How to Record S Corp Salary and Distributions in QuickBooks
Jul 17, 2026
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Short answer: An S corporation owner is paid in two separate ways, and QuickBooks records them differently. A reasonable salary runs through payroll as a W-2 wage and is a business expense subject to payroll taxes. A distribution is the owner taking profit out of the company, and it is recorded as a reduction of equity, not an expense, and it is not subject to payroll tax. The order matters to the IRS: a shareholder-employee who does real work must take a reasonable salary first, and only then take distributions. Recording a distribution as an expense, or skipping the salary entirely, are the two mistakes that draw an audit.
This trips up almost every new S corp owner because the whole point of the S election is the tax difference between the two, and getting the bookkeeping wrong quietly undoes the benefit or creates a liability. Here is how each one is recorded and why.
Why an S corp owner is paid two ways
When you elect S corporation status, the company's profit passes through to your personal tax return, but you as the owner who works in the business are also an employee. The IRS requires that employee to be paid a reasonable salary through payroll, because that salary is subject to Social Security and Medicare taxes, together 15.3 percent. Anything left over as profit can be taken as a distribution, which is not subject to those payroll taxes. That gap is the entire tax advantage of an S corp. It is also why the IRS watches the split closely: paying yourself a tiny salary and a huge distribution to dodge payroll tax is exactly what triggers reclassification and penalties.
How do I record an S corp salary in QuickBooks?
Record a reasonable salary by running it through payroll, so it produces a paycheck, withholds taxes, and lands on a W-2 at year end. In QuickBooks Online you set yourself up as an employee in Payroll, choose a pay schedule, and pay yourself like any other employee. The gross wage posts to a wage expense account, the employer payroll taxes post to a payroll tax expense, and the net pay comes out of the bank. This is a genuine business expense that reduces the company's profit. Do not record owner salary as a check coded to equity or draws; if it is a salary, it has to go through payroll and generate the payroll tax filings, or it is not a valid S corp wage.
How do I record an S corp distribution in QuickBooks?
Record a distribution as a payment to the owner coded to a shareholder distributions equity account, never to an expense account. Create an equity account called Shareholder Distributions if one does not exist. When you move money to yourself as profit, enter it as a check or expense from the bank and set the category to that equity account. Because it is equity, it reduces the company's book equity but does not touch the profit and loss statement at all. That is the key difference from salary: salary lowers profit and shows on the income statement, while a distribution simply moves money that was already profit out to the owner and shows only on the balance sheet.
| Reasonable salary | Distribution | |
|---|---|---|
| How it is paid | Through payroll, as a paycheck | A transfer or check to the owner |
| Tax form | W-2 wages | Reported on the K-1, no separate form |
| Payroll tax | Subject to 15.3% Social Security and Medicare | Not subject to payroll tax |
| QuickBooks account | Wage expense | Shareholder distributions (equity) |
| Effect on profit | Reduces net profit | No effect on profit and loss |
What counts as a reasonable salary?
A reasonable salary is what you would have to pay someone else to do the work you do for the company, given your role, hours, experience and industry. The IRS does not publish a formula or a percentage, and rules of thumb like the 60/40 split are not law. Courts have looked at factors such as your training and experience, duties and responsibilities, time devoted to the business, what comparable businesses pay for similar services, and the amount of distributions being taken. The safest approach is to base the number on real market data for your role and document how you arrived at it. If your salary is clearly too low relative to a large distribution, the IRS can reclassify distributions as wages and add back payroll taxes plus penalties and interest.
The common mistakes to avoid
The first mistake is taking no salary at all and paying yourself only distributions, which is the fastest way to lose the reasonable-compensation argument. The second is recording distributions as an expense, which understates your profit and misstates both the income statement and the balance sheet. The third is running the salary as a simple owner draw instead of through payroll, which means no W-2 and no payroll taxes were paid, so it does not count as compensation. Keep the two streams cleanly separate in QuickBooks: salary in payroll and on the profit and loss, distributions in an equity account on the balance sheet. If you also reimburse yourself for business costs like a home office or mileage, run those through an accountable plan as expense reimbursements and keep every business expense documented so the reimbursement holds up rather than looking like disguised wages.
Getting the transactions into QuickBooks correctly
All of this depends on your bank activity being in the books accurately in the first place. The salary paychecks, the payroll tax payments, and the distribution transfers all show up on your business bank statement, and each has to be coded to the right account. If your feed is missing history or you are catching up several months at once, it is faster to work from the full statement than to retype it. Many owners convert the statement PDF to a spreadsheet first, tag each owner payment as either payroll or distribution, and then import. For a repeatable way to sort those transactions, see our guide on categorizing transactions from a bank statement, and if you run an online business, the ecommerce bookkeeping workflow shows how payouts, fees and owner draws separate out. BankXLSX prepares the data; your accountant sets the reasonable salary and files the returns.
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