Many business owners wonder if they can pay their children and deduct it as a business expense. The answer is yes, but there are specific rules you must follow. This guide explains when you can pay your kids, how to deduct it, and what tax benefits are available.
Table of Contents
- Can You Pay Your Kids and Deduct It?
- Requirements for Deducting Payments to Children
- Legitimate Business Services
- Tax Benefits of Paying Children
- Employment Tax Considerations
- Age Requirements
- Documentation Requirements
- Real-World Examples
- Common Mistakes
- Special Situations
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Bottom Line
Can You Pay Your Kids and Deduct It?
Yes, you can pay your children and deduct it as a business expense, but only if they perform legitimate work for your business and you follow all the rules.
Key Requirements
- Legitimate work: Child must perform real work for your business
- Reasonable pay: Pay must be reasonable for the work performed
- Actually paid: You must actually pay the child (not just record it)
- Business expense: Work must be for your business, not personal
- Documentation: Keep records of work performed and payments made
What You Can Deduct
- Wages paid: Deductible as business expense
- Reduces business income: Lowers your taxable business income
- Tax savings: Saves at your tax rate (could be 12% to 37%)
Requirements for Deducting Payments to Children
To deduct payments to your children, you must meet several requirements.
1. Legitimate Business Work
- Real work: Child must perform actual work for your business
- Business purpose: Work must be for business, not personal
- Necessary: Work should be necessary for business operations
- Not make-work: Cannot create fake jobs just for tax benefits
2. Reasonable Compensation
- Fair market rate: Pay must be reasonable for the work
- Not excessive: Cannot overpay just for tax benefits
- Comparable rates: Should be similar to what you'd pay others
- Documentation: Be able to justify the pay rate
3. Actually Paid
- Real payments: Must actually pay the child (check, cash, etc.)
- Not just recorded: Cannot just record it without paying
- Regular payments: Should pay regularly (weekly, biweekly, etc.)
- Records: Keep records of all payments
4. Business Expense
- For business: Work must be for your business
- Not personal: Personal chores don't qualify
- Separate entity: If you have a business entity, work must be for that entity
5. Proper Documentation
- Time records: Keep records of hours worked
- Work descriptions: Document what work was performed
- Payment records: Keep records of all payments
- Tax forms: Issue W-2 or 1099 if required
Legitimate Business Services
Here are examples of legitimate work children can do for your business:
Qualifying Work
✅ Office work: Filing, data entry, answering phones ✅ Marketing: Social media, website updates, flyer distribution ✅ Cleaning: Office cleaning, organizing ✅ Inventory: Stocking, organizing inventory ✅ Customer service: Helping customers, taking orders ✅ Delivery: Making deliveries (if age appropriate) ✅ Maintenance: Basic maintenance, repairs ✅ Research: Market research, competitor analysis ✅ Photography: Product photos, event photos ✅ Other business tasks: Any legitimate business work
Non-Qualifying Work
❌ Personal chores: Cleaning your home (not business) ❌ Make-work: Creating fake jobs just for tax benefits ❌ Excessive pay: Paying more than work is worth ❌ No actual work: Paying without child actually working
Tax Benefits of Paying Children
Paying your children can provide significant tax benefits.
For the Business (You)
- Business deduction: Wages are deductible business expense
- Reduces taxable income: Lowers your business income
- Tax savings: Saves at your tax rate (12% to 37%)
- Shifts income: Shifts income from your higher bracket to child's lower bracket
For the Child
- Earned income: Child has earned income (can contribute to IRA)
- Lower tax bracket: Child likely in lower bracket (may pay no tax)
- Standard deduction: Child gets standard deduction ($15,400 if earned income)
- Learning experience: Teaches work ethic, responsibility
Combined Benefit
Example: You pay child $12,000 for legitimate business work
Your benefit:
- Business deduction: $12,000
- Tax savings (24% bracket): $2,880
Child's tax:
- Gross income: $12,000
- Standard deduction: $12,000 (earned income, up to $15,400)
- Taxable income: $0
- Child's tax: $0
Total benefit: $2,880 (you save, child pays no tax)
Employment Tax Considerations
Employment taxes depend on your business structure and the child's age.
If Child Works for Your Business
- W-2 employee: If child is employee, issue W-2
- Employment taxes: May need to pay employment taxes
- Exceptions: Some exceptions for children under 18 or 21
Exceptions for Children
If child is under 18:
- No FICA: No Social Security or Medicare taxes (if sole proprietorship or partnership)
- No FUTA: No federal unemployment tax (if under 21)
- Still issue W-2: Still need to issue W-2
If child is 18 or older:
- FICA applies: Must pay Social Security and Medicare taxes
- FUTA applies: Must pay federal unemployment tax (if 21+)
- Issue W-2: Issue W-2 and pay employment taxes
Business Structure Matters
- Sole proprietorship: Special rules for children under 18
- Partnership: Similar rules if parents are partners
- Corporation: Different rules, child is regular employee
- LLC: Depends on how LLC is taxed
Age Requirements
Age affects employment tax obligations.
Children Under 18
- No FICA: No Social Security/Medicare taxes (sole proprietorship/partnership)
- No FUTA: No federal unemployment tax (under 21)
- Still W-2: Still issue W-2
- Income tax: Still subject to income tax (if income high enough)
Children 18-20
- FICA applies: Must pay Social Security/Medicare taxes
- No FUTA: No federal unemployment tax (under 21)
- W-2 required: Issue W-2 and pay FICA
Children 21+
- All taxes apply: FICA and FUTA both apply