Small Business Tax · For 1099 Professionals

Tax Strategies for Consultants

Independent consulting income is fully exposed to the 15.3% self-employment tax. The right entity structure and a year-round plan can shrink that bill significantly, whether you just went 1099 or you are scaling a six-figure practice.

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The Numbers First

The Logic-First Proof: How an S-Corp Election Cuts Your Self-Employment Tax

As a sole proprietor, every dollar of net profit is hit with both income tax and the full 15.3% self-employment tax. An S-corp election splits your income into a reasonable W-2 salary and tax-free distributions, so only the salary carries payroll tax. To see the difference, assume a consultant nets $150,000 for the year.
Sole Proprietor (Schedule C)
Full self-employment tax

$21,194

You pay 15.3% on 92.35% of net profit ($138,525). No salary split. Every dollar of profit is exposed to Social Security and Medicare tax on top of income tax.
S-Corp Election
Reduced payroll tax

$10,710

A reasonable $70,000 W-2 salary carries 15.3% payroll tax. The remaining $80,000 is paid as a distribution, free of self-employment tax. Annual savings: $10,484.
Metric Sole Proprietor (Schedule C) S-Corp Election
Net Business Income $150,000 $150,000
Wages Subject to FICA / SE Tax $138,525 $70,000
Self-Employment / Payroll Tax $21,194 $10,710
Tax-Free Distribution $0 $80,000
Annual SE Tax Due $21,194 $10,710
Total Annual Self-Employment Tax Savings
$10,484
Savings = (Net × 92.35% × 15.3%) − (Salary × 15.3%). Figures are illustrative and assume a $150,000 net profit with a $70,000 reasonable salary.

The Advisor Perspective: Four Tax Pitfalls for 1099 Consultants (2026)

An S-corp is rarely the only lever for a consultant, and it is not always the right one. These are the four issues we surface most often in our consulting work before recommending a structure.

 
⚠ The Quarterly Trap

You Skip Estimated Tax Payments

1099 income has no withholding. The IRS expects four estimated payments a year, and missing them triggers underpayment penalties plus interest, even if you pay in full by April. New consultants are caught off guard most often.
⚠ The SSTB Limit

Your QBI Deduction Phases Out

Consulting is a Specified Service Trade or Business, so the 20% qualified business income deduction phases out once taxable income passes the annual threshold. Above the cap, the deduction can disappear entirely unless income is managed.
⚠ The Reasonable Salary Rule

An S-Corp Salary Set Too Low

The IRS requires S-corp owners to pay themselves a fair, market-rate salary before taking distributions. Set it too low to dodge payroll tax and you invite reclassification, back taxes, and penalties on audit.
⚠ The Retirement Blind Spot

You Under-Fund a Solo 401(k) or SEP

Self-employed consultants can shelter far more than a standard employee through a Solo 401(k) or SEP IRA. Skipping or under-funding these plans leaves one of the largest legal deductions on the table every year.

S-Corp Suitability Checklist for 1099 Consultants

An S-corp election only pays off above a certain profit level, and it adds payroll and filing work. Steady, proactive tax planning across the year is what tells you whether the structure fits. Here is what to confirm first.

5 / 5 to be confident
Profit Above the Break-Even
Consistent net profit around $80,000 or more, where savings outweigh payroll and admin costs.
A Defensible Salary
You can justify a fair market salary for the work you actually do.
1099 Self-Employment Income
Your income arrives as 1099-NEC, not a W-2 paycheck.
Willing to Run Payroll
You will file quarterly payroll returns yourself or use a provider.
A Long-Term Practice
You plan to keep working independently, since the election is a multi-year commitment.
Quick Suitability Snapshot
Factor Criteria
Annual net profit ~$80,000+ for meaningful savings
Entity structure LLC or corporation electing S-corp status
Owner salary Reasonable market rate
Payroll administration Quarterly filings required
Income type 1099-NEC self-employment

See If an S-Corp Election Fits Your Practice

If most of these boxes line up, you may be overpaying in self-employment tax right now. The only way to know is to run your real numbers. Let us check before the next quarter closes.

Expert FAQs

At what income does an S-corp election make sense for a consultant?

There is no fixed line, but the savings usually outpace the added payroll and filing costs once net profit reaches roughly $80,000 a year. Below that, the administrative work often cancels out the benefit.
Sometimes. Consulting is a Specified Service Trade or Business, so the deduction is available in full only below the annual income threshold. Above it, the deduction phases out and can reach zero unless taxable income is actively managed.
A common starting point is 25% to 30% of net profit, set aside as you invoice. Your exact rate depends on your bracket, state, and deductions, so a quick projection at the start of the year keeps you from over- or under-paying.
Ordinary and necessary business costs, including a home office, software, professional development, business travel, a portion of your phone and internet, health insurance premiums, and retirement contributions. Clean records make these defensible.
Yes, though timing matters. The election has filing deadlines, and a mid-year switch means running payroll for the remaining months. Planning the change early in the year usually captures the most savings.

Disclaimer: This is not tax advice, and it is recommended to consult a tax professional, as every tax situation is unique.