One of the biggest tax surprises for new Florida LLC owners is self-employment (SE) tax. While Florida has no state income tax, LLC owners still owe federal self-employment tax on their business profits.
This guide explains how SE tax works for Florida LLCs and strategies to reduce it.
What Is Self-Employment Tax?
The Basics
Self-employment tax is the Social Security and Medicare tax for self-employed individuals. When you’re an employee, your employer pays half of these taxes and withholds your half from your paycheck. When you’re self-employed, you pay both halves.
Self-employment tax rate: 15.3%
| Component | Rate |
|---|---|
| Social Security | 12.4% |
| Medicare | 2.9% |
| Total | 15.3% |
Why LLC Owners Pay It
Most LLC owners are considered self-employed for tax purposes:
- Single-member LLCs are taxed as sole proprietorships
- Multi-member LLCs are taxed as partnerships
- Both structures result in self-employment income
This means your LLC profits flow through to your personal tax return and are subject to SE tax.
How Much Will You Pay?
Calculating Self-Employment Tax
Step 1: Calculate net self-employment income
- LLC profit (from Schedule C or K-1)
Step 2: Calculate taxable amount
- Multiply by 92.35% (you only pay SE tax on 92.35% of income)
Step 3: Apply tax rate
- Multiply by 15.3%
Example:
- LLC profit: $100,000
- SE taxable: $100,000 × 0.9235 = $92,350
- SE tax: $92,350 × 0.153 = $14,130
Social Security Wage Base
The 12.4% Social Security portion only applies to income up to the Social Security wage base.
2024 wage base: $168,600
Income above this threshold only owes the 2.9% Medicare portion.
Example at $200,000 profit:
- SE income: $200,000 × 0.9235 = $184,700
- Social Security: $168,600 × 0.124 = $20,906
- Medicare: $184,700 × 0.029 = $5,356
- Total SE tax: $26,262
Additional Medicare Tax
Income above $200,000 (single) or $250,000 (married filing jointly) owes an additional 0.9% Medicare tax.
SE Tax at Different Income Levels
| LLC Profit | SE Tax | Effective Rate |
|---|---|---|
| $50,000 | $7,065 | 14.1% |
| $75,000 | $10,597 | 14.1% |
| $100,000 | $14,130 | 14.1% |
| $150,000 | $21,194 | 14.1% |
| $200,000 | $26,262 | 13.1% |
| $250,000 | $28,959 | 11.6% |
At higher incomes, the effective rate decreases because Social Security maxes out.
The Florida Advantage
No State Income Tax
While SE tax is federal, Florida’s lack of state income tax means:
- No state income tax on LLC profits
- Combined federal + state taxes lower than most states
- More money stays in your pocket
Comparison at $100,000 LLC profit:
| State | Federal Income Tax | State Tax | SE Tax | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Florida | ~$14,000 | $0 | $14,130 | ~$28,130 |
| California | ~$14,000 | ~$9,300 | $14,130 | ~$37,430 |
| New York | ~$14,000 | ~$6,500 | $14,130 | ~$34,630 |
Estimates vary based on deductions and filing status.
What You Still Owe
Even in Florida, LLC owners pay:
- Federal income tax on LLC profits
- Self-employment tax on LLC profits
- FUTA if you have employees
- Florida reemployment tax if you have employees
Strategies to Reduce SE Tax
S Corporation Election
The most common strategy to reduce SE tax is electing S corp taxation for your LLC.
How it works:
- File Form 2553 with IRS
- LLC is now taxed as S corp
- Pay yourself “reasonable salary”
- Remaining profit is distribution (no SE tax)
Example:
- LLC profit: $120,000
- Without S election: $120,000 subject to SE tax = ~$16,956
- With S election: $70,000 salary + $50,000 distribution
- SE tax only on salary: ~$10,710
- Savings: ~$6,246
Caveats:
- Must pay “reasonable” salary (IRS scrutinizes this)
- Additional payroll tax compliance
- Extra administrative costs
- Most beneficial at higher incomes
When S election makes sense:
- Generally, when profits exceed $50,000-$80,000+
- When payroll costs are offset by tax savings
- After consulting with a CPA
Retirement Contributions
SEP IRA:
- Contribute up to 25% of net self-employment income
- Reduces taxable income (income tax savings)
- Doesn’t directly reduce SE tax, but reduces total tax bill
- Easy to set up, flexible contributions
Solo 401(k):
- Employee contributions: up to $23,000 (2024)
- Employer contributions: up to 25% of compensation
- Total limit: $69,000 (2024)
- Reduces income tax, not SE tax directly
Legitimate Business Deductions
Every deduction reduces your SE taxable income.
