Business Taxes (Legal Angle)

Tax planning is its own profession; this guide covers the tax law a business operator should understand: how entity choice affects taxation, the S-Corp election, payroll tax and trust fund liability, sales tax economic nexus, 1099 reporting, and how IRS audits work. Specific tax planning requires a CPA or tax attorney. The mechanics here help you recognize when one is needed.

Entity tax classification

The IRS taxes business entities based on classification, not state-law form. Default classifications:

Important consequence: an LLC isn't a tax category. An LLC can be a disregarded entity, partnership, S-Corp, or C-Corp depending on how many members and what elections have been filed. The state-law entity choice and the federal tax classification are independent decisions.

Federal entity tax rates

Current federal rates:

The double-taxation issue with C-Corps: the entity pays 21% on earnings, then shareholders pay tax again on dividends (qualified dividends at 0%, 15%, or 20% depending on income; ordinary income rates for ordinary dividends). Effective combined rate can exceed 35% for distributed earnings.

Section 199A Qualified Business Income deduction provides up to 20% deduction for pass-through business income (S-Corp, partnership, sole prop), subject to thresholds, wage limits, and "specified service trade or business" restrictions for higher-income taxpayers.

S-Corp election

An LLC or corporation can elect to be taxed as an S-Corp by filing Form 2553. Effect: income passes through to shareholders (Schedule E on Form 1040), avoiding the C-Corp double-taxation problem. Plus a specific payroll-tax benefit: working owners receive both salary (subject to payroll tax) and distributions (not subject to self-employment tax), which can save FICA compared to a pass-through partnership or sole prop where all net earnings are subject to SE tax.

S-Corp restrictions:

These restrictions make S-Corp incompatible with venture capital financing (VC funds aren't permitted shareholders), with foreign investment, or with stratified equity structures.

The S-Corp salary requirement: working owners must take "reasonable compensation" before taking distributions. The IRS challenges arrangements where owners take little or no salary and large distributions to avoid payroll tax. What's "reasonable" is fact-specific; aiming for industry-standard compensation for the work performed is the conservative approach.

Section 2553 election timing: file within 75 days of formation, or by March 15 of the year the election is to take effect. Late election relief is available (Rev. Proc. 2013-30) but adds complexity.

State income tax

States with no individual income tax: Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire (interest/dividends only, being phased out), South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington (capital gains tax on high earners only), Wyoming. Pass-through business income to owners in these states is not state-taxed.

States with corporate income tax: 44 states plus DC, with rates varying significantly. Some states tax pass-through entities at the entity level despite federal pass-through treatment.

Pass-Through Entity Tax (PTET) elections: 35+ states now allow pass-through entities to elect entity-level tax, which is deductible at the federal level (avoiding the $10,000 SALT cap on individual deduction). The election can produce significant federal tax savings for owners in high-tax states.

State franchise taxes are separate from income tax: California's $800 minimum, Texas margin tax, Delaware franchise tax, etc. apply regardless of profitability.

Payroll tax

Employer-side payroll obligations:

Filing and deposit requirements:

Payroll services (commercial providers or PEOs) handle the mechanics. Many small businesses use payroll services from day one of having employees because the penalty structure for getting it wrong is severe.

Trust fund recovery penalty

Withheld income tax, Social Security, and Medicare withheld from employees are "trust fund" taxes — held in trust for the government rather than belonging to the employer. The Trust Fund Recovery Penalty (TFRP) imposes personal liability on "responsible persons" who "willfully" fail to pay over trust fund taxes.

"Responsible person" is broad: anyone with significant authority over the company's financial affairs — CEO, CFO, bookkeeper, controller, sometimes outside accountants or directors. Multiple people can be jointly and severally liable.

"Willful" doesn't require malice; knowledge of unpaid taxes plus preferring other creditors satisfies the standard.

TFRP equals 100% of the unpaid trust fund tax. The penalty is personal — piercing the entity's liability shield. It's one of the most aggressive collection tools the IRS has and one of the few areas where a corporation's owners can be personally liable for tax debts of the entity.

Practical implication: trust fund taxes must be paid even when the business is struggling. Borrowing from withheld taxes to fund operations is a common path to personal liability and sometimes criminal prosecution.

Sales tax and Wayfair nexus

Before South Dakota v. Wayfair (2018), states could only require sales tax collection by sellers with physical presence in the state. Wayfair overruled Quill and held that "economic nexus" — sales activity exceeding state-specific thresholds — was sufficient to require collection.

