LLC vs Sole Proprietor Tax Calculator
Compare the tax treatment of LLCs and sole proprietorships. Understand the myth that LLCs reduce self-employment tax.
Important Stuff Upfront
- Single-member LLCs taxed as sole proprietorships pay the same 15.3% self-employment tax as traditional sole proprietors (up to the $176,100 Social Security wage base for 2025).
- LLCs reduce self-employment tax only if you elect S-Corp status, which requires a separate IRS filing and formal payroll. This is worth considering around $60,000 to $80,000 in net profit.
- The main benefit of an LLC is liability protection, separating your personal assets from business debts and lawsuits (not tax savings for single-member structures).
- State-level costs for LLCs vary widely ($50 to $500+ annually in filing and report fees), so factor these into your decision before forming.
LLC vs Sole Proprietor vs S-Corp: Full Comparison
The table below compares the three most common structures for self-employed individuals across every dimension that matters:
| Dimension | Sole Proprietor | Single-Member LLC | LLC with S-Corp Election |
|---|---|---|---|
| Formation Cost | $0 (no filing needed) | $50 to $500 (state filing fee) | $50 to $500 + Form 2553 |
| Annual State Fees | $0 to $50 (DBA renewal) | $0 to $800+ (varies by state) | $0 to $800+ (varies by state) |
| Liability Protection | None (personal assets at risk) | Yes (personal assets shielded) | Yes (personal assets shielded) |
| SE Tax Treatment | 15.3% on all net profit | 15.3% on all net profit (identical) | 15.3% on salary only; distributions exempt |
| Federal Tax Filing | Schedule C + Schedule SE | Schedule C + Schedule SE (identical) | Form 1120-S + W-2 + personal return |
| Payroll Required | No | No | Yes (reasonable salary required) |
| Annual Filing Complexity | Low | Low | High ($1,500 to $3,000+ in CPA fees) |
| Best For | Low-risk, low-revenue freelancers | Freelancers wanting liability protection | $60,000+ net profit, willing to run payroll |
The LLC vs Sole Proprietor Tax Myth
One of the most common misconceptions about LLCs is that they automatically reduce self-employment tax. This is false. For federal tax purposes, a single-member LLC that does not make an S-Corporation election is treated as a disregarded entity, meaning the IRS ignores the LLC structure and taxes your income exactly as if you were a sole proprietor. Your net business income is subject to 15.3% self-employment tax (Social Security and Medicare), just like a traditional sole proprietor.
The confusion often arises because people conflate LLC status (a legal structure for liability protection) with tax classification (how the IRS taxes your income). You can be an LLC with zero tax advantage. The only way an LLC reduces self-employment tax is through a separate, intentional election: becoming an S-Corporation for tax purposes. This election is optional, requires filing Form 2553, and comes with added complexity and costs.
When an LLC Actually Helps: Liability Protection
The real value of forming an LLC is personal liability protection. As a sole proprietor, your business and personal assets are legally merged: you are personally liable for business debts, lawsuits, and claims. If your business is sued, a creditor can pursue your personal savings, house, car, and other property to satisfy the judgment. An LLC separates your personal assets from your business assets, so lawsuits and creditors generally cannot touch your personal property.
For solo freelancers with low liability risk (writers, designers, consultants), the liability benefit may not justify the cost of forming and maintaining an LLC. For professions with higher risk (contractors, personal trainers, childcare providers), the asset protection can be valuable. You should weigh the ongoing LLC fees in your state against the risk you perceive in your profession before deciding to form.
How Single-Member LLCs Are Taxed for Self-Employment Tax
A single-member LLC files Schedule C (Profit or Loss from Business) and Schedule SE (Self-Employment Tax), identical to a sole proprietor. You calculate net profit (revenues minus deductions), then apply 92.35% to that amount (to account for the business portion of the SE tax deduction), and multiply by 15.3% to find your SE tax bill. This amount is split: 12.4% goes to Social Security (capped at $176,100 in combined W-2 and SE earnings for 2025) and 2.9% goes to Medicare (uncapped). You deduct half of your SE tax from your income before calculating federal income tax.
