What if the entity structure everyone online is telling you to choose doesn’t fit your business goals? Social media has created a flood of misinformation about business structures — LLCs, S corps, C corps — and most of it is either oversimplified or flat out wrong. The truth is, there is no one-size-fits-all answer. The right entity depends on your income, your industry, your family situation, and your long-term goals. Here's a breakdown of each structure, when it works, and when it doesn't — so you can stop following trends and start following strategy.HighlightsA single-member LLC does not automatically save you taxes — it is treated as a sole proprietorship for tax purposes and you still file a Schedule C on your personal returnOnce your LLC earns more than $50,000 in net income, it may be time to look at converting to another entity to reduce self-employment taxesOperating businesses (not passive real estate) pay self-employment tax of 15.3% on all net earnings under an LLC — both the employee and employer sideA sole proprietorship and the business owner are legally the same person, meaning zero liability protection — but it has one powerful use caseIf you have kids under 17, a sole proprietorship family management company lets you pay them with no Social Security, Medicare, or unemployment taxes — as long as wages stay under the standard deductionThe S corp shines when your net income exceeds $50,000 — you pay yourself a reasonable salary, and only that salary is subject to self-employment taxesThe Social Security wage cap in 2026 is $184,500 — above that, only Medicare tax continues to applyFix-and-flip real estate investors can benefit significantly from the S corp by separating their earnings into wages and distributionsPassive rental real estate should stay in an LLC — putting it in an S corp could trigger unnecessary self-employment tax exposureSeasonal businesses with unpredictable revenue may struggle to justify and consistently pay a reasonable salary, making the S corp a poor fitC corps are a separate tax-paying entity at a 21% flat rate — and distributions are taxed again as dividends (double taxation)C corps work best for venture-backed companies with multiple investors who do not want annual K-1 pass-through tax implicationsThe goal is not to choose the trendiest entity — it is to choose the one that aligns with your goals, your structure, your plans, and your tax strategyChapters0:48 – Incorporation Myths Online1:17 – LLC Basics and Protection2:10 – LLC: When It Works2:51 – LLC Income Threshold Issues4:32 – Sole Proprietor Pros and Cons5:47 – Paying Kids Strategy (Family Management Company)6:43 – S Corp Tax Savings Explained8:18 – S Corp Best Use Cases9:43 – When S Corp Fails11:20 – C Corp Double Tax Reality13:39 – Choosing the Right EntityResources MentionedEpisode 2 – Full breakdown of the S corp: dos, don'ts, and everything you need to knowSchedule C – IRS form used by sole proprietors and single-member LLCs to report business income: https://www.irs.gov/forms-pubs/about-schedule-c-form-1040K-1 (Form 1065 / 1120-S) – Pass-through tax document issued to partners and S corp shareholders: https://www.irs.gov/forms-pubs/about-schedule-k-1-form-1120-sWant to keep more of what you earn? If you’re a 7-6-5 business owner ready to move from financial chaos to CFO-level comfort, visit www.simplifymynumbers.com to schedule a call with our team. Subscribe and leave a review on Apple or Spotify to help us grow the community, and be sure to share this episode with a fellow founder.This show is designed to be used for educational and informational purposes. For your own situation, be sure to contact a tax professional directly.This show is part of the ICT Podcast network. For more information, visit ictpod.net