What’s the difference between a C and S corporation? – watch video
What’s the difference between a C and an S corporation?
A corporation is exactly the same, whether it is a C or S corporation from a liability standpoint. Both C and S corporations provide precisely the same amount of liability protection. They’re only different with respect to the way they are taxed.
When a corporation is initially formed and nothing is done whatsoever, it is taxed under subchapter C of the Internal Revenue Code. That means that it pays its own taxes on its earnings; and when it distributes its earnings to the shareholders, they pay tax on their dividends that they receive. That can result for many little corporations in a double level of tax. To avoid that, a corporation can make an election by filing IRS Form 2553 to be taxed as a subchapter S corporation. It then would only be taxed once – at the shareholder level.