Business · Tax
S-Corp Break-Even Stress Test
Find the point where complexity starts paying for itself.
Find the point where complexity starts paying for itself.
Stress-test S-corp savings against lower profit, higher salary, higher state costs, payroll cost, filing cost, and admin time.
Best for: Owners who saw an exciting S-corp savings number and want to know whether it survives conservative assumptions.
Estimate inputs
Decision mode
Get the current planning number from the inputs.
What most advice leaves out
Most S-corp break-even advice treats complexity like a small fixed fee. The owner still has to run payroll, keep books clean, file separately, meet state requirements, and support salary assumptions.
How this calculator thinks
This stress test compares expected S-corp savings with lower-profit, higher-salary, higher-admin cases and shows whether the savings still justify complexity.
Reality check questions
- What profit level makes the admin worth it?
- Does the spread survive higher salary?
- What state/entity costs apply?
- How much admin time is realistic?
- Would you still want the structure in a weak year?
What this tool does not do
- It does not file taxes or determine a tax position.
- It does not determine reasonable salary, eligibility, deductions, penalties, or state treatment.
- It does not replace a CPA, enrolled agent, tax software, or official IRS forms.
- It does help identify the tax assumptions to verify before acting.
Your next calculator depends on what felt uncomfortable
Messy questions this calculator should answer
When is an S-corp not worth it yet?
When savings are small, profit is unstable, salary assumptions are weak, or payroll, filing, state, and admin costs consume the spread.
What profit threshold should I use?
Use a range, not one threshold. The better test is whether savings survive lower profit and higher salary assumptions.
Should setup cost count?
Yes. Setup and transition costs matter because they can delay or reduce the first-year benefit.
Business recommendation rule
Calculator result -> guide -> template -> software or service
Kefiw should not send a Business user from a calculator straight to generic affiliate cards. The result should point to the next decision, then to the asset or tool category that fits the actual bottleneck.
- Step 1
Calculator result
Start with the calculator state, not a tool category.
- Step 2
Result-state guide
Read the guide for the exact weakness the result exposed.
- Step 3
Template or packet
Turn the number into a script, worksheet, checklist, or review packet.
- Step 4
Software or service bridge
Consider tools only after the problem is clear enough to justify them.
Disclosure stays close to recommendation blocks: Kefiw may earn a commission from some links, but calculator results are not changed by affiliate relationships.
Assumptions
- The break-even point is an administrative threshold as much as a tax number.
- If savings disappear in stress tests, the entity may be too early even if the expected case looks good.
Deductions need a business reason and records
Self-employed deductions generally need to be ordinary, necessary, tied to the business, and supported by records. The dangerous deductions are usually not the biggest dollar amounts; they are the ones with weak business purpose, mixed personal use, or no contemporaneous documentation.
- Home office: document exclusive and regular business use, square footage, and why the space is not personal.
- Vehicle: keep a mileage log or actual-expense records. The 2026 standard business mileage rate is 72.5 cents per mile.
- Meals and travel: keep business purpose, date, amount, location, and who was involved.
- Software, phone, internet, equipment: split personal and business use if mixed.
Danger flags
This tool should flag deductions that often need extra support: large home-office claims, 100 percent vehicle use, travel mixed with vacation, meals without business purpose, family payroll, hobby-like losses, and contractor payments without tax forms.
Related tools and tracks
Tools that may help after you run the numbers
Use this only after the calculator shows where the pressure is. The useful category depends on the bottleneck, not the ad pitch.
- payroll software
- bookkeeping software
- CPA review
- entity administration
Source links used for this calculator family
Source check and limits
Last source check: April 30, 2026
Scope checked: IRS S-corp reasonable-compensation guidance, officer wage treatment, federal payroll baseline, Social Security wage base, and user-entered state/admin assumptions.
This calculator uses educational planning assumptions. Tax rules, thresholds, forms, deadlines, and state rules can change. Kefiw shows the assumptions used so you can audit the math before relying on the result. This tool does not provide legal, tax, accounting, payroll, or filing advice.
This tool estimates possible savings after reasonable salary, payroll, filing, state, and admin assumptions. It does not determine a reasonable salary or tax election.