Templates Corporate Business S-Corporation Election Package (Form 2553 + State S-Election) — Arizona

S-Corporation Election Package (Form 2553 + State S-Election) — Arizona

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S-CORPORATION ELECTION PACKAGE (FORM 2553 + ARIZONA STATE OVERLAY)

OVERVIEW

An S corporation is not a separate kind of entity. It is a federal tax classification, under Subchapter S of the Internal Revenue Code, available to a qualifying corporation or LLC that timely files IRS Form 2553. When the election is in effect, the entity generally pays no federal income tax; instead, items of income, loss, deduction, and credit pass through to the shareholders, who report them on their personal returns. This avoids the "double taxation" of a C corporation.

Why elect S status:

  • Pass-through taxation — no entity-level federal income tax (26 U.S.C. § 1363).
  • Potential self-employment / payroll tax savings: only a shareholder-employee's reasonable compensation (W-2 wages) is subject to FICA; distributions beyond reasonable compensation are not.
  • Limited liability of the underlying corporation or LLC is retained.

Why an Arizona owner should care about the state overlay:

  • Arizona recognizes the federal S election automatically — there is no separate Arizona S election form. See Part 5.
  • The Arizona S corporation files Form 120S and generally pays no Arizona entity-level income tax (A.R.S. § 43-1126).
  • Arizona offers an optional pass-through entity (PTE) / entity-level tax election under A.R.S. § 43-1014 — a potential federal SALT-cap workaround.

Entity / filing fields (complete before filing):

Field Entry
Legal name of corporation / LLC [________________________________]
Federal EIN [____________]
State of incorporation / organization [____________]
Date of incorporation / organization [__/__/____]
Arizona Corporation Commission file no. (if any) [____________]
Intended S-election effective date [__/__/____]
Tax year end ☐ December 31 ☐ Other: [____________]
Authorized officer (name / title) [________________________________]

PART 1 — FEDERAL ELIGIBILITY CHECKLIST (IRC § 1361)

Confirm EVERY item below before filing Form 2553. A single failure makes the entity ineligible and any election invalid.

Entity-level requirements

☐ The entity is a domestic corporation or an eligible domestic entity (e.g., an LLC) electing to be treated as a corporation (26 U.S.C. § 1361(b)(1)).
☐ The entity has no more than 100 shareholders (§ 1361(b)(1)(A)). Members of a family (a common ancestor, lineal descendants, and their spouses/former spouses) may be counted as one shareholder under § 1361(c)(1).
☐ The entity has only ONE class of stock (§ 1361(b)(1)(D)). Differences in voting rights alone are permitted; differences in distribution or liquidation rights are not.
☐ The entity is not an ineligible corporation under § 1361(b)(2) (e.g., a financial institution using the reserve method of accounting for bad debts, an insurance company taxed under subchapter L, a possessions-tax-credit corporation, or a current/former DISC).

Shareholder eligibility (§ 1361(b)(1)(B)–(C))

☐ Every shareholder is an eligible shareholder: an individual (U.S. citizen or resident), an estate, a qualifying trust, or a § 401(a) / § 501(c)(3) tax-exempt organization.
No shareholder is a nonresident alien (§ 1361(b)(1)(C)).
No shareholder is a partnership or a corporation.
☐ Any trust shareholder is a permitted trust: a grantor trust, a former-grantor trust (2-year window), a testamentary trust (2-year window), a voting trust, a Qualified Subchapter S Trust (QSST) (§ 1361(d)), or an Electing Small Business Trust (ESBT) (§ 1361(e)).


PART 2 — FEDERAL FORM 2553, LINE BY LINE

Part I — Election Information

Line What to enter
Name / address Exact legal name and current mailing address of the entity.
A — EIN The entity's federal EIN. Obtain one before filing if needed.
B — Date incorporated [__/__/____]
C — State of incorporation [____________]
E — Effective date of election [__/__/____] — first day of the tax year the S election is to take effect.
F — Selected tax year ☐ Calendar year ☐ Fiscal year ending [____________] ☐ 52/53-week year. A non-calendar year generally requires Part II.
H — Officer signature An authorized officer signs and dates Part I.
J–N — Shareholder consents Each shareholder's name, address, SSN/EIN, number of shares (or % owned) and date(s) acquired, shareholder's tax-year month/day, and signature consenting to the election.

Part II — Selection of Fiscal Tax Year

Complete only if the entity wants a tax year other than the required year (generally the calendar year). State the business-purpose basis (e.g., § 444 election, natural business year under Rev. Proc. 2006-46, or ownership tax year).

Part III — QSST Election

A Qualified Subchapter S Trust beneficiary uses Part III (or a separate statement under § 1361(d)(2)) to elect QSST treatment so the trust qualifies as an eligible shareholder.

