Charlotte, NC · S-Corp Accountants & CPAs

Find an S-Corp CPA in Charlotte, NC

CPAs who specialize in S-corporations — from the initial Form 2553 election through annual 1120-S filings, reasonable compensation analysis, and shareholder basis tracking. Serving Charlotte, NC and the surrounding region — Charlotte CPAs serve the second-largest U.S. banking center, plus energy, healthcare, motorsports, and one of the fastest-growing relocation markets in the country.

Why Charlotte clients hire s-corp

Local context for s-corp accountants & cpas in Charlotte, NC

Dominant local industries

  • Banking & finance (Bank of America, Truist)
  • Energy (Duke Energy)
  • Motorsports & NASCAR
  • Healthcare (Atrium, Novant)
  • Logistics & advanced manufacturing

North Carolina tax climate

North Carolina has a flat 4.5% personal income tax (scheduled to drop to 3.99% by 2026) and a 2.5% corporate income tax — among the lowest in the country. The state offers a pass-through entity tax election that mirrors federal SALT cap workarounds.

Key local deadline

Apr 15

North Carolina individual income tax due — flat 4.5% rate (scheduled to drop to 3.99% by 2026).

When to hire

  • You're considering electing S-corp status (Form 2553)
  • Your single-member LLC profits exceed $60K–$80K
  • You need help setting reasonable owner compensation
  • You have multiple shareholders or are issuing stock
  • You're behind on 1120-S filings or 1099 requirements

What they do

  • Run S-election analysis: tax savings vs. added compliance
  • File Form 2553 (S-election) and any late-election relief requests
  • Prepare annual Form 1120-S and Schedule K-1s for shareholders
  • Document reasonable compensation with industry benchmarks
  • Track shareholder basis and AAA (accumulated adjustments account)

Typical fees

What it costs

Low end

$1,200

per year

High end

$5,000

per year

Notes

1120-S preparation: $1,200–$2,500. Add bookkeeping + payroll oversight: $500–$1,500/mo. Reasonable comp study: $500–$1,500 one-time.

Compare

S-Corp vs Single-Member LLC (Disregarded)

FactorS-CorpSingle-Member LLC (Disregarded)
Self-employment taxOnly on W-2 wages, not distributionsOn all net profit (15.3%)
FilingForm 1120-S + K-1s annuallySchedule C on personal return
Payroll requiredYes — owner must take reasonable W-2No
Compliance cost$1,200–$3,000/yr extraMinimal
Break-even on tax savingsUsually $60K–$80K in profit

Questions to ask

  1. How many S-corp returns do you file each year?
  2. Do you document reasonable comp with a defensible study?
  3. How do you track my shareholder basis annually?
  4. Will you handle late S-election relief if I missed the deadline?
  5. What's your process for K-1 delivery — and by when?
  6. Do you coordinate with my payroll provider for owner W-2?

Red flags

  • Doesn't ask about reasonable comp at all
  • Doesn't track shareholder basis
  • Files 1120-S late without explanation (penalty is $245/month per shareholder)
  • Can't explain the difference between distributions and W-2 wages
  • Tells you to take 100% distributions and skip payroll

Documents to prepare

  • Articles of incorporation or LLC formation documents
  • EIN letter and any S-election confirmation (CP261)
  • Prior-year 1120-S and K-1s
  • YTD payroll reports for all owners
  • Shareholder basis schedule, if you have one

Verified directory

S-Corp Accountants & CPAs serving Charlotte, NC

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FAQ

S-Corp Accountants & CPAs in Charlotte — common questions

How much does s-corp accountants & cpas cost in Charlotte?+

Charlotte s-corp accountants & cpas typically charge $1,200–$5,000 per year. 1120-S preparation: $1,200–$2,500. Add bookkeeping + payroll oversight: $500–$1,500/mo. Reasonable comp study: $500–$1,500 one-time.

Do I need a North Carolina-licensed CPA to work with a s-corp accountants & cpas in Charlotte?+

For North Carolina state filings, your preparer should hold a CPA license from the North Carolina Board of Accountancy or be an Enrolled Agent. Out-of-state pros can prepare your federal return but should not sign as a CPA on North Carolina returns. North Carolina has a flat 4.5% personal income tax (scheduled to drop to 3.99% by 2026) and a 2.5% corporate income tax — among the lowest in the country.

When does an S-corp election save money?+

Generally once net profit consistently exceeds $60K–$80K. Below that, the added cost of payroll, 1120-S preparation, and compliance often exceeds the self-employment tax savings.

What is reasonable compensation for an S-corp owner?+

The IRS requires you to pay yourself a salary 'reasonable' for the work performed before taking distributions. Defensible studies use industry, geography, and role data — typically 30–60% of profit for owner-operators.

What's the deadline for an S-election?+

Form 2553 is due by March 15 of the year the election takes effect, or within 75 days of formation. Late-election relief is available under Rev. Proc. 2013-30 in many cases.

Can I undo an S-election?+

Yes, but with a 5-year waiting period before re-electing. Most reversals are triggered by adding ineligible shareholders or moving toward an IPO.

What if I missed filing 1120-S?+

Penalty is $245 per shareholder per month, up to 12 months. File late as soon as possible and request first-time abatement if you qualify.

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