Member Limited Liability Company (SMLLC) that files their business return for Federal purposes on their personal income tax return must file Pennsylvania RCT101 and include the following items (as outlined on page 1 of the booklet instructions):
Extended Deadline with Pennsylvania Tax Extension: Pennsylvania offers a 60-day extension for corporations that don't have a valid Federal tax extension. If a corporation has a 6-month Federal extension and owes zero state tax, a Pennsylvania extension will automatically be granted for the same period of time.
If you're a physician assistant (PA), you SHOULD form a Professional Corporation taxed as an S-Corporation.
Filing as an S Corp in Pennsylvania Step 1: Choose a Business Name. Step 2: Appoint Directors and a Registered Agent. Step 3: File Articles of Organization. Step 4: Create an S Corp Operating Agreement. Step 5: Apply for an Employer Identification Number. Step 6: File Form 2553 for S Corporation Election.
If Built-In-Gains are triggered in any subsequent tax year, the PA S Corporation would have to file the RCT-101 to report the amount of gain subject to tax. Such return should be marked as both “First Report” and “Final Report”.
Start an S corp in Pennsylvania Step 1 – Choose a name. Step 2 – Designate a Pennsylvania registered office. Step 3 – File Pennsylvania Certificate of Organization. Step 4 – Create an operating agreement. Step 5 – Apply for an EIN. Step 6 – Apply for S Corp status with IRS Form 2553.
Businesses that elect federal subchapter S status are considered Pennsylvania S corporations, unless they opt to be taxed as a C corporation in Pennsylvania by filing the REV-976, Election Not to be Taxed as a Pennsylvania S Corporation PDF(opens in a new tab).
No, an S Corp doesn't need two owners. A one owner S Corp is perfectly legal and quite common. The IRS allows S Corporations to have up to 100 shareholders, but there's no minimum requirement.