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Hiring Your Kids Is Just the First Move

A practical look at why hiring kids in your business is only step one, and how the right hire your kids tax strategy creates more value.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

    What Happens Next Is the Strategy

    I think this is one of those strategies that gets talked about just enough to be dangerous.

    Most business owners have heard some version of it before. Put your kids on payroll. Pay them up to the standard deduction. Write it off and move on.

    And that’s usually where the conversation ends.

    That’s also where most of the value gets left behind.

    Because hiring kids in your business isn’t the strategy. It’s a tactic that serves as the entry point. The real strategy is what happens after the money moves, and that’s the part almost no one takes the time to think through.

    If you zoom out for a second, you’re already spending money on your kids. Activities, clothes, trips, general lifestyle support. None of that is new. The only question is how those dollars are flowing through your life.

    Most people follow the same pattern. They earn income, pay tax on it, and then spend what’s left. It’s a reactive process with no structure behind it.

    When you bring your children into the business, that sequence changes. The business pays them for legitimate work, you take the deduction, and the income lands in a much lower tax environment. Economically, nothing has changed. Structurally, everything did.

    Now, like all other tax strategies, this only works if it’s set up properly.

    In most cases, your child will be treated as an employee, not a contractor. The IRS looks at the level of control in the relationship, not just what you call it. If your child is working under your direction, helping with day-to-day operations, and performing defined tasks inside the business, that leans clearly toward employee treatment.

    There are situations where a 1099 could be appropriate, typically when the child is operating more independently and the relationship looks like a separate service provider. But that’s not how most family businesses function.

    In practice, the cleaner and more defensible approach is to treat them as an employee. That means putting them on payroll, issuing a W-2, defining the role, and paying a reasonable wage tied to actual work performed.

    Most people default to what’s easiest to set up. Strategy focuses on what actually holds up and works over time.

    Business meeting about hiring kids in your business

    Where this starts to get more interesting is when you layer in structure.

    If you operate as a sole proprietor or a partnership between spouses, the tax code gives you a very clean path. Wages paid to your children under age 18 are not subject to Social Security or Medicare taxes, and wages paid under age 21 are not subject to FUTA. In that structure, you’re not just shifting income – you’re doing it without layering in additional payroll taxes. That’s where this becomes highly efficient.

    Now compare that to an S-corp or a C-corp. In those entities, your child is treated like any other employee, which means Social Security, Medicare, and FUTA all apply. No exceptions.

    The strategy still works. You’re still shifting income into a lower tax bracket and creating a deduction at the business level. But the efficiency changes because now you’ve introduced payroll taxes into the equation.

    This is where most people oversimplify entity planning. They focus on saving self-employment tax in isolation, without considering how that decision impacts everything else around it. In some cases, the S-corp still makes sense. In others, it quietly limits strategies like this.

    That’s why structure should be part of a broader plan, not a one-time decision you set and forget.

    At some point, the conversation usually shifts to how much you should pay your child.

    People like to anchor on the standard deduction. For 2026, it’s roughly $14,600, which is the range where your child can earn income and pay little to no federal income tax.

    But that number is not the strategy. It’s just a guideline.

    What actually matters is whether the structure holds up: Is the work real? Is the pay reasonable? Can you defend it if asked?

    If the answer is no, the number doesn’t matter.

    Age plays into this more than most people realize.

    Courts have supported paying children for legitimate work, but expectations need to match reality. A younger child handling basic tasks should be paid accordingly, while teenagers can take on more meaningful roles that justify higher compensation. Once they are over 18, the strategy still works, but payroll taxes come into play and the focus shifts more toward what you’re building than what you’re saving.

    As your child gets older, the strategy becomes easier to justify and more impactful.

    This is also not some fringe idea.

    Courts have consistently upheld this when the fundamentals are in place: The work is real The pay is reasonable The documentation is clean

    And they’ve shut it down when those same elements are missing.

    The pattern is simple. The strategy works when it reflects reality.

    And this is where most people stop thinking.

    They get the deduction, feel like they “did it,” and move on. That’s not the play.

    The real opportunity is what happens after the money hits your child.

    At a basic level, that income can now cover things you were already paying for: Activities Camps Clothing Everyday spending

    Same expenses. Different structure.

    Where this starts to separate is when you direct that income into assets.

    Once your child has earned income, you open the door to a few powerful options: Roth IRA, where you get tax-free growth and tax-free withdrawals over time 529 plans for structured, tax-advantaged education funding Life insurance, in the right situations, for long-term capital access and flexibility

    This is where the shift happens. You’re no longer just saving taxes. You’re building something.

    The Hire Your Kids Tax Strategy Only Works With Proper Execution

    At the end of the day, the IRS is not against this strategy. They are against poor execution.