If you earn W-2 wages from another job, your combined W-2 wages and SE earnings count toward the Social Security wage base cap. Once your total hits $176,100, the 12.4% Social Security portion stops, and you only owe 2.9% Medicare tax on additional income. The calculator above handles this interaction automatically for you.
Sole Proprietor vs S-Corp at $100,000: The Numbers
Scenario: $100,000 Net Profit
As a sole proprietor or single-member LLC: SE base = $100,000 x 0.9235 = $92,350. SE tax = $92,350 x 15.3% = $14,130. You pay $14,130 in self-employment tax.
As an S-Corp (LLC with S-Corp election): You pay yourself a $60,000 W-2 salary. Employment taxes (employer + employee share) on salary = $60,000 x 15.3% = $9,180. The remaining $40,000 is a distribution with no SE tax. Total payroll tax: $9,180.
S-Corp saves $4,950 in SE/payroll tax. After subtracting $1,500 to $3,000 in additional filing and payroll costs, you net $1,950 to $3,450 in annual tax savings. This is why S-Corp elections become worthwhile around $60,000 to $80,000+ in net profit.
How to Form an LLC: Step by Step
- Choose your state. Most freelancers form an LLC in the state where they live and work. Forming in Delaware or Wyoming for "tax advantages" rarely benefits solo freelancers and can add extra filing requirements.
- Pick a business name. Your LLC name must be unique in your state. Search your state's business registry to verify availability. The name must include "LLC" or "Limited Liability Company."
- File Articles of Organization. Submit this document (sometimes called a Certificate of Formation) to your state's Secretary of State office. Filing fees range from $50 to $500 depending on the state.
- Get an EIN from the IRS. Apply free at irs.gov. You need an EIN to open a business bank account, file taxes, and hire contractors. It takes 5 minutes online.
- Create an Operating Agreement. While not legally required in all states, an operating agreement documents your LLC's ownership and management structure. For a single-member LLC, this can be a simple one-page document.
- Open a business bank account. Use your EIN and Articles of Organization to open a dedicated business checking account. Keep business and personal finances completely separate.
- Register for state and local taxes. Depending on your state, you may need to register for state income tax withholding, sales tax, or business licenses. Check your state's Department of Revenue website.
- Set up annual compliance reminders. Most states require annual reports and filing fees. Mark your calendar for the renewal date to avoid losing your LLC status due to non-compliance.
State-Level LLC Costs and Considerations
Before forming an LLC, research your state's requirements. Most states charge an annual LLC filing fee (typically $100 to $200), and many require an annual report filing (another $25 to $100). Some states (like California and New York) assess gross receipts taxes or franchise taxes on LLCs based on revenue, which can add hundreds of dollars annually. Illinois, for example, charges a personal property replacement tax on LLCs. These ongoing costs are deductible business expenses, but they reduce your bottom line and may not be worth the liability protection if your profession is low-risk.
Additionally, some states require you to file a Doing Business As (DBA) statement if your LLC name differs from your own, and you may need business licenses or permits depending on your industry. Factor all of these state-level costs into your decision. For many solo freelancers, especially in high-fee states, staying a sole proprietor and carrying professional liability insurance may be more cost-effective than an LLC.
Multi-Member LLCs and Partnerships
If you have a business partner, a multi-member LLC is treated differently for tax purposes. By default, a multi-member LLC is taxed as a partnership, where each partner reports their share of profit and loss on Schedule C, and pays SE tax on their share. You can elect for a multi-member LLC to be taxed as an S-Corporation or C-Corporation, which changes the tax treatment. Partnership taxation adds complexity and typically requires hiring a CPA, so consult a tax professional before forming a multi-member LLC.
LLC vs Sole Proprietor FAQs
Disclaimer
This calculator and guide provide estimates for educational purposes only. Tax laws and rates may change. This content does not account for all possible deductions, credits, state taxes, or individual circumstances. For accurate tax advice, consult a qualified tax professional. For more information, refer to the IRS Self-Employed Tax Center.