LLC vs S-Corp for AI Businesses: Which Saves More on Taxes?
– You pay yourself a “reasonable salary” (subject to payroll tax—same 15.3%)
– Remaining profit = distributions (NOT subject to self-employment tax)
– You save 15.3% on distributions
Example:
– Net profit: $80,000
– Reasonable salary: $50,000 (subject to 15.3% payroll tax = $7,650)
– Distribution: $30,000 (NO self-employment tax)
– Income tax: ~$10,000 (same as LLC)
– Total tax: ~$17,650
Tax savings: $4,590/year ($22,240 – $17,650)
When S-Corp Makes Sense (The $60K Rule)
S-Corps save you money, but they cost more to run. You need:
– Payroll software ($50-100/month)
– Payroll tax filings (quarterly)
– Additional tax prep ($500-1,500/year)
– More bookkeeping time
Break-even math:
– Extra S-Corp costs: ~$2,000-2,500/year
– Tax savings needed to justify: $2,500+
– Required profit level: ~$60,000/year (net profit after expenses)
Below $60K/year? Stick with LLC. The admin overhead isn’t worth it yet.
Above $60K/year? S-Corp election starts making sense. Talk to a CPA.
The “Reasonable Salary” Problem
Here’s where solo founders try to get cute: paying themselves $1 salary and taking $100K in distributions.
The IRS knows this game. They require a “reasonable salary” for S-Corp owners who work in the business.
What’s “Reasonable”?
The IRS doesn’t publish a number, but here’s the framework:
- Industry standards — What would you pay someone to do your job?
- Your role — Are you the CEO, developer, marketer? (Different salaries)
- Time commitment — Full-time vs side project?
- Profit level — Can’t pay yourself $120K salary on $80K profit
Safe harbor range: 40-60% of net profit as salary.
Examples:
– $80K profit → $32K-48K salary
– $150K profit → $60K-90K salary
– $300K profit → $120K-180K salary
Red flag: Salary under 30% of profit invites IRS scrutiny.
LLC vs S-Corp: Quick Comparison Table
| Factor | LLC | S-Corp |
|——–|—–|——–|
| Formation cost | $50-500 (state filing fee) | Same (it’s a tax election, not a different entity) |
| Annual compliance | Minimal (annual report) | Payroll filings, more bookkeeping |
| Self-employment tax | 15.3% on all profit | 15.3% on salary only |
| Tax savings | None (standard pass-through) | Significant (if profit >$60K) |
| Admin burden | Low | Medium-high |
| Best for | Side projects, <$60K profit | Established businesses, $60K+ profit |
| Can switch later? | Yes (easy) | Yes (but harder to reverse) |
AI-Specific Considerations
##
1. Revenue Volatility
###
AI projects can be feast-or-famine (viral month, then crickets). S-Corp salary requirements are rigid—you need consistent income to justify payroll.
Solution: Start with LLC, switch to S-Corp once you have 6-12 months of stable revenue.
2. API Costs
###
Your “profit” matters for tax planning, not gross revenue. If you’re pulling $120K in revenue but spending $80K on API costs, your net profit is $40K—below the S-Corp threshold.
Tip: Calculate net profit after all expenses (API, subscriptions, hosting, contractors).
3. Multiple Projects
###
Running 5 AI side projects? You can have multiple LLCs, but generally you’d want one S-Corp to consolidate for tax efficiency.
Strategy: Form holding company S-Corp, run individual projects as DBAs (Doing Business As) or separate LLCs owned by the S-Corp.
How to Switch from LLC to S-Corp
##
Good news: You don’t form a new entity. S-Corp is a tax election, not a separate legal structure.
Steps:
###
- File Form 2553 with the IRS (“Election by a Small Business Corporation”)
- Deadline: File by March 15th for current-year election (or within 2.5 months of forming LLC)
- Set up payroll — Use Gusto, Rippling, or similar
- Quarterly payroll taxes — File 941s, pay FICA
- Annual reporting — File 1120-S (S-Corp tax return)
Timeline: ~2-4 weeks for IRS to approve. Can take effect retroactively if filed on time.
Common Mistakes Solo Founders Make
##
1. Electing S-Corp Too Early
###
You’re excited about tax savings, so you elect S-Corp at $30K profit. Now you’re doing payroll for $1,500/year in tax savings (barely worth it).
Fix: Wait until you hit $60K+ consistently.
2. Paying Yourself $0 Salary
###
“I’ll just take distributions!” The IRS will reclassify distributions as salary and charge you back taxes + penalties.
Fix: Pay yourself a reasonable salary (40-60% of profit).
3. Forgetting Quarterly Estimated Taxes
###
LLC or S-Corp, you’re paying estimated taxes quarterly. Miss a payment? Penalties and interest.
Fix: Set calendar reminders (April 15, June 15, Sept 15, Jan 15).
Decision Framework: LLC or S-Corp?
##
Choose LLC if:
###
- ✅ Net profit under $60K/year
- ✅ Revenue is inconsistent (side project, just launched)
- ✅ You want simplicity (low admin burden)
- ✅ You’re testing the business model
Choose S-Corp if:
###
- ✅ Net profit consistently above $60K/year
- ✅ Revenue is stable (6-12 months of consistent income)
- ✅ You’re comfortable with payroll + bookkeeping
- ✅ You plan to keep this business long-term
Still Unsure?
###
Default to LLC. You can always elect S-Corp status later. It’s easy to upgrade, harder to downgrade.
Next Steps
##
- Calculate your net profit (revenue minus all expenses)
- If under $60K: Form an LLC, stay simple
- If above $60K: Talk to a CPA about S-Corp election timing
- Track your finances — Use accounting software (QuickBooks, Xero, Wave)
Need help deciding which state to form your LLC in? Read our guide: [Delaware vs Home State: Where Should AI Founders Incorporate?](#)
Want a step-by-step LLC formation guide? Check out: [Single-Member LLC Setup Guide for Solo Entrepreneurs](#)
Disclaimer
##
LawAmie is an information tool, not a law firm. This content does not constitute legal or tax advice and does not create an attorney-client relationship. While created by a California and New York licensed attorney, LawAmie operates as an educational resource. For advice specific to your situation, consult a licensed attorney or CPA in your jurisdiction.
Internal Links:
- [Do I Need an LLC for My AI Side Project?](link)
- [Delaware vs Home State: Where Should AI Founders Incorporate?](link)
- [Single-Member LLC Setup Guide for Solo Entrepreneurs](link)
- [Complete Guide to LLC Formation for AI Entrepreneurs](link) (pillar page)
External Links:
- [IRS Form 2553](https://www.irs.gov/forms-pubs/about-form-2553)
- [IRS Self-Employment Tax Guide](https://www.irs.gov/businesses/small-businesses-self-employed/self-employment-tax-social-security-and-medicare-taxes)
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