industry benchmarks like:

  • Consultants: $75k – $160k
  • Construction Trades: $55k – $130k
  • Real Estate Agents: $50k – $120k

Is it Time to Switch?

The general "break-even" point in 2026 is approximately $75,000 to $80,000 in net profit. If you are earning less than that, the costs of running payroll and filing a corporate return may eat up your tax savings. If you are earning more, you are likely overpaying the IRS every single month.