    They are looking at whether the work is legitimate, whether the pay is reasonable, and whether the documentation supports it. If those pieces are in place, this holds. If they’re not, it doesn’t.

    Where most people get this wrong is that they treat it like a quick win.

    They push the numbers too far, skip payroll, ignore structure, and stop at the deduction. That’s how something that should be straightforward turns into a problem.

    If you look at it the right way, hiring your kids is not really about hiring your kids.

    It’s about how you structure income, how you direct cash flow, and how you start building assets earlier than most people ever think to.

    That’s the difference between using a tactic and actually having a strategy.

    And most people never make it past the first move.

    When it comes to tactics such as these, most people think the win is the deduction. It’s not. The win is realizing you can start shaping how money flows through your life instead of reacting to it after the fact. When you understand that, hiring your kids stops being a “tax trick” and starts becoming a framework for building something intentional. You’re teaching your children responsibility, creating early ownership, and quietly moving dollars into environments where they can grow instead of disappear. That’s the shift most people never make. And it’s the one that actually changes the outcome.

    Accountants analyzing compensation and payroll planning for a family business

    Case Study: “Paying Your Kids—Smart Strategy or IRS Red Flag?”

    Escenario 1: La estrategia de TikTok (No supera la prueba del olfato)

    John owns a real estate investment company: Fix-and-flips Rental properties No real brand presence No paid advertising strategy

    His marketing consists of: Listing properties Occasional social media posts

    Then he hears: “Pay your kids $12,000 tax-free—it’s a loophole.”

    So he decides to: Put his 7-year-old daughter on payroll Call her a “model” Take a few photos at job sites Pay her $12,000 per year (conveniently right at the threshold)

    Let’s run this through the IRS criteria

    1. Ordinary & Necessary

    FALSE

    Why this fails: Real estate investors do not rely on child-based branding Buyers and renters are not influenced by children in marketing There is no industry precedent for this

    IRS thinking: “Why would a real estate business need a child model?”

    This alone is enough to disallow the deduction.

    2. Reasonable Compensation

    FALSE

    What actually happened: 2–3 casual photo sessions No defined deliverables No usage tied to revenue

    Market reality: That level of work might justify a few hundred dollars—if anything

    IRS conclusion: “This is not compensation. This is income shifting.”

    3. Bona Fide Employment

    FALSE

    What’s missing: No job description No schedule No supervision structure No expectations

    This isn’t employmen, it’s retroactive justification. The IRS will say: “There is no real job here.”

    4. Substance Over Form

    FALSE

    This is where the entire thing collapses.

    Ask the real question: Would John do this if there were no tax benefit?

    Answer: No.

    That’s all the IRS needs.

    5. Assignment of Income

    FALSE

    Reality: The business income was generated by John The child didn’t meaningfully contribute to revenue The IRS will reassign the income back to him.

    6. Documentation

    FALSE

    What he likely has: No contract No time logs No deliverables No proof of use

    Audit reality: “Show me what she did and how you used it.”

    He can’t.

    7. Business Use

    FALSE

    Even if photos exist: Not used in listings Not part of marketing funnels Not tied to revenue

    No economic benefit = no deduction.

    8. Consistency

    FALSE

    Huge red flag: Exactly $12,000 Clean, round number Matches “tax-free advice” online

    This signals intent.

    9. Arms-Length Standard

    FALSE

    Ask: Would John pay a random child $12K for this?

    No.

    10. Age-Appropriate

    Technically true but irrelevant

    Yes, a child can model.

    But the role might be valid while the context is not.

    Verdict: Complete Failure

    Lo que realmente sucede en una auditoría: Deducción denegada Ingresos añadidos Multas e intereses Posiblemente reclasificado como donación

    “This is what happens when people start with a tax number and try to reverse-engineer a business activity.”

    Scenario 2: The “Looks Legit” Case (Where People Get Tripped Up)

    Background (Make it Feel Real + Credible)

    John launches BrightSprout, a direct-to-consumer kids brand: E-commerce website Active Instagram and TikTok presence Paid ads running Visual storytelling is critical

    His daughter is: Featured in product shoots Used in brand imagery Part of social content

    He pays her $10,000 per year.

    IRS Criteria Breakdown (Expanded)

    1. Ordinary & Necessary

    TRUE

    Why this works: Kids modeling kids products is standard Visual content directly drives conversions This passes easily.

    2. Reasonable Compensation

    DEPENDS (Major Risk Area)

    What determines this: Break it down like a real advisor: Number of shoots per year Hours per shoot Type of content (ads vs casual posts) Market rates for child models

    Example: 12 shoots per year × $200–$500 per shoot

    Now you have a defensible range.

    Red flag: Flat $10,000 with no breakdown

    The IRS wants logic, not round numbers.