Part IV — Late Corporate Classification Election Representations

Used when the entity also seeks late S-election relief (and, for an LLC, a deemed entity classification election). See timing and relief below.

Timing of the election (26 U.S.C. § 1362(b))

  • Timely election: file by the 15th day of the 3rd month of the tax year the election is to take effect, or at any time during the immediately preceding tax year.
  • New entities: the first tax year begins on the earliest of when the corporation has shareholders, acquires assets, or begins doing business; file within 2 months and 15 days of that date.
  • Late-election relief — Rev. Proc. 2013-30: if the deadline is missed, relief is generally available if (1) the entity intended to be an S corp as of the intended effective date, (2) the only reason it is not an S corp is the missed/defective filing, (3) there is reasonable cause and the entity acted diligently, and (4) the relief request is filed within 3 years and 75 days of the intended effective date. Write "FILED PURSUANT TO REV. PROC. 2013-30" across the top of Form 2553 and attach a reasonable-cause statement signed by all shareholders.

Filing method

Form 2553 is filed by mail or fax to the IRS service center designated in the current instructions for the entity's state. Electronic filing of a standalone Form 2553 is not generally available; it may be attached to a timely filed Form 1120-S for certain late elections. Retain the IRS acceptance notice (CP261) permanently.


PART 3 — SHAREHOLDER CONSENT STATEMENT (ALL SHAREHOLDERS MUST CONSENT)

Every shareholder on the effective date (and, for a preceding-year election, those who held stock during that prior period) must consent. Reproduce and attach extra rows as needed.

Shareholder name Address SSN / EIN Shares owned (or %) Date(s) acquired Shareholder tax-year end Signature Date
[____________] [____________] [____________] [____] [__/__/____] [____________] __________ [__/__/____]
[____________] [____________] [____________] [____] [__/__/____] [____________] __________ [__/__/____]
[____________] [____________] [____________] [____] [__/__/____] [____________] __________ [__/__/____]
[____________] [____________] [____________] [____] [__/__/____] [____________] __________ [__/__/____]

By signing, each shareholder consents to the S corporation election under 26 U.S.C. § 1362(a) and represents that the information provided is true and correct.


PART 4 — ENTITY INTERPLAY (LLC ELECTING S STATUS)

An LLC is, by default, a disregarded entity (single member) or a partnership (multi-member). To be taxed as an S corporation it must first be classified as an association taxable as a corporation.

  • A single Form 2553, filed on time, lets an eligible LLC elect S status without separately filing Form 8832 (Entity Classification Election). A timely, properly completed Form 2553 is treated as a deemed Form 8832 corporate-classification election effective on the same date (Treas. Reg. § 301.7701-3(c)(1)(v)(C)).
  • If the LLC wants corporate (C) classification effective on a different date than the S election, file Form 8832 separately.
  • Confirm the LLC operating agreement does not create a second class of stock (e.g., disproportionate distribution/liquidation rights or preferred returns), which would void S eligibility.

PART 5 — ARIZONA STATE S-CORP OVERLAY

Recognition rule — AUTOMATIC (no separate Arizona election)

Arizona automatically recognizes the federal S election. There is no separate Arizona S-corporation election form. Under A.R.S. § 43-1126, an S corporation is subject to Arizona income tax only to the extent it is subject to federal income tax, and Arizona taxes the S corporation and its shareholders in the same manner as federal law. A corporation that has a valid federal S election is treated as an S corporation for Arizona purposes for the same tax year.

Return / form

  • The Arizona S corporation files Arizona Form 120S (Arizona S Corporation Income Tax Return).
  • An LLC that has made a valid federal S election must also file Form 120S.
  • Due date: the 15th day of the 3rd month after the close of the tax year (March 15 for calendar-year filers); extensions available.

Entity-level income tax

  • Generally no entity-level Arizona income tax on the S corporation's pass-through income; income flows to shareholders and is taxed at Arizona's individual rate (a flat 2.5% for current years — [verify rate for the applicable tax year]).
  • Built-in gains and excess net passive income that are taxed federally at the corporate level may correspondingly be taxed at the Arizona corporate level under § 43-1126.

Optional pass-through entity (PTE) / entity-level tax election (A.R.S. § 43-1014)

  • For taxable years beginning after December 31, 2021, the shareholders of a business treated as an S corporation may consent to be taxed at the entity level at the highest individual rate under A.R.S. § 43-1011 — a federal SALT-cap workaround. (Current PTE rate 2.5% — [verify rate for the applicable tax year].)
  • The election is made on the Arizona return (Form 120S) — there is no separate standalone election form; check the PTE box on a timely filed (original or, within the statute of limitations, amended) Form 120S.
  • The electing S corporation must notify shareholders who are individuals, estates, or trusts and give each at least 60 days to opt out; only individuals, estates, and trusts may participate.
  • Shareholders included in the election claim a corresponding PTE tax credit on their Arizona individual returns.

