How to Reduce Payroll Tax: Advanced Strategies for Business Owners

March 16, 2026

Small business owner reviewing payroll tax documents and tax reduction strategies.

You can reduce payroll tax by reclassifying your business as an S-Corp to lower FICA exposure, implementing an Accountable Plan for reimbursements, utilizing Section 125 “Cafeteria” plans for pre-tax benefits, and claiming available tax credits like the R&D credit. These methods legally lower the taxable wage base.

The S-Corp Strategy: Reducing FICA Tax via Distributions

For many small business owners, the single most effective way to reduce payroll tax is the S-Election.

The Strategy: As an LLC or C-Corp, you pay self-employment or payroll tax on all profits. By electing S-Corp status, you only pay payroll tax (15.3% FICA) on a reasonable salary. The remaining profit is taken as a distribution, which is exempt from payroll taxes.

  • Actionable Insight: If your business nets $150k and you take a $70k salary, you save 15.3% on the remaining $80k a tax savings of over $12,200 annually.
  • CTA: Is your salary “reasonable” in the eyes of the IRS? Schedule a strategy session with Squires Tax Planning to find your optimal split.

Implement an Accountable Plan for Employee Reimbursements

Don’t let employee expenses inflate your payroll tax bill.

The Strategy: If you pay employees a “stipend” for tools, travel, or home office use without an Accountable Plan, those payments are treated as taxable wages. By implementing a formal IRS-compliant Accountable Plan, these payments become tax-free reimbursements.

  • Result: You avoid the 7.65% employer share of FICA, and the employee avoids their 7.65% share plus income tax.

Leverage Section 125 Cafeteria Plans

Traditional benefits are often paid with post-tax dollars. A Section 125 plan flips the script.

The Strategy: Allow employees to pay for health insurance premiums, HSA contributions, and dependent care with pre-tax dollars.

  • The Math: Every dollar an employee contributes to a Section 125 plan reduces your gross taxable payroll. If your staff contributes $50,000 annually to benefits, you save ~$3,825 in employer payroll taxes.

Utilize the R&D Tax Credit Against Payroll Tax

Most owners think the Research & Development (R&D) credit only applies to income tax.

The Strategy: Qualified small businesses (startups with less than $5M in gross receipts) can apply up to $500,000 of the R&D tax credit against the employer portion of Social Security taxes.

  • Real-World Example: A software startup spending $200k on developer wages may qualify for a credit that effectively wipes out their payroll tax liability for the year.

Offer Tax-Free Fringe Benefits Instead of Raises

When you give a $5,000 raise, it costs you roughly $5,400 after payroll taxes. When you provide $5,000 in tax-free fringe benefits, it costs exactly $5,000.

High-Impact Fringe Benefits:

  • Educational Assistance (up to $5,250/year).
  • Group-term life insurance (up to $50,000 coverage).
  • Health Reimbursement Arrangements (HRAs).

Stop Overpaying the IRS: Your Payroll Efficiency Audit 

Payroll tax is often the largest silent expense in a growing business. Most CPAs are “historians” who tell you what you owe after the year is over. At Squires Tax Planning, we are architects. We build structures that protect your cash flow before it ever reaches the payroll processor.

Don’t leave your ROI to chance. A single mistake in S-Corp salary allocation or Accountable Plan documentation can trigger an audit. Let us optimize your tax footprint.

Book Your Comprehensive Tax Blueprint Session Today

FAQs

Q: Can I classify employees as 1099 contractors to save on payroll tax? 

Only if they meet the IRS “Right to Control” test. Misclassifying W-2 employees as 1099 contractors to avoid payroll tax can lead to severe penalties, back taxes, and audits. Always consult a tax strategist before switching classifications.

Q: What is the employer’s share of payroll tax in 2024? 

Employers are responsible for 6.2% for Social Security (up to the wage base limit) and 1.45% for Medicare, totaling 7.65%. Additionally, employers must pay FUTA (Federal Unemployment) and SUTA (State Unemployment) taxes.

Q: Does contributing to a 401(k) reduce payroll taxes? 

No. While 401(k) contributions reduce an employee’s income tax, they do not reduce FICA (Social Security and Medicare) taxes for either the employer or the employee.

Q: What is the maximum salary subject to Social Security tax? 

For 2024, the Social Security wage base is $168,600. Any earnings above this amount are not subject to the 6.2% Social Security tax, though the 1.45% Medicare tax still applies to all wages.

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