An S-Corporation (S-Corp) is a special type of corporation that blends the benefits of a traditional corporation with some tax perks usually seen in partnerships or LLCs. Structurally, it’s just like a C-Corp: you have shareholders, a board of directors, bylaws, and state filing requirements.
The difference is purely tax-related — the IRS treats the company as a “pass-through entity.” This means the S-Corporation itself doesn’t pay federal income tax. Instead, profits (and losses) “pass through” to shareholders, who report them on their personal tax returns.
An S-Corp is best for small-to-medium businesses that want the protection of a corporation. It’s especially appealing for business owners looking to reduce self-employment taxes while staying relatively lean and private.