If you’re a small business owner in California, paying yourself the wrong way can quietly cost you thousands in self-employment income taxes, trigger tax compliance issues, or create avoidable scrutiny from the IRS and Franchise Tax Board. The right answer depends on your business structure.
Here’s the short version upfront:
Let’s break it down properly.
An owner’s draw is when you take money out of the business account for personal use without running payroll.
Key characteristics:
This is how most sole proprietors, partnerships, and default-taxed LLCs pay themselves.
Many California business owners assume owner’s draws are “tax-free.” They aren’t. You’re still taxed on the business’s net profit, regardless of whether you leave the money in the company or withdraw it. The draw only affects cash, not tax liability.
Poor bookkeeping and weak income and expense tracking make this worse, especially when personal expenses are mixed with business activity.
A salary is regular compensation paid through payroll.
Key characteristics:
In California, this also means:
This setup requires a payroll provider and accurate records to avoid missed filings or incorrect remittances.
If you own an S Corporation, the IRS requires you to pay yourself a reasonable owner salary before taking distributions. This compensation must be reported on Form W-2.
This is not optional for S Corp shareholders.
|
Category |
Owner’s Draw |
Salary |
|
Paid through payroll |
No |
Yes |
|
Payroll taxes withheld |
No |
Yes |
|
Business expense |
No |
Yes |
|
Reduces net income |
No |
Yes |
|
Compliance complexity |
Low |
High |
|
Required for S-Corps |
No |
Yes |
This is where most online advice gets sloppy. Business structures matter.
Payments to owners are not reported on Form 1099-NEC. Owners are not contractors.
This requires filing Form 8832 (entity classification) and Form 2553 (S-Corp election). This structure is often used to reduce self-employment taxes, but only when payroll, bookkeeping, and compliance are done correctly.
A C Corp introduces double taxation considerations but offers more flexibility in compensation planning.
California is less forgiving than many states, especially for service-based businesses.
Common problem areas:
These issues often surface when income and expense tracking is weak or when the business account isn’t kept separate from personal spending.
Here’s the blunt answer:
The “best” option depends on:
Salary vs owner draw isn’t about preference. It’s about structure, tax compliance, and efficiency.
Paying yourself incorrectly can:
Getting it right creates clarity, predictable cash flow, and cleaner financials.
If you’re unsure which method applies to your business or whether your current setup still makes sense, that’s usually the signal to review it now, before the IRS or California does.