Common deductions:
- Home office
- Health insurance premiums (if self-employed)
- Business equipment
- Vehicle expenses (business use)
- Professional services
- Software and subscriptions
- Marketing and advertising
Health Insurance Deduction
Self-employed individuals can deduct health insurance premiums for themselves and family.
This deduction:
- Reduces income tax
- Reduces SE tax calculation
- Significant savings for those buying their own coverage
Hire Your Spouse
If your spouse works in the business:
- Pay them a wage
- Their wages are subject to employment taxes
- But household SE tax may be lower overall
- Spouse becomes eligible for benefits
This strategy requires legitimate work and proper documentation.
Quarterly Estimated Taxes
Why You Pay Quarterly
As a self-employed LLC owner:
- No employer withholds taxes
- You must pay estimated taxes quarterly
- Covers both income tax and SE tax
Due Dates
| Quarter | Due Date |
|---|---|
| Q1 (Jan-Mar) | April 15 |
| Q2 (Apr-May) | June 15 |
| Q3 (Jun-Aug) | September 15 |
| Q4 (Sep-Dec) | January 15 |
How to Calculate
Estimate annual tax:
- Project annual income
- Calculate income tax
- Calculate SE tax
- Add together
- Divide by 4
Safe harbor rules:
- Pay 100% of last year’s tax (110% if income over $150,000), OR
- Pay 90% of current year’s tax
- Avoid underpayment penalties
How to Pay
EFTPS (Electronic Federal Tax Payment System):
- Free government system
- Set up at EFTPS.gov
- Schedule payments in advance
IRS Direct Pay:
- Pay directly from bank account
- No registration required
- IRS.gov/Payments
Common Misconceptions
“My LLC Pays the Tax”
False. For most LLCs, the business doesn’t pay income or SE tax. Profits flow through to owners’ personal returns. The LLC isn’t a separate taxpayer unless you elect corporate taxation.
“Florida LLCs Don’t Pay Self-Employment Tax”
False. Florida has no state income tax, but self-employment tax is federal. All self-employed individuals in every state owe SE tax.
“I Can Avoid SE Tax by Not Taking Money Out”
False. SE tax is on profits, not distributions. Even if you leave all money in the business, you owe SE tax on the profits.
“Forming an LLC Saves on Taxes”
Not necessarily. Sole proprietors and single-member LLCs pay identical taxes. LLC provides liability protection, not tax savings—unless you elect S corp status.
LLC Tax Elections Compared
| Election | SE Tax On | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Default (pass-through) | All profits | Simplicity, lower profits |
| S Corporation | Only salary | Higher profits ($50K+) |
| C Corporation | Only salary | Rare for small businesses |
Default Pass-Through
- Simplest structure
- No payroll required
- All profit subject to SE tax
- Best for lower-profit businesses
S Corporation
- Must pay reasonable salary
- Salary subject to employment taxes
- Distributions not subject to SE tax
- Payroll compliance required
- Best when savings exceed compliance costs
C Corporation
- Corporation pays corporate tax
- Distributions (dividends) taxed again
- Double taxation issue
- Rarely beneficial for small LLCs
When to Consult a CPA
Consider professional advice when:
- Profits exceed $40,000-$50,000
- You’re considering S corp election
- You have complex business structures
- You need to optimize retirement contributions
- You want to ensure compliance
A good CPA can:
- Model tax scenarios
- Determine if S election saves money
- Ensure “reasonable salary” compliance
- Identify all available deductions
- Help with quarterly estimate planning
Calculating Your SE Tax: Example
Scenario: Florida LLC with $85,000 profit
Step 1: Net SE Income $85,000 × 0.9235 = $78,498
Step 2: Social Security Tax $78,498 × 0.124 = $9,734
Step 3: Medicare Tax $78,498 × 0.029 = $2,276
Step 4: Total SE Tax $9,734 + $2,276 = $12,010
Step 5: SE Tax Deduction You can deduct half of SE tax from income tax. $12,010 ÷ 2 = $6,005 deduction
Net effect: You owe $12,010 in SE tax but get to deduct $6,005 from your taxable income for income tax purposes.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Florida charge self-employment tax?
No. Self-employment tax is a federal tax. Florida has no state income or self-employment tax.
Can I avoid SE tax with an LLC?
Not by default. LLCs are pass-through entities for tax purposes. To reduce SE tax, consider S corp election.
How much should I set aside for taxes?
A common guideline: 25-30% of profits for federal income tax and SE tax combined.
When does S corp election make sense?
Generally when profits consistently exceed $50,000-$80,000 and the tax savings exceed the added compliance costs.
Do I pay SE tax on distributions?
For default LLC taxation: yes (on profits, regardless of distributions). For S corp taxation: no (distributions are not wages).
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