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The level of compensation you draw from your business undoubtedly will vary widely due to the ebb and flow of your personal and business needs. If your business is structured in any way other than a C corporation, the business profits "flow through" directly to your personal income tax return. Since your compensation isn't technically a deduction for the business, it won't be attacked by the IRS as unreasonable. Similarly, you do not have to worry about allowing too much profit to accumulate within the business, as you do with a C corporation.
Because a C corporation is a separate "person" from its owners, money flowing through a C corporation is taxed twice: once on the corporate tax return as the profit from the business and again on the individual's tax return as compensation or dividends paid by the business. Because of this double taxation, many small businesses are organized as S corporations, partnerships, proprietorships or, limited liability companies (LLCs), although recent tax changes may make the C corporation more attractive.
With a C corporation, it's usually a good idea to keep your compensation as regular and level as possible to avoid waving any red flags at the IRS. Paying yourself too little can, in many cases, get you into just as much trouble as paying yourself too much, because your corporation can find itself paying "accumulated earnings tax." Bunching compensation into lump sums at the end of the year is also not a recommended practice--unless the payments were established and documented early in the year as part of a "bonus" program. Otherwise, even if the overall amount is acceptable, the timing could call it into question.
As a general rule, the ultimate objective in your business is a C corporation is for you to obtain the maximum cash and benefits at the minimum tax cost. The catchword in this relationship is "reasonable" in the eyes of the IRS. You may be paid what you deem to be a reasonable amount, but the IRS may not define "reasonable" in the same way. In this event, their interpretation will often prevail and will usually carry with it increased tax liability thus ruining your maximum-cash for minimum-tax equation.
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You can, of course, pay yourself what you like. The IRS can't enforce a cap on you. But what they can do is prevent your corporation from enjoying the benefits of deducting your unreasonable compensation. They do this by recharacterizing some of it as constructive dividends. And if this is done, you can bet there'll be a penalty assessed. And penalties are, you guessed it, non-deductible to your C corporation as well.
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