oldsparky52
Senior Member
- Location
- Wilmington, NC USA
The IRS is not concerned with certified payroll. The IRS does have rules about how little of a salary/wage the owner of the S-Corp takes. The IRS expects the owner/worker to have an income that would be reasonable for what that person is doing. So, for and EC S-Corp the owner while working in the field should be earning and paying SS taxes on a wage that is in line with what an employed electrician would make (the rest of the profit would be taken as a distribution not subject to SS taxes). Take too little and you can get an IRS visit. I think though, the IRS is getting a bit overwhelmed and I doubt they would come after you, but ... they have in the past.As long as they get their cut, one way or the other, the IRS doesn't care how you move the money around. The only case where certified payrolls are required, to my knowledge, are for federal or state prevailing wage jobs. In that case, the state or the feebs don't care how you dance with the taxman, they want to know that Joe's pay-stub, whether he's the owner of the business or a day laborer, shows that Joe was paid the prevailing wage for any prevailing wage work he performed during the pay period. If Joe owns the (S-corp) business he can't pay himself a dollar an hour and take the rest as some kind of distribution.
ETA, https://www.firmofthefuture.com/content/what-is-reasonable-compensation-for-an-s-corporation/
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