What is a C Corporation

Jun 26
08:15

2008

Nick Braun

Nick Braun

  • Share this article on Facebook
  • Share this article on Twitter
  • Share this article on Linkedin

A C Corporation is the only business structure that is never a pass-through entity. The difference between C corporations and others is that c corporations are completely separate C Corp tax entities.

mediaimage

A C Corporation is the only business structure that is never a pass-through entity.

The difference between C corporations and all the others is that c corporations are completely separate C Corp tax entities. This means you don’t pay the business taxes – the corporation pays its own C Corp tax. You will only pay C Corp tax on any money you take out of the business as salary or dividends.

  • C corporations are taxed twice
  • Tax is paid at the corporate level first.
  • Dividends are taxed at the shareholder level (maximum 15%)

The business owner has to file two forms with the IRS:

  • One for your personal taxes,What is a C Corporation Articles reporting your salary or dividends from the business
  • One for the business. This will be either Form 1120 or Form 1120-a, the short form.

C corporation can still be a good choice where profits are less than $75,000

For this to work your company must earn more than you need to put in your pocket.

Instead of paying 35% on the surplus income you can pay just 15% or 25% by keeping it in your corporation.

Corporations are also subject to three additional taxes:

  • Accumulated earnings C Corp tax.  If your C corporation holds onto too much of its profits it incurs an accumulated earnings tax of 15%. This doesn’t kick in until accumulated earnings exceed $250,000.
  • Personal holding company tax. This targets C corps that earn most of their money from investments such as dividends. You don’t have to concern yourself with this if you have a normal business.
  • Corporate alternative minimum tax. Very few small businesses have to worry about this.