Other Arizona items to confirm

☐ Maintain good standing with the Arizona Corporation Commission (corporations file annual reports via eCorp; Arizona LLCs do not file annual reports).
☐ Register for Transaction Privilege Tax (TPT) if selling taxable goods/services (economic nexus threshold $100,000).
☐ Register for Arizona withholding / unemployment before paying shareholder-employee wages.


PART 6 — POST-ELECTION COMPLIANCE

Reasonable compensation. A shareholder who performs services must be paid reasonable compensation as W-2 wages before taking distributions; the IRS may recharacterize disguised wages and assess back FICA, penalties, and interest.
Payroll setup. Run payroll, withhold and deposit federal and Arizona income tax and FICA, and file Forms 941/940 and Arizona withholding returns.
Distributions. Distributions to shareholders are generally tax-free to the extent of stock basis and the accumulated adjustments account (AAA); track basis carefully (§ 1367).
Built-in gains tax (§ 1374). If the entity converted from C-corporation status, gain on pre-conversion appreciated assets sold within the 5-year recognition period is taxed at the entity level.
Passive investment income (§ 1375). If the entity has accumulated C-corporation earnings and profits and passive investment income exceeds 25% of gross receipts, an entity-level tax applies; exceeding 25% for 3 consecutive years terminates the S election (§ 1362(d)(3)).
One class of stock maintained. Avoid side agreements, disproportionate distributions, or debt that could be reclassified as a second class of stock.
Annual federal/state returns. File Form 1120-S with Schedules K-1 federally and Arizona Form 120S with Arizona Schedule K-1s.
Recordkeeping. Retain Form 2553, the CP261 acceptance notice, shareholder consents, stock/ownership records, and minutes permanently.


PART 7 — REVOCATION / TERMINATION (26 U.S.C. § 1362(d))

Voluntary revocation (§ 1362(d)(1))

☐ Shareholders holding more than 50% of the outstanding shares (voting and nonvoting) must consent.
☐ File a revocation statement with the IRS (no official form; a signed letter identifying the entity, EIN, and effective date, with shareholder consents).
☐ Effective date: if filed by the 15th day of the 3rd month of the tax year, it is effective the first day of that year; otherwise the first day of the following tax year. A prospective date may be specified.

Automatic termination (§ 1362(d)(2)–(3))

Termination is automatic if:
☐ The entity ceases to qualify as a small business corporation (e.g., exceeds 100 shareholders, an ineligible shareholder acquires stock, or a second class of stock is created) — effective on the date of the disqualifying event.
☐ The entity has C-corporation E&P and passive investment income exceeds 25% of gross receipts for 3 consecutive tax years — terminating at the start of the next year.

Five-year re-election bar (§ 1362(g))

After revocation or termination, the entity generally may not re-elect S status for 5 tax years without IRS consent.

Arizona effect

Because Arizona follows the federal classification (A.R.S. § 43-1126), a federal revocation/termination ends Arizona S treatment for the same period; the entity then files as a C corporation on Arizona Form 120.


SIGNATURE BLOCK

Authorized Officer

Signature: _________________________________________
Name: [________________________________]
Title: [________________________________]
Date: [__/__/____]


SOURCES AND REFERENCES

  • 26 U.S.C. §§ 1361–1368, 1374, 1375 (Subchapter S)
  • 26 U.S.C. § 1362 (election, revocation, termination)
  • IRS Form 2553 and Instructions; IRS Notice CP261
  • Rev. Proc. 2013-30 (late election relief); Treas. Reg. § 1.1362-6; Treas. Reg. § 301.7701-3 (entity classification)
  • A.R.S. § 43-1126 (Arizona S corporation taxation) — https://www.azleg.gov/ars/43/
  • A.R.S. § 43-1014 (Arizona entity-level / PTE tax election) — https://www.azleg.gov/ars/43/01014.htm
  • Arizona Department of Revenue, Form 120S and Instructions; Pub. 713 (The Arizona Pass-Through Entity Election) — https://azdor.gov
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About This Template

Corporate documents govern how a company makes decisions, records them, and handles disputes between owners, directors, and officers. Proper corporate paperwork is what lets a business take advantage of limited liability, pass clean audits, and survive an acquisition or investor review. Skipping formalities like written resolutions and signed consents is one of the fastest ways for a business owner to lose personal asset protection.

Important Notice

This template is provided for informational purposes. It is not legal advice. We recommend having an attorney review any legal document before signing, especially for high-value or complex matters.

Last updated: June 2026

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