Reasonable Compensation of Shareholders and Officers
A deduction is allowed for compensation, but the amount must be reasonable and the payment must be solely for services. (IRC §162(a); Treas. Regs. §1.162-7(a)) The Ninth Circuit uses five factors to determine the reasonableness of compensation:
- The employee’s role in the company
- Comparison of compensation paid by similar companies for similar services
- The character and condition of the company
- Potential conflicts of interest; and
- Internal consistency of compensation arrangements
Both C corporations and S corporations might be tempted to pay unreasonable compensation, but they are the flip sides of each other. C corporations might be tempted to pay unreasonably high compensation to their shareholder-employees to avoid paying nondeductible dividends. On the other hand, S corporations might be tempted to use unreasonably low compensation to avoid employment taxes.
In the case of S corporations, the IRS lists the following factors in determining the amount of reasonable compensation:
- Training and experience
- Duties and responsibilities
- Time and effort devoted to the business
- Dividend history;
- Compensation to non-shareholder employees
- Timing and manner of paying bonuses to key employees
- What comparable businesses pay for similar services
- Compensation agreements; and