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C corporation |
| Companies law |
| Company · Business Sole proprietorship Corporation Cooperative |
| United States |
| S corporation · C corporation LLC · LLLP · Series LLC Delaware corporation Nevada corporation Massachusetts business trust |
| UK / Ireland / Commonwealth |
| Community interest company |
| European Union / EEA |
| SE · SCE · SPE · EEIG |
| Elsewhere |
| AB · AG · ANS · A/S · AS · GmbH K.K. · N.V. · OY · S.A. · more |
| Doctrines |
| Corporate governance Limited liability · Ultra vires Business judgment rule Internal affairs doctrine Piercing the corporate veil Rochdale Principles |
| Related areas |
| Contract · Civil procedure |
A C corporation (or C corp.) is a corporation in the United States that, for Federal income tax purposes, is taxed under and Subchapter C ( et seq.) of Chapter 1 of the Internal Revenue Code.1 Most major companies (and many smaller companies) are treated as C corporations for Federal income tax purposes.
Contents |
| Please help improve this section by expanding it. Further information might be found on the talk page. (June 2008) |
The income of a C corporation is taxed, whereas the income of an S corporation (with a few exceptions) is not taxed under the Federal income tax laws. The income, or loss, is applied, Pro Rata, to each Shareholder and appears on their tax return as Schedule E income/(loss).
Unlike corporations treated as S corporations, a corporation may qualify as a C corporation without regard to any limit on the number of shareholders, foreign or domestic.
According to Nolo, a prospective creator of a C corporation must2
Since corporations are state entities and the C corporation status refers to the tax treatment of these corporations by the federal government, the C corporation's impact is mostly relegated to the tax realm. The impact of double taxation, the taxation of the corporation's income and the separate taxation on their dividends, constitutes the impact of the C corporation treatment. C corporations are subject to this double taxation unlike S corporations and most other business entities taxed by the federal government.
| This section needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (January 2008) |
As of February 2006, the IRS lists the following tax rate schedule for "[m]ost corporations", except "qualified personal service corporations" and certain other cases3:
| Taxable Income ($) | Tax Rate3 | Deduction ($)citation needed |
|---|---|---|
| 0 to 50,000 | 15% | 0 |
| 50,000 to 75,000 | 25% | 5,000 |
| 75,000 to 100,000 | 34% | 11,750 |
| 100,000 to 335,000 | 39% | 16,750 |
| 335,000 to 10,000,000 | 34% | 0 |
| 10,000,000 to 15,000,000 | 35% | 100,000 |
| 15,000,000 to 18,333,333 | 38% | 550,000 |
| 18,333,333 and up | 35% | 0 |