S Corp
I have an S Corp. The ONLY income is paid with shares of a publicly traded stock (RSUs that vest upon grant). I prefer not to sell the shares. Can I simply transfer the shares as payment of wages / commission and/or a distribution of profit?
I have an S Corp. The ONLY income is paid with shares of a publicly traded stock (RSUs that vest upon grant). I prefer not to sell the shares. Can I simply transfer the shares as payment of wages / commission and/or a distribution of profit?
Thank you very much David for taking time to elaborate and ask questions.
I do not take a wage. In 2025 I was paid for some work late in the year and for my branding (company able to leverage my name and reputation). The portion paid for work was taken as a commission from my S-Corp rather than a regular wage since I do not do regular work. It was more than substantial enough to pay for the time I spent doing work.
I would prefer not to sell the stock that I'm granted as RSUs that vest and are tradable upon grant at this juncture. In recent past years, I was paid a small number of RSUs totally for branding - I did no work. So, I simply transferred all the shares to my personal account.
This year I had a small amount of work and was paid more for that late in the year - one time deal. From my personal cash, I paid both sides of FICA and estimated income taxes. I've always played by the rules in that I pay my taxes, but here, even though I'm paying the correct amounts I'm confused by the process.
Having the company be paid with stock is no problem. And, as @DavidD66 points out above, because you are the owner of the business paying yourself with the stock is not a problem.
The problem is that in order to have a single member S-Corp you are required to pay yourself what the IRS calls a "reasonable salary" which is to say a reasonable amount for your area to do the job that you do. This salary is required to be reported to the social security administration and have payroll taxes taken out of it and a W2 issued to you at the end of the year.
When you pay the payroll taxes to the IRS you won't be able to do that with stock so you will have to pay them with something. Maybe you can personally purchase some of the shares from the company for cash in order to infuse cash into the company?
Either way, it sounds as though you are not doing the payroll correctly and you need to get that taken care of soon.
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