I’ve coached thousands of business owners on one simple shift that protects their wealth and cuts their tax bill. The Schedule C is a trap. It invites audits and exposes everything you own. There’s a smarter way to structure income and reduce risk without working harder or taking more chances.
The Core Problem With Schedule C
Filing as a sole proprietor is the least efficient way to run a business. It raises the chance of an audit and keeps you on the hook for every mistake. If a client sues, or something goes wrong, your house, your savings, and your future sit on the line.
“If you are a business owner or investor and you use a Schedule C, you have a 400% higher chance of being audited. The other things you have unlimited liability.”
That alone should push any serious owner to change course. You don’t need to accept these risks or these taxes. You can structure your business to win.
The Better Structure I Use
Own a business through an entity, not a Schedule C. I run a consulting company. I’m the only owner. It’s an S corporation. I pay myself a reasonable salary and I take dividends on top of that. The result is simple: distributions aren’t hit with self-employment tax. That keeps more money in my pocket, legally and cleanly.
“I pay myself a salary, plus I take dividends. And so those dividends don’t get hit with self-employment tax.”
This isn’t theory. It’s how I operate. And it’s how many of my clients turn the tax code from a burden into a tool.
What This Saves
Strategic income splitting cuts the tax bite. When part of income shows up as distributions, you avoid self-employment tax on that portion. The savings can be meaningful.
“I can save anywhere from as high as 15.3% or at least about 3.2% by just simply splitting my income.”
The salary still pays payroll taxes. But the distributions don’t. That’s the point. Design your pay the right way, and you stop lighting money on fire.
What To Do Instead
Pick the right entity, then pay yourself the right way. Keep it simple and legal.
- Stop filing on Schedule C if you run an active business.
- Consider an LLC taxed as an S corp or an S corporation.
- Set a reasonable salary based on your role and market pay.
- Take the rest as distributions, when appropriate.
- Keep clean books and document how you set your salary.
These steps cut risk and often cut taxes. They also make your finances cleaner if you ever sell or raise money.
Liability Matters More Than You Think
Unlimited liability is a silent threat. One lawsuit can wipe out years of effort. An entity creates a line between business risks and personal assets. That line matters when things go wrong. And yes, things go wrong.
But What About The Downsides?
Some people argue Schedule C is “simple.” It looks simple until you get audited or sued. Others say the payroll work for an S corp adds cost. True, there’s paperwork. But the savings and protection often dwarf the admin.
Another concern is paying a “reasonable salary.” Good. That’s the rule. Follow it. Document your role, hours, and market comp. Most owners can do this with a little help and common sense.
My Take
Taxes and risk are expenses you can manage. With the right structure, you pay what you owe—no more. You protect what you’ve built. You stop donating extra money to the government out of habit or fear. That’s not being aggressive. That’s being awake.
I became a multimillionaire by twenty-six through entrepreneurship, not luck. The difference wasn’t just revenue. It was design. Entity choice. Cash flow strategy. Paying attention to details that compound over time.
The Move To Make Now
If you’re still on Schedule C, change it. Talk with a qualified pro. Map your salary. Plan distributions. Clean up your books. Don’t wait for an audit or a lawsuit to force the issue.
Build a business that defends your time, your money, and your peace. Structure it to last. Keep what you earn and sleep better at night. That’s not just smart—it’s responsible.