Generate a complete S-Corp election package in under 60 seconds: IRS Form 2553 cover letter, board resolution, and state-specific filing checklist. Free. No signup.
IRC § 1362(a) compliant State-specific deadlines Updated April 2026
Fill in your business details and click Generate. Takes about 20-40 seconds to create all three documents.
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Analyzing entity structure...
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Drafting Form 2553 cover letter...
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Writing board resolution...
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Building state-specific checklist...
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Finalizing election package...
IRS Form 2553 Cover Letter
✦ Documents drafted by AI · Content reviewed for accuracy against IRC § 1362, IRS Form 2553 instructions, and state filing requirements · About AI usage
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Tax savings projection: current structure vs. S-Corp (your numbers)
Reasonable salary analysis with industry benchmarks
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The IRS requires S-Corp owners to pay themselves reasonable compensation. Too low = audit risk. Use our free calculator to get your IRS-defensible salary range.
What is IRS Form 2553 and when do I need to file it?
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IRS Form 2553 (Election by a Small Business Corporation) is the form you file to elect S-Corporation tax status under IRC Section 1362(a). For calendar-year taxpayers, you must file by March 15 of the tax year you want the election to take effect, or at any time during the preceding tax year. For new businesses, the deadline is within 75 days of formation. If you miss the deadline, late election relief is available under Rev. Proc. 2013-30 if you have reasonable cause.
How much can I save with an S-Corp election?
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The primary S-Corp savings come from avoiding the 15.3% self-employment tax on business profits above your reasonable salary. On $150,000 of net income, you could save approximately $8,687/year by paying yourself a $75,000 salary and taking $75,000 as distributions. The breakeven point is typically $50,000-$80,000 in annual net self-employment income, after accounting for additional payroll costs ($500-$2,000/year for payroll service).
Do I need a board resolution to elect S-Corp status?
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Yes. While the IRS technically only requires shareholder consents on Form 2553, proper corporate governance requires a formal board resolution (corporations) or member consent resolution (LLCs) authorizing the election. This protects you in future disputes or audits by documenting that the election was properly authorized by all owners.
Does my state automatically recognize federal S-Corp election?
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Not always. Most states follow the federal election, but some require separate filings. California taxes S-Corps at 1.5% of net income (minimum $800 franchise tax). New York and New Jersey require separate state S-Corp elections. New Hampshire and Tennessee tax S-Corp income at the entity level. Always check your specific state's requirements.
What is a "reasonable salary" for S-Corp owners?
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The IRS requires S-Corp shareholder-employees to pay themselves a reasonable salary before taking distributions. Factors include: duties, time devoted, comparable industry pay, and company revenue. A common benchmark is 40-60% of net business income. Setting salary too low risks IRS reclassification of distributions as wages plus penalties. The IRS specifically targets S-Corps paying minimal salary with large distributions.