Choosing between a C-Corp and an S-Corp can impact taxes, liability, and long-term growth. Our Lancaster business transactions team helps you compare options and set up the right corporate framework.
From formation to ongoing compliance, we guide you through the process so you can focus on building your business.
Understanding tax treatment, liability protection, and ownership flexibility between C-Corp and S-Corp helps you plan for growth, attract investors, and manage costs over time.
Ling Law Group serves clients in Lancaster and throughout California with practical guidance on business transactions, corporate formation, and governance.
C-Corporations and S-Corporations are two common corporate structures used by growing businesses to manage taxes, ownership, and liability.
We tailor our approach to your business, outlining advantages and potential drawbacks to help you decide which structure best fits your goals.
A C-Corp is a separate legal entity taxed at the corporate level, with profits that may be subject to corporate tax and possible double taxation when distributed as dividends. An S-Corp provides pass-through taxation, with profits and losses passing to shareholders to be reported on their personal returns, subject to eligibility and limits.
Key elements include choosing the right entity, preparing formation documents, issuing stock, and establishing governance and compliance practices, followed by ongoing recordkeeping and annual filings.
This glossary explains common terms you’ll encounter when evaluating C-Corp and S-Corp options.
A C-Corp is a separate legal entity taxed at the corporate level, with profits potentially taxed again at the shareholder level when distributed as dividends.
An S-Corp provides pass-through taxation, with profits and losses reported on shareholders’ personal tax returns, subject to eligibility and restrictions.
Tax treatment refers to how corporate income is taxed under different structures, including corporate taxes for C-Corps and pass-through taxation for S-Corps.
Stock represents ownership in the company and determines voting rights and distributions; stock structures and eligibility vary between C-Corps and S-Corps.
When selecting a corporate structure, consider taxes, growth plans, investor expectations, and ongoing compliance. We help you weigh these options and plan for the future.
If your business has simple ownership and tax needs, a lighter approach may be enough, with fewer regulatory requirements.
A streamlined process can shorten setup time and reduce upfront costs while still providing essential protection.
A comprehensive approach covers formation, governance, tax planning, and ongoing compliance to support healthy growth.
By aligning formation with your business plan, you reduce later restructuring and create a clear path for investors.
Well-drafted bylaws, stock agreements, and governance policies streamline decisions and accountability.
Outline your growth plan, funding needs, and governance preferences to guide the right corporate choice.
Keep stock ledgers, bylaws, and meeting minutes organized to support future changes and reviews.
If you plan to attract investors, issue stock, or structure governance for growth, choosing the right entity early matters.
Our team helps you understand requirements and align strategy with business goals.
Starting a new venture, expanding ownership, seeking investment, or reorganizing an existing entity are typical scenarios.
Setting up a C-Corp or S-Corp to meet tax and governance objectives.
Preparing stock issuances and investor agreements.
Planning for ownership changes, mergers, and succession with compliant processes.
We provide clear guidance, practical solutions, and a plan tailored to your business needs.
With a focus on moving your business forward, we prioritize communication and results.
Our local knowledge of California corporate requirements helps you stay compliant.
We begin with an assessment, outline options, and guide you through formation, governance, and ongoing compliance steps.
We discuss your goals, structure preferences, and timeline.
We review your business plan, ownership structure, and financing plans.
We draft an outline covering entity selection, required filings, and governance documents.
We prepare articles, bylaws, stock certificates, and necessary registrations.
We file articles with the state and create governance documents.
We establish stock classes, shareholder agreements, and vesting schedules as needed.
We set up ongoing filings, annual reports, and governance practices.
We monitor deadlines and ensure timely filings and updates to bylaws and ownership records.
We help you maintain accurate meeting records, governance policies, and investor communications.
Results-focused representation without big-firm overhead. We combine aggressive advocacy with AI and modern tools to expedite your legal issues with precision. We have closed over nine figures in litigation and transactional deals while keeping fees sensible.
Results-focused representation without big-firm overhead. We combine aggressive advocacy with AI and modern tools to expedite your legal issues with precision. We have closed over nine figures in litigation and transactional deals while keeping fees sensible.
A C-Corp is taxed at the corporate level and may face double taxation on distributions. An S-Corp provides pass-through taxation, with profits and losses passing to shareholders’ personal tax returns. The best choice depends on goals, funding plans, and tax strategy. In California, both structures offer liability protection and scalable options for growing businesses.
For many small businesses, an S-Corp can reduce self-employment taxes and simplify filings, but restrictions on ownership and stock types may apply. A C-Corp may be better for raising capital and scaling. Your choice should balance tax considerations, investor plans, and governance needs.
Switching from C-Corp to S-Corp is possible in some cases, usually by filing an election with the IRS and meeting eligibility. There can be tax consequences and regulatory steps to consider, so planning with counsel is recommended.
C-Corp profits can be taxed twice (corporate level and shareholder level when distributed as dividends). S-Corp pass-through avoids corporate tax at entity level but has restrictions. State taxes and local fees may apply; consult a tax professional.
Ongoing compliance includes annual reports, minutes, stock ledgers, and maintaining corporate records. Be aware of deadlines, renewals, and shareholder meeting requirements.
Formation times vary; typical timelines range from a few days to a few weeks depending on filings. We can expedite processes and prepare required documents to fit your schedule.
While you can form a corporation on your own, having a lawyer helps ensure the documents are accurate and compliant. Professional guidance can save time and prevent errors.
Needed documents include identification, proposed company name, and details on ownership and officers. We also help prepare the articles of incorporation, bylaws, and initial stock issuances.
An S-Corp can have up to 100 shareholders who are U.S. citizens or residents, with some restrictions on stock types. Nonresident aliens cannot be shareholders in an S-Corp.
Stock issuance and vesting are managed through stock certificates, stock ledgers, and vesting schedules. We help you draft and implement these documents for clarity and compliance.