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Entity election decisions that compound: S-corp vs C-corp at $25M revenue

The S-corp versus C-corp election gets treated as a tax-year decision. At $25M revenue, it becomes structural. The election compounds — every year it persists, the cumulative impact widens. Businesses that revisit this at $50M or $75M typically discover the original election produced two hundred thousand to one million dollars or more of suboptimal tax outcome over the prior three to five years.

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Entity election decisions that compound: S-corp vs C-corp at $25M revenue
Tax Services2 min read
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The S-corp versus C-corp election gets treated as a tax-year decision. At $25M revenue, it becomes structural. The election compounds — every year it persists, the cumulative impact widens. Businesses that revisit this at $50M or $75M typically discover the original election produced two hundred thousand to one million dollars or more of suboptimal tax outcome over the prior three to five years.

Four factors determine the right answer at this revenue band.

Factor one — the ownership and exit horizon. If the owners intend to hold for ten-plus years, draw substantial profits annually, and have no near-term sale event in view, S-corp pass-through generally wins. If the business is on a five-year track toward sale or a fundraise event that requires C-corp structure (institutional capital almost always requires it), the conversion friction late in that timeline is meaningful. Electing C-corp earlier sometimes avoids the conversion penalty later.

Factor two — the reinvestment versus distribution profile. S-corps work best when most earnings are distributed. C-corps work best when most are retained to fund growth, capital expenditure, or M&A. Businesses that retain seventy percent of earnings annually under S-corp structure are paying personal-rate tax on income that never reaches the owners' bank accounts.

Factor three — the multi-state operating footprint. S-corp pass-through surfaces complex multi-state filings for every owner. Businesses operating across ten or more states with multiple owners can spend forty to eighty hours per owner per year managing the pass-through compliance. The complexity tax is real and rarely modeled in the original election analysis.

Factor four — the qualified business income deduction and federal rate trajectory. The QBI deduction structurally favors S-corp pass-through for qualifying businesses. The deduction expires at the end of 2025 absent congressional action. The federal corporate rate has been at 21% since 2018 and may move. Decisions made in 2026 against an assumed 2027 rate environment are exposed to legislative risk both directions.

Across the engagements where I have advised on entity structure during finance transformation — including a multi-entity consolidation involving 44 operating entities — the right answer was never the same in any two businesses. The decision required tax modeling against the four factors above, not a default to whichever election the incorporation document specified.

If your business is past $25M and has not revisited the original election in three years, the compounding may already be material.

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