Utah S-Corp Election Savings Calculator

Utah has a flat 4.50% state income tax. Set your expected net profit and a reasonable salary to see whether an S-corp election beats staying a sole proprietor or default LLC in Utah for 2026.

Sole prop / default LLC

Take-home rate 73%
Take-home $87,244 Tax $32,756
Net profit $120,000
Self-employment tax (15.3%) $16,955
Federal income tax $11,506
Utah income tax $4,294
Take-home pay $87,244

S-corp election

Take-home rate 75%
Take-home $90,394 Tax $29,606
Salary (W-2 wages) $65,000
Distribution (K-1) $48,828
Payroll tax (15.3%) $9,945
Federal income tax $14,064
Utah income tax $4,398
S-corp admin costs $1,200
Take-home pay $90,394

Electing S-corp status could save you

$3,149 per year

The distribution portion of your profit skips the 15.3% self-employment tax entirely — it's only subject to ordinary income tax. That's the whole S-corp savings mechanism. It's offset by payroll tax on the salary you must pay yourself, plus payroll processing and extra tax-prep costs. The IRS requires "reasonable compensation" for your salary — pay yourself too little relative to your work and distributions, and it can be recharacterized as wages on audit.

GigTaxTools provides estimates for planning purposes only and is not tax, legal, or accounting advice. Tax figures reflect 2026 federal and state rates as published and may not capture every deduction, credit, or local tax that applies to your situation. Consult a qualified tax professional before filing.

% © 2026 GigTaxTools. All calculations are estimates.