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Comparison GuideS-Corp vs C-Corp: side-by-side comparison of structure, taxes, liability, and cost. Pick the right entity for your situation.
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Comparison Guide
S Corp Vs C Corp · File.Business

S-Corp vs C-Corp: a tax election, not different entities.

A side-by-side comparison of structure, tax treatment, liability protection, cost, and use cases. The decision usually comes down to a few specific factors; this guide walks through each.

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S-Corp A tax election (Form 2553) that makes the Corporation a pass-through entity. Avoids double taxation. Restricted to US individual shareholders, 100 shareholders max, single class of stock.
vs
C-Corp The default tax treatment for a Corporation. The Corporation pays 21% federal income tax on profits; shareholders pay tax again on dividends. Required for venture capital, ISOs, QSBS, and IPO.
The Bottom Line

S-Corp saves self-employment tax on owner distributions for profitable operating businesses. C-Corp is required for venture capital and offers QSBS. The choice depends on funding plans more than tax math.

When each is the right pick

Which fits your situation.

Based on publicly listed pricing and feature pages as of 2026. Competitor names are trademarks of their respective owners.

Side by side

Every factor that matters.

FactorS-CorpC-Corp
Federal taxPass-through to shareholdersCorporate income tax at 21% + dividend tax on distributions
Owner payReasonable salary (W-2) + distributions (no SE tax on distributions)Wages (W-2) or dividends; ordinary tax + 15-23.8% qualified dividend tax
Shareholder limit100 maximumUnlimited
Shareholder eligibilityUS individuals, certain trusts, certain estates onlyAnyone: individuals, entities, foreign persons, partnerships
Foreign ownersNo (excludes non-US persons)Yes
Stock classesSingle class only (voting differences allowed; no economic preferences)Multiple classes; common + preferred; convertible securities
VC compatibilityGenerally noYes (standard structure)
Employee stock optionsLimited (NSO only; no ISO)Both ISO and NSO supported
QSBS (Section 1202)Not eligibleEligible if requirements met
Retained earningsPass through whether distributed or notRetained at corporate level; taxed at 21%
Annual filingForm 1120-S + Schedule K-1Form 1120
Self-employment taxNone on distributions (salary only)None (corporate level taxation instead)
State recognitionMost states recognize federal S-election; some (NJ, NY, others) require separate state electionStandard across states
Tax treatment

How each is taxed.

The S-Corp election (Form 2553) makes a Corporation a pass-through entity for federal tax. The Corporation files Form 1120-S, issues Schedule K-1 to each shareholder, and shareholders report their share of income on their personal returns. No double taxation.

For owner-operators, S-Corp election creates a tax-saving opportunity: the owner pays themselves a reasonable salary (subject to payroll tax) and takes the rest as distributions (not subject to self-employment tax). At $200k profit with $80k salary + $120k distribution, the SE tax savings are approximately $11k to $15k per year.

C-Corp files Form 1120 and pays 21% federal corporate income tax. Distributions to shareholders are taxed again as dividends (15-23.8% qualified rate plus state). Total federal+state rate can exceed 40% on distributed earnings.

C-Corp is more tax-efficient when most profit is retained at the corporate level for growth (taxed once at 21%). It is also better when QSBS applies, because Section 1202 can exclude up to $10M or 10x basis of capital gains on stock held more than 5 years.

Cost

What each costs.

S-Corp election costs $0 in IRS fees. Form 2553 is free to file. Our service fee is $99 standalone or included on Growth.

C-Corp has no federal election cost. The Corporation is C-Corp by default.

Both file federal tax returns annually. S-Corp files Form 1120-S; C-Corp files Form 1120. State filing fees and tax preparation costs are similar for both.

Liability

Protection differences.

Liability protection is the same for both. Both are Corporations under state law and provide the same liability shield. The S-Corp/C-Corp distinction is federal tax treatment only.

To maintain the liability shield: separate bank accounts, no commingling, regular board meetings, meeting minutes, file annual reports, follow corporate formalities.

FAQ

Common questions.

What is the difference between an S-corp and a C-corp?
They are tax treatments of a corporation: a C-corp is taxed at the entity level and again when profits are distributed as dividends (potential double taxation), while an S-corp passes income through to owners' returns, avoiding entity-level tax. The right one depends on your profit, ownership, and fundraising plans, and we help you choose.
Which is better for a small business?
Often an S-corp: for a profitable small business with eligible US owners, S-corp treatment avoids double taxation and can reduce self-employment tax, while a C-corp mainly suits companies raising venture capital or retaining earnings. We run your numbers so the choice fits your situation.
Why do investors prefer a C-corp?
Venture investors want a C-corporation, typically Delaware, for its stock structure, ability to have many and foreign owners, and legal familiarity, none of which an S-corp allows. If you are raising priced rounds, a C-corp is expected, and we form it when you are ready.
What is double taxation?
It is the C-corp feature where the corporation pays tax on its profit and shareholders pay tax again on dividends, taxing the same earnings twice, which the S-corp's pass-through treatment avoids. We flag how it affects your take-home so the entity choice is informed.
Can an LLC be an S-corp or C-corp?
Yes: an LLC can elect S-corp or C-corp taxation while staying an LLC, so you can often get corporate tax treatment without corporate formalities. This flexibility means the tax choice and entity form are separate, and we help you use it.
Who can own an S-corp versus a C-corp?
An S-corp is limited to 100 shareholders, all US citizens or resident aliens, and one class of stock, while a C-corp has no such limits and can have foreign and institutional owners and multiple share classes. Ownership plans often decide the choice, and we flag the constraints.
When should I switch from S-corp to C-corp?
Typically when you raise venture capital or need features an S-corp cannot support, like foreign or institutional investors or multiple share classes, at which point converting or forming a C-corp fits. We flag the trigger so the switch is timed to your fundraising.
How do the two file taxes?
A C-corp files its own corporate return and pays corporate tax, while an S-corp files an informational return and passes income to owners via K-1s, so their filings and tax flows differ. We flag the filing implications so you know what each entails.
Can File.Business help me choose and set up?
Yes: we form the corporation or LLC, run your numbers on S-corp versus C-corp treatment, file the appropriate election, and can convert later if you outgrow the choice, so your tax structure fits your profit and plans.

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