Typical economic nexus thresholds:

(Thresholds vary by state — some have one or the other, some have both, some have higher dollar amounts.)

Once nexus is established:

Marketplace facilitator laws (now in nearly all sales-tax states) shift collection responsibility to the marketplace platform for sales made through it. Sales made directly through the seller's own website remain the seller's responsibility.

Multi-state sales tax compliance for an online seller can quickly become unmanageable manually. Sales tax automation services calculate, file, and remit across multiple states; the cost is typically much less than the penalty exposure for missed jurisdictions.

Sales tax audits are common in states with aggressive enforcement. The look-back period is often 3 years; for unregistered sellers who later register, voluntary disclosure programs can limit look-back and waive penalties.

1099 reporting

Form 1099 information returns report payments to non-employees:

To issue 1099s, the payer needs the payee's Form W-9 (Request for Taxpayer Identification Number). Best practice: collect W-9 before issuing first payment, not at year-end.

Penalties for late or missing 1099 filings: per-form penalties on increasing scale based on how late. Penalties for intentional disregard are significantly higher.

1099 reporting also matters for Section 530 relief on contractor classification — the business must have filed all required 1099s to qualify for relief from employment-tax assessments. See contractor classification.

Estimated taxes

US tax is pay-as-you-go. Employees satisfy this through withholding; self-employed individuals and corporations make quarterly estimated tax payments.

Failure to pay estimated taxes results in underpayment penalty interest. The penalty is modest at current interest rates but adds up for large underpayments.

IRS audits

IRS audits take three forms:

Audit triggers can include: high income, large losses, large or unusual deductions, mismatches between returns and 1099s/W-2s, certain industries the IRS focuses on, random selection. Schedule C losses, business meals, vehicle expenses, and home office deductions are recurring areas of scrutiny.

Audit response process:

  1. IRS notice describing items examined and documentation requested.
  2. Taxpayer provides documentation, either directly or through representation (CPA, EA, or attorney with power of attorney via Form 2848).
  3. Agent issues examination findings (Form 4549 or similar) — agreement with taxpayer's return, proposed adjustments, or no-change.
  4. Taxpayer agrees, requests informal conference with supervisor, or appeals to IRS Independent Office of Appeals.
  5. If unresolved at appeals, statutory notice of deficiency issued; taxpayer can petition Tax Court (before paying) or pay and sue for refund in district court / Court of Federal Claims.

Statute of limitations

IRS assessment deadlines:

Collection statute is generally 10 years from assessment, with extensions for specific events (offer-in-compromise, bankruptcy, etc.).

State tax limitations vary; many follow the federal 3-year pattern but some are longer.

International tax basics

Cross-border activity triggers additional rules:

International tax is specialist territory. Any business with foreign operations, foreign income, foreign owners, or significant inbound foreign transactions should engage international-tax counsel early.

Recordkeeping

IRS recordkeeping general rule: keep records supporting items on the return for as long as the IRS could examine them. Practical guidelines:

Digital records are acceptable if accurate and accessible. Cloud storage with regular backups is the modern standard.

Common mistakes

FAQ

When should I elect S-Corp status? When net earnings are sufficient to make the payroll-tax savings exceed the added compliance cost — roughly $40,000–$60,000 of net earnings is a common breakeven, but it varies. Run the numbers with a CPA.

Do I need to register for sales tax in every state I sell to? Once you cross economic nexus thresholds in a state, yes. For online sellers below thresholds, no. The thresholds vary by state.

Can I deduct business meals? Generally 50% deductible. The 100% deduction for restaurant meals (TCJA temporary provision) has sunset; current law allows 50%.

Can I deduct home office expenses? Yes if the space is used regularly and exclusively for business and is the principal place of business. Simplified method (square footage) or actual expense method.

How do I respond to an IRS notice? Read it carefully — many are automated and address narrow issues. If you understand the issue and can respond with documentation, do so by the deadline. If it's complex or large, engage a CPA, enrolled agent, or tax attorney.

What's a tax attorney vs CPA vs enrolled agent? CPA is licensed by state for accounting and tax (broad scope); EA is federally licensed to represent taxpayers before the IRS; tax attorney is a lawyer with tax specialization (can also advise on legal aspects with privilege). For litigation or criminal issues, tax attorney is essential.

Are LLC distributions taxed? The income is taxed (allocated to members regardless of distribution) but the distribution itself generally isn't a separate taxable event unless it exceeds the member's basis.