What Is a Chapter S Corporation?
- According to SmallBusinessLawFirms.com, the income from a regular corporation becomes subject to double taxation. Earnings or profits are taxed at the corporate level and then taxed again if the corporation distributes any dividends to its individual shareholders.
- Earnings from a Chapter S corporation are taxed only once. The corporation passes through its income to individual shareholders and they report the income on their individual federal income tax forms.
- Since the profits or losses from corporate operations pass through to individual shareholders directly, an S Corp shares some of the same characteristics of Partnerships, says SmallBusinessLawFirms.com.
- Although an S Corp is taxed in a similar manner as a Partnership, its shareholders still enjoy the protection of limited liability.
- In order to qualify for status as an S Corp, the company can only have one class of stock and it cannot have more than 100 shareholders.
- Income or losses must allocate to individual shareholders in proportion to their respective interest in the business.
Double Taxation
Pass-Through Treatment Of Income
S Corp Similar To A Partnership
Limited Liability
Qualifications
Allocation Of Income and Losses
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