Using Your Business Bank Account to Pay Yourself
Paying yourself as an LLC owner means moving money from the LLC business bank account to your personal account.
You’ll use your business bank account to take in revenue, hold money and pay expenses. When you pay yourself as an LLC owner, you move money from your business bank account into your personal one.
You have a few ways to move this money, and this will be determined by the type of LLC that you’re running.
If You’re a Single-Member LLC Taxed as a Sole Proprietorship
Single-member LLCs taxed as sole proprietorships can simply log into the banking portal for the LLC business account and move money to the owner’s personal account. You would then show the amount that you’ve transferred over as a “drawing” or “owner draw” in your bookkeeping software.
If You’re a Multi-Member LLC Taxed as a Partnership
Multi-member LLCs taxed as partnerships can simply log into the banking portal for the LLC business account and move money to each of the owner’s personal accounts.
You would transfer money between accounts based on the profit-sharing rules or guidelines within your operating agreement. For example, if you have four partners, each owning a quarter of the business, you would transfer 25 percent of the profits that you’re taking out of the business to each partner.
You then show the amount that you’ve transferred over to each owner as a “drawing” or “owner draw” in your bookkeeping software.
If You’re a Single- or Multi-Member LLC Taxed as an S Corporation
LLCs can file Form 2553 with the IRS to be treated as an S Corporation for tax purposes . This often allows LLCs to pay lower self-employment taxes, increasing tax savings overall. One requirement to using this tax classification is that any owners must be treated as employees and paid through a payroll service. There are many payroll providers available, and the features they offer will vary between providers.
If you do run payroll, which must be the case if you file taxes as an S Corporation, then the payroll service may have built-in functionality to move money between your business and personal accounts as part of the employee salary payment process. In other cases, you may need to move money manually. Check the documentation and features of your payroll service to understand how this works.
It’s also important to note that owners of an LLC taxed as an S Corp can move some money from the business bank account to their personal bank accounts outside a payroll service — more on that below. In those cases, you can use the same approach as we’ve described above for single- or multi-member LLCs.
Of course, no matter how you pay yourself, the IRS is also going to want their cut!
Paying Taxes on LLC Profits
One important area to understand as an LLC owner is the taxes you'll owe . Generally, you will pay taxes on your profits, whether you use them to pay yourself, keep them in the business or do something else with them.
You don’t need to take money out of your LLC to incur or pay taxes. So, if your LLC has revenue of $150,000 and expenses of $50,000, you pay taxes on the $100,000 profit. It doesn’t matter if you transfer $0, $50,000 or $100,000 of that as pay between your business and personal bank account — you’ll still pay taxes on the whole amount.
If you pay yourself through a payroll system, there is an exception to this, as there are a couple of taxes (FUTA and SUTA) that you only pay on the salaried amount you pay yourself. But, if you’re not using a payroll system and paying yourself through distributions, that tax is the same whether the money is in your personal account or your business one.
Further Information on How to Pay Yourself as an LLC Business Owner
Building on what we’ve discussed previously, let’s dig into owner’s draws and salary/payroll a little further. LLC business owners have three options for paying themselves:
Distributions or an “Owner’s Draw,” where you move money directly between your business account and your personal account
Salary , where you run the payroll on a regular basis and you or the payroll system transfers the money, fewer taxes, between your business and personal account
A combination of distributions/owner’s draw and salary/payroll