Business & farm

From what I have heard, there is not likely to be much left after your salary, uber supposedly pays pretty poorly.

 

Yes, I think you can do that in principle. It might be cheaper to be a sole prop taxed as an S-corp rather than actually forming an S-corp, depending on your state and the fees involved. However:

 

A. You have to pay yourself a fair market wage, what drivers usually get paid, which might be more than minimum wage, depending on your state labor laws and the local economy.

 

B. An S-corp (formally or taxed as) prevents you from deducting operating losses against your other income. For example, if you bought a fancy new car and took depreciation rather than standard mileage, your expenses might give you a tax loss that you could deduct against other income, even though you have positive cash flow.  You can't do that as an S-corp.

 

I read a tax court case once involving a man who had a small business, and one day his son formed him into an s-corp because he got some incomplete advice on the pros and cons.  It turned out to be very bad for the man so he filed on schedule C instead.  He got audited, fined, took it to court, and lost.  The court said that even if he didn't understand what his son had done, he signed the papers and now he was stuck with the results.  Make sure you know what you are doing.