Key Takeaways

  • S corporations elect S status by filing Form 2553 with all shareholders consenting.
  • Must be a domestic corporation with no more than 100 shareholders.
  • Only one class of stock is permitted (voting differences allowed).
  • Shareholders must be individuals, estates, or certain trusts (no partnerships or corporations).
  • For Tax Year 2024 effectiveness, Form 2553 must be filed by March 15, 2024.
  • Late election relief is available with reasonable cause.
Last updated: January 2026

S Election Requirements (Form 2553)

Why This Matters for the Exam

S corporation eligibility requirements are heavily tested on Part 2. The exam tests the specific requirements, filing deadlines, and what can disqualify a corporation from S status.

Exam Note: For the May 2025 - February 2026 testing window, you are tested on S corporation rules as of December 31, 2024 (Tax Year 2024).

Expect at least 4-5 questions on S corporation eligibility.

What Is an S Corporation?

An S corporation is a corporation that elects to pass corporate income, losses, deductions, and credits through to its shareholders for federal tax purposes.

FeatureS Corporation
TaxationPass-through (no entity-level tax)
Legal structureCorporation (limited liability)
Double taxationAvoided
Best forSmall businesses with U.S. individual owners

Eligibility Requirements

To elect S status, a corporation must meet all of the following:

RequirementDetail
Domestic corporationOrganized in the U.S.
100 shareholders maximumFamily members can count as one
One class of stockVoting differences allowed
Eligible shareholders onlyIndividuals, estates, certain trusts
No ineligible shareholdersNo partnerships, corporations, NRAs

The 100-Shareholder Limit

RuleDescription
Maximum100 shareholders
Family ruleAll members of a family (6 generations) can elect to count as one shareholder
SpousesCount as one shareholder
EstatesCount as separate shareholders

One Class of Stock Rule

PermittedNot Permitted
Common stock with voting rightsPreferred stock
Common stock without voting rightsDifferent distribution rights
Different voting rights onlyDifferent liquidation rights

Key Point: All shares must have identical rights to distributions and liquidation proceeds. Voting differences are okay.

Eligible Shareholders

EligibleIneligible
U.S. citizens and residentsNon-resident aliens (NRAs)
Decedent's estatesPartnerships
Bankruptcy estatesCorporations
Grantor trustsLLCs taxed as partnerships
Qualified Subchapter S Trusts (QSSTs)Foreign trusts
Electing Small Business Trusts (ESBTs)Tax-exempt organizations (most)

Form 2553 Filing Deadline

ScenarioFiling Deadline
New corporationWithin 2 months 15 days of formation
Existing corporation (calendar year)March 15 for current year effectiveness
Prior year electionAny time during the prior tax year

For Tax Year 2024 Calendar-Year Corporation:

  • File Form 2553 by March 15, 2024 for 2024 effectiveness.
  • Or file any time during 2023 for 2024 effectiveness.

All Shareholders Must Consent

Every shareholder must sign Form 2553 or a separate consent statement.

SituationRequirement
All shareholdersMust consent
Community propertyBoth spouses must consent
New shareholdersNeed not re-consent (bound by election)

Late Election Relief

The IRS grants relief for late-filed Form 2553 if:

RequirementDescription
Reasonable causeFailure was inadvertent
Timely returnsCorporation filed returns consistent with S status
IntentCorporation and shareholders intended S election

Revenue Procedure 2013-30 provides automatic relief if filed within 3 years 6 months.

Real-World Scenario

Scenario: A corporation formed on January 15, 2024, wants S status for 2024. When must Form 2553 be filed?

  • Deadline: Within 2 months 15 days of formation = March 31, 2024.
  • All shareholders: Must sign Form 2553.
  • If missed: Apply for late election relief under Rev. Proc. 2013-30.

On the Exam

Expect 4-5 questions on S election, typically:

  1. Shareholder Limit Questions: "What is the maximum number of shareholders?"
  2. Eligible Shareholder Questions: "Which entity CANNOT be an S corp shareholder?"
  3. Stock Questions: "What stock differences are permitted?"
  4. Deadline Questions: "When must Form 2553 be filed?"

The key is to remember: 100 shareholders max. One class of stock (voting differences OK). Only individuals, estates, certain trusts. No partnerships, corporations, or NRAs.

Test Your Knowledge

What is the maximum number of shareholders an S corporation can have?

A
B
C
D
Test Your Knowledge

Which of the following is NOT an eligible S corporation shareholder?

A
B
C
D
Test Your Knowledge

For a calendar-year corporation to have S status effective for Tax Year 2024, by what date must Form 2553 be filed?

A
B
C
D