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  1. The Amy Porterfield Show
  2. LLC vs. S-Corp: The $10K Decision Every Entrepreneur Faces
LLC vs. S-Corp: The $10K Decision Every Entrepreneur Faces

LLC vs. S-Corp: The $10K Decision Every Entrepreneur Faces

The Amy Porterfield Show · Nov 20, 2025

Tackle business taxes with confidence. Tax attorney Brayden Drake demystifies LLCs, S-Corps, deductions, and year-end strategies for entrepreneurs.

A Percentage of Housekeeping Expenses Qualifies as a Deductible Home Office Cost

Many entrepreneurs miss that a portion of their home cleaning service is tax-deductible as part of the home office deduction. The rationale is that any commercial office lease would include maintenance and cleaning costs, and the home office is no different.

LLC vs. S-Corp: The $10K Decision Every Entrepreneur Faces thumbnail

LLC vs. S-Corp: The $10K Decision Every Entrepreneur Faces

The Amy Porterfield Show·3 months ago

The IRS Disregards Single-Member LLCs for Tax Purposes, Treating Them as Sole Proprietorships

An LLC is a legal designation for liability protection, not a tax classification in the eyes of the IRS. By default, a single-member LLC is taxed identically to a sole proprietorship. To change this, you must proactively file to be taxed as an S-Corporation.

LLC vs. S-Corp: The $10K Decision Every Entrepreneur Faces thumbnail

LLC vs. S-Corp: The $10K Decision Every Entrepreneur Faces

The Amy Porterfield Show·3 months ago

Delaying Business Expenses to a Higher-Income Year Can Maximize Tax Deductions

Contrary to popular belief, spending money just for a year-end tax write-off can be a poor financial move. If your income is on a sharp upward trajectory, delaying the expense to the next year could result in a larger tax saving, as you'll likely be in a higher tax bracket.

LLC vs. S-Corp: The $10K Decision Every Entrepreneur Faces thumbnail

LLC vs. S-Corp: The $10K Decision Every Entrepreneur Faces

The Amy Porterfield Show·3 months ago

Forming an S-Corp Prematurely Can Be a Financial Drain, Not a Benefit

Tax attorney Brayden Drake admits he formed his S-Corp two years too early. Inconsistent revenue made it difficult to pay himself a required salary, leaving insufficient profit distributions to generate significant tax savings. This premature move added complexity without the financial benefit.

LLC vs. S-Corp: The $10K Decision Every Entrepreneur Faces thumbnail

LLC vs. S-Corp: The $10K Decision Every Entrepreneur Faces

The Amy Porterfield Show·3 months ago

Switching to an S-Corp Becomes Financially Viable at $60K-$80K in Annual Profit

Don't rush to form an S-Corp. The tax savings typically don't outweigh the added costs and complexity, like running payroll, until your business is generating at least $60,000 to $80,000 in profit. Before that, a sole proprietorship or standard LLC is often more efficient.

LLC vs. S-Corp: The $10K Decision Every Entrepreneur Faces thumbnail

LLC vs. S-Corp: The $10K Decision Every Entrepreneur Faces

The Amy Porterfield Show·3 months ago

Open a Retirement Account By Dec. 31 to Enable Tax-Deductible Contributions Until April

To preserve your ability to make tax-deductible retirement contributions for the current year, you only need to *open* the account before December 31. You can then wait until you know your final tax liability (up until the April tax deadline) to decide the exact amount to contribute.

LLC vs. S-Corp: The $10K Decision Every Entrepreneur Faces thumbnail

LLC vs. S-Corp: The $10K Decision Every Entrepreneur Faces

The Amy Porterfield Show·3 months ago