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When Does It Make Sense to Switch to an S Corp?

Losses, Timing, and the IRS View on Reasonable Salary

One of the most common tax questions business owners ask is:

“When should I switch from a single-member LLC to an S Corp?”

The short answer:  Not during loss years—and not before profits are consistent.

The longer answer requires understanding two things:

  1. How losses and early profits are treated for tax purposes
  2. What the Internal Revenue Service expects when it comes to reasonable salary

Let’s walk through both with practical examples.

First, a quick refresher

A single-member LLC (SMLLC) is taxed by default as a sole proprietorship:

  • All profit flows to Schedule C
  • All profit is subject to self-employment tax

An S Corp is a tax election:

  • The owner must be paid a reasonable salary (subject to payroll taxes)
  • Remaining profit can be taken as distributions, which are not subject to self-employment tax

Important distinction:

An S Corp does not reduce income tax.

It only reduces self-employment (payroll) taxes—and only when there is profit after paying a reasonable wage.

Loss years: where Schedule C is actually better

Example: Year 1 – Startup loss

  • Net loss: ($45,000)

Best structure: Stay a single-member LLC.

Why?

  • The full loss flows directly to your personal tax return
  • It can offset W-2 income or a spouse’s income
  • No payroll, no payroll tax deposits, no added compliance

Electing S Corp status during a loss year usually:

  • Creates payroll obligations even when cash is tight
  • Adds cost without creating any tax benefit

Loss years are not S Corp years.

Small or inconsistent profits: still too early

 

Example: Year 2 – Modest profit

  • Net profit: $25,000

This still isn’t S Corp territory.

Why?

  • The IRS requires owners who work in the business to take reasonable compensation
  • For a practicing veterinarian, that salary consume all of the profit
  • Once payroll taxes and compliance costs are added, the S Corp provides little to no benefit

At this stage, simplicity matters more than structure.

The IRS position on “reasonable salary”

The IRS has been clear and consistent:

If you work in your business, you must be paid like someone doing that job.

In determining reasonable compensation, they look at:

  • Duties performed
  • Time spent in the business
  • Training and experience
  • Industry norms
  • What it would cost to hire someone else to do the same work

What the IRS does not allow:

  • Artificially low salaries
  • Excessive distributions designed to avoid payroll taxes

This is one of the most common S Corp audit triggers.

What is a reasonable salary for a veterinarian who also manages the practice?

There is no single “correct” number, but there is a defensible framework.

For a veterinarian who:

  • Actively practices medicine and
  • Manages the business (team oversight, operations, leadership, decision-making)

A reasonable salary often reflects both roles.

Practical example:

  • The veterinarian personally generates $500,000 of revenue
  • A salary of $100,000 represents 20% production

This aligns well with:

  • Market-based associate veterinarian compensation
  • A defensible production-based benchmark
  • IRS expectations for active owner compensation

Importantly:

Ownership alone does not justify paying yourself less than market.

When the S Corp does start to make sense

Example: Year 3 – Strong, stable profit

  • Net profit before owner comp planning: $200,000

Possible structure:

  • Reasonable salary: $100,000
  • Remaining profit: $100,000 (distributions)

Result:

  • Payroll taxes apply only to the salary
  • Distributions avoid self-employment tax
  • Potential annual tax savings: $10,000+, even after added compliance costs

This is where the S Corp becomes a tax optimization tool, not a startup experiment.

A common misconception: “Should I elect S Corp early to protect losses?”

No.

Losses are not enhanced in an S Corp.

They do not receive special treatment, nor are they more valuable later.

Electing too early often:

  • Adds unnecessary complexity
  • Increases audit exposure
  • Creates payroll obligations during the least stable years

The healthiest progression for most practices

Many successful veterinary practices follow this path:

  • Year 1: Loss → Stay Schedule C
  • Year 2: Small profit → Stay Schedule C
  • Year 3+: Consistent profit → Elect S Corp

This is normal.

This is expected.

This is good tax planning.

The key takeaway

An S Corp is not a startup strategy.

It is a profit-stage strategy.

Or said more simply:

The right time to switch to an S Corp isn’t when you’re optimistic.

It’s when profitability is real, repeatable, and defensible.

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