    3. Bona Fide Employment

    DEPENDS

    Strong version: Scheduled shoot days Defined expectations Direction during sessions

    Weak version: “Hey, smile for this real quick”

    Structure creates credibility.

    4. Substance Over Form

    DEPENDS

    Ask: If his daughter wasn’t available, would he hire another child?

    Yes → strong No → weak

    This is the intent test.

    5. Assignment of Income

    TRUE (if done right)

    The child is physically performing the service Her image is being monetized This is one of the few situations where it can actually hold.

    6. Documentation

    FALSE (where most fail)

    To survive audit, he needs: Modeling agreement Parental consent documentation Usage rights Shoot logs Payment records Proof of where content appears

    Without this, even a good setup collapses.

    7. Business Use

    DEPENDS

    Strong: Website banners Paid ads Product pages Email campaigns

    Weak: Content created but never deployed

    The IRS wants to see business impact.

    8. Consistency

    DEPENDS

    Pay tied to actual work → strong Same number every year → red flag

    Patterns matter.

    9. Arms-Length Standard

    DEPENDS

    Ask: Would he pay another child model this amount?

    Yes (supported by comps) → strong No → weak

    10. Age-Appropriate

    TRUE

    Modeling is appropriate for a child.

    Verdict: Could Pass But Execution Is Everything

    The reality: “This works in theory. Most people fail in execution.”

    Where This Scenario Usually Breaks

    No formal agreements No compensation analysis No usage tracking Overpaying relative to work Built around tax savings instead of business need

    The Real Lesson (Authority Close)

    “The IRS isn’t asking if you can pay your kids. They’re asking if your business actually needed to—and whether you treated it like a real business decision.”

    The Difference

    Weak Strategy Starts with “How do I save taxes?” Chooses a number (usually $12K) Creates a role afterward Outcome: Fails audit

    Strong Strategy Starts with real business need Defines a legitimate role Pays based on actual work Documents everything Outcome: Defensible

    Final Line

    “If you wouldn’t hire a stranger to do the same job for the same pay, this isn’t tax strategy—it’s just a risk you haven’t been caught for yet.”

    1. Ordinary & Necessary Business Expense (IRC §162)

    This is the foundation.

    The IRS asks: Is this expense ordinary for your industry? Is it necessary for running your business?

    If not → deduction gets denied.

    Translation in your context: Would a similar business reasonably pay someone for this role? Does this activity actually help generate or support revenue?

    2. Reasonable Compensation

    Even if the role is valid, the pay has to be reasonable.

    They evaluate: Age of the child Skill level Time worked Market rates for similar work

    If it’s inflated → they’ll reclassify the excess.

    Key principle: You can’t pay your kid more than you’d pay a stranger for the same job.

    3. Bona Fide Employment Relationship

    They’re looking for a real employer-employee relationship, not a paper setup.

    They ask: Was there actual work performed? Was there direction/control (you acting as employer)? Were duties clearly defined?

    If it looks informal or fabricated → 🚩

    4. Substance Over Form Doctrine

    This is where most people lose.

    The IRS ignores how you structured it and asks: What’s really going on here?

    If the true purpose is: Shifting income to a lower tax bracket Rather than running the business

    They’ll disregard the structure entirely.

    5. Assignment of Income Doctrine

    You can’t just redirect income to someone else to avoid tax.

    So they evaluate: Did the child actually earn the income? Or are you just reallocating your income to them?

    If it’s the latter → it gets pulled back to you.

    6. Documentation & Substantiation

    If it’s not documented, it didn’t happen (in IRS world).

    They expect: Job descriptions Time logs Work product Payroll records Proof of payment

    No records = no deduction.

    7. Actual Business Use / Economic Benefit

    They look at whether the work: Was actually used in the business Provided measurable or logical value

    Example: Photos taken but never used → fails Social media content actively used → stronger case

    8. Consistency & Pattern of Behavior

    They analyze behavior over time: Are payments consistent with actual work? Or conveniently timed to hit tax thresholds (like ~$13–14K)?

    If it looks engineered → 🚩

    9. Arms-Length Standard

    Would you do this with someone unrelated?

    They ask: Would you hire an unrelated person for this role? Would you pay them the same way and amount?

    If the answer is no → problem.

    10. Age-Appropriate Work

    This is practical but important.

    They consider: Can a child of this age realistically perform this job?

    Paying a 5-year-old: $12K for “branding strategy” → obviously not defensible

    Written by Jose Ortiz, CPA, CTC

    Founder, The Scale Collective. I work with high-earning business owners and real estate investors who want clarity, structure, and long-term tax strategy…not last-minute fixes. My focus is Systems-First Tax Planning: designing how money behaves before optimizing how it’s taxed. Subscribe for more insights on proactive planning.

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