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New Hampshire . S-Corp Election

Elect S-Corp tax status for your New Hampshire business.

S-Corp is a federal tax election, not a New Hampshire entity type. Both LLCs and Corporations can elect S taxation by filing Form 2553 with the IRS. For profitable owner-operators, the savings on self-employment tax can be substantial. For founders below the breakeven, the extra compliance is not worth it.

File Form 2553 with File.Business →

When S-Corp election makes sense in New Hampshire

  • Net profit above ~$50,000-$80,000. Below that, the salary + payroll-tax + accounting cost wipes out the savings.
  • Owner actively works in the business. Passive investors do not benefit.
  • Owner is a US citizen or resident. Foreign owners are not eligible for S-Corp election.
  • Entity has ≤100 shareholders and a single class of stock.
  • Profits exceed reasonable salary needs. Distributions in excess of salary avoid self-employment tax.
Federal election

New Hampshire S-Corp Election: at a glance.

S-Corp is a federal IRS election (Form 2553), not a state filing. State recognition varies.

Filing details

How New Hampshire handles S-Corp Election.

Where to fileSecretary of State office, online portal, or by mail with the required fee.
TurnaroundStandard processing: 5-10 business days. Expedited service available for an additional state fee.
Required informationEntity name + ID, current officers and registered agent, principal office address.
Common pitfallsMismatched officer addresses, expired registered agent, missed prior reports causing administrative dissolution.
Frequently asked

New Hampshire S-Corp Election questions.

Does the New Hampshire Secretary of State handle the S-Corp election?

No: the S-corp election is a federal tax election filed with the IRS on Form 2553, not with the New Hampshire Secretary of State, which handles your entity registration. Your New Hampshire LLC or corporation stays the same entity; only its tax treatment changes. We file the 2553 and coordinate it with your New Hampshire entity.

Does New Hampshire accept the federal S-Corp election?

In most states New Hampshire follows the federal election automatically, so pass-through treatment carries to your New Hampshire return with no separate state form; a few states require a state election or tax S-corps. We confirm New Hampshire's exact treatment so you are not surprised by a state filing or franchise tax the federal election does not remove.

When is the S-Corp election due?

Generally within two months and fifteen days of the start of the tax year you want it to take effect, about mid-March for a calendar-year business, with the same window from formation. Miss it and you usually wait a year, barring late relief. We file inside the window for your New Hampshire entity so timing does not cost you. Link details.

Does my New Hampshire entity need to become a corporation to elect S-corp?

No: a New Hampshire LLC can elect S-corp taxation while staying an LLC, keeping its simpler structure, and you do not convert at the Secretary of State. Converting to an actual corporation is a separate, fundraising-driven decision. We keep your New Hampshire LLC and just change how the IRS taxes it.

What is a reasonable salary under an S-corp?

The wage the IRS requires an owner-employee to pay themselves before taking distributions, what a comparable business would pay for the work. Too low invites an audit; sensible frees the distributions from self-employment tax. Getting this right is the core of the election, and we help you support the New Hampshire figure with real comparables.

When does an S-corp election make sense for my New Hampshire business?

Once profit is high enough that the self-employment tax saved beats payroll and a second return, often low-to-mid five figures and up. Below that it adds cost without saving. We run your New Hampshire numbers before you elect so the saving is real rather than theoretical.

Can I revoke the election later?

Yes: you revoke with the IRS, usually effective from the start of a tax year, returning your New Hampshire LLC to default taxation, with timing rules before you can re-elect. It is not a switch to flip casually. We help you revoke cleanly if your profit drops or the admin outweighs the savings.

Do foreign owners affect the New Hampshire S-corp election?

Yes: S-corp shareholders must be US citizens or resident aliens, so a nonresident owner disqualifies the election. If your New Hampshire business has foreign partners, a C-corp or default LLC usually fits better, and we flag it before you file rather than after a rejection.

Can File.Business file my S-Corp election?

Yes. We prepare and file Form 2553, confirm New Hampshire follows the federal election, set up the payroll the election requires, and track the CP261 acknowledgement, so the tax change is done correctly alongside your New Hampshire entity registration.

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