Maintain Your S-Corp’s Tax Savings—Without Getting Stung!
With Salary Sherpa, compliance is a breeze and peace of mind is just a click away.

Avoid painful IRS penalties

Maximize your S-Corp benefits

Keep those scorpions calm

Here’s the process:

No Salary. No Shield.

The IRS doesn’t care if you “meant to.” If you’re skipping salary, you’re not compliant—and you’re not protected.

🧢 That’s why Salary Sherpa exists.
We guide you up the mountain before the audit stings start.

“The IRS requires that an S corporation pay reasonable compensation to a shareholder-employee in return for services that the employee provides to the corporation before non-wage distributions may be made to the shareholder-employee.”

IRS.gov: S-Corporations

Are You Protecting Your Tax Savings?

Many business owners love the tax savings of an S-Corp—but too many forget that the IRS doesn’t hand those savings out for free. They come with strings… and stingers.

Fail to pay yourself a reasonable salary? Boom—you’re out of compliance.
Forget to file Form 1120S on time? That sting’s gonna hurt.

Don’t risk it. While we can’t promise audit immunity, your personalized report from Salary Sherpa gives you a solid, IRS-conscious foundation for reasonable comp decisions and conversations with your tax professional.

That’s Where We Step In

Salary Sherpa was built to take the guesswork (and paperwork) out of S-Corp compliance.
We deliver a tailored compensation report that’s:

  • Backed by real job and wage data
  • Easy to complete (we ask the right questions—fast)
  • Clear enough to hand straight to your accountant or tax pro

Make sure your S election stays in good standing. Don’t let a simple misstep trigger an expensive audit.

Let us help you dodge the sting of non-compliance—so you can focus on growing your business, not defending it.

Salary Sherpa makes reasonable compensation simple, smart, and audit-conscious.

Built for busy S‑Corp owners: answer a few quick questions, and in minutes get a personalized, audit-conscious report that helps you justify payroll decisions—without pulling out the hair.