So I scroll through the same flashy tax reels you do. I find that these TikTok Taxperts, as I call them, love to sell the S-Corp as the ultimate hack. They tell you that you can slash self-employment taxes, pay yourself with some sexy “trifecta” formula (try and sell that one to the IRS), or follow a […]
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So I scroll through the same flashy tax reels you do. I find that these TikTok Taxperts, as I call them, love to sell the S-Corp as the ultimate hack. They tell you that you can slash self-employment taxes, pay yourself with some sexy “trifecta” formula (try and sell that one to the IRS), or follow a simple percentage rule for “reasonable compensation.”
It all sounds good, and there is some truth to what they are saying. But most of these gimmicks are bullshit. A “trifecta” is not how the IRS will suggest that you calculate reasonable compensation (we’ll dissect that in a future column), and percentage-based hacks may look slick on TikTok but won’t hold up under audit.
The biggest issue I see however is that these posts almost never mention one of the most critical features of S corp tax planning, the one thing that can actually put an entrepreneur in tax trouble or hit you with a nasty IRS surprise. That hidden landmine is something called basis.
And without basis, a lot of the tax benefits pertaining to S-corps are null and void.
If you don’t take the time to understand basis, your S-Corp could end up costing you more than it saves. The good news? You don’t need to become a tax expert, you just need to know enough to ask the right questions.
Take this insight straight to your CPA and make sure they’re tracking your basis correctly. If they’re not, you now know why that’s a problem.
What the Hell is S Corp Tax Basis, Anyway?
Let’s think of basis as your “investment tracker” in the business. It tells the IRS how much you’ve put into the company and what you’re allowed to take out without creating taxable income.
Your CPA should be tracking basis as part of their duty to protect your deductions, your distributions, and your audit defense.
The rules are simple on the surface but packed with landmines. There are three kinds of basis you need to know for S corp tax planning:
1. Stock Basis in S Corp Tax Planning
Stock basis starts with the money you put in to buy shares or fund the company. Each year it gets:
Increased by profits and new contributions
Decreased by losses and distributions
If you don’t track it:
You could lose deductions for losses and expenses you thought you could take
You could invalidate strategies like bonus depreciation or R&D tax credits because without enough basis, the IRS won’t let you use the losses they generate
You could accidentally turn tax-free distributions into taxable capital gains
Case Study – Sarah’s Phantom Deductions:
Sarah invests $50,000 to start her S-Corp. Over 3 years, her K-1 shows $100,000 in profits. She also takes out $120,000 in distributions. On top of that, she invests in new equipment and claims $80,000 of bonus depreciation, and spends another $40,000 on R&D tax credit–eligible projects.
But here is the problem – her CPA isn’t tracking basis. On paper, Sarah thinks she’s wiped out her taxable income with depreciation and credits.
But the IRS says, “not so fast, my friend”.
Sarah’s stock basis is only $150,000 ($50K investment + $100K profits)
Her cumulative distributions and deductions exceeded that amount
Result: her bonus depreciation and R&D deductions get suspended, and $20,000 of her distributions are reclassified as taxable capital gains
Not only does Sarah lose her immediate deductions, she gets hit with a $4,000–$6,000 surprise tax bill, the exact opposite of what those S corp tax strategies were supposed to deliver.
2. Debt Basis in S Corp Tax Strategy
Debt basis only comes from money you personally loan to the S-corp. I should note here that we are not talking about bank loans to the business. These are your loans to the business.
If you don’t track it:
You’ll miss out on deducting losses in down years
You might think you can claim a $50,000 loss, but without debt basis, the IRS says no way, Jose
Case Study Example:
Jose owns a marketing S-corp that had a crappy year and showed a $75,000 loss. He only has $40,000 in stock basis left.
If he had loaned the business $50,000 from his own pocket, he would’ve created debt basis and been able to deduct the full $75,000
But his CPA never mentioned it. Instead, he only deducts $40,000 this year. The other $35,000 gets suspended. That’s $35,000 of wasted deductions—costing him maybe $10,000+ in extra taxes.
3. At-Risk Basis for S Corp Tax Benefits
Being “at risk” means that you have skin in the game. You could actually lose your own money if the business goes south. The IRS only lets you deduct losses to the extent that you personally have something real on the line.
At-risk rules make sure you’re really on the hook. Even if you have stock or debt basis, you can’t deduct losses if you’re not actually “at risk.”
If the worst-case scenario happened, your business failed tomorrow, the question is: how much of your own cash, property, or personally guaranteed debt would you actually be stuck paying?
That’s your “at-risk” amount.
So what can happen if you don’t track it?:
You might think your nonrecourse loan (like one secured only by company assets) gives you basis. The IRS disagrees
You’ll claim losses, and when audited, the IRS strips them away and slaps on penalties and interest
Case Study Example:
Lisa’s S-corp gets a $200,000 loan secured only by company equipment. Her CPA tells her “no problem, that’s basis.”
She deducts a $50,000 loss against her income
The IRS happens to audit her for that tax year and determines that the loan wasn’t personally guaranteed, so it didn’t count. Her $50,000 loss is disallowed. Add penalties and interest, she’s out $15,000 and has a target on her back for future audits.
H3: Why S Corp Tax Basis Matters
These are the rules in the S corp tax game that decide if you’re playing to win, or playing yourself.
Losses: Without basis, you can’t deduct them. Period.
Distributions: Take out too much without basis, and you owe capital gains tax.
Audits: Claim losses without being “at risk,” and you’re paying it back, with penalties.
From my experience, the average CPA rarely tracks basis properly. Some don’t track it at all.
One client once told me that his old CPA, when asked about tracking basis, just shrugged and said, “The software handles it.”
But now you know that it doesn’t.
Strategic S Corp Tax Moves Most CPAs Miss
Structuring shareholder loans to intentionally build debt basis
Tracking stock basis annually to prevent phantom taxable gains
Coordinating basis with exit planning, so you don’t blow up your exit with unexpected taxable income
Using basis planning proactively alongside other strategies (insurance funding, real estate entities, retirement plans)
This is where you need a strategist, not a form-filler. Bring this up with your CPA. Then circle back and tell me what you found, right or wrong, I want to hear it.
Final Word: Don’t Just File, Plan Smart S Corp Tax Strategy
Basis isn’t just an IRS formality. It’s a tool for leverage. Miss it, and you’re handing money back to the government. If you track it strategically, you can unlock deductions, protect distributions, and keep your exit clean.
Remember, average CPAs stop at compliance. Strategic CPA advisors go further by connecting basis to your structure, your timing, and your long-term goals. That’s where real S corp tax efficiency is created and value is added.
If you have an S-corp and your CPA isn’t talking about basis, they’re not planning – they’re processing. And that increases the risk of leaving you exposed.
Your tax strategy should match the size of your ambition.
That’s why average isn’t enough.
Hit Me Up in Chat – Let’s Keep the S Corp Tax Conversation Going…
Reading about S corp tax strategy is one thing but applying it to your own situation is another. That’s where the nuances of S-Corp planning, basis tracking, and IRS rules really start to matter.
I’d love to hear how this lands for you. Ask your CPA about basis, then jump into our chat and tell me what you discovered. Was I right? Did they dodge the question? Did you uncover a surprise you weren’t expecting?
Substack’s Chat feature is where we take these articles off the page and into real conversations. It’s a place for you to:
Share what your CPA told you
Get clarity on how these rules hit your business
Ask questions that don’t always fit neatly in an article
Think of it as your direct line to me, a way to get personalized guidance, sense-check what you’re being told, and make sure you’re not leaving money on the table.
Your future wealth starts with smart tax strategy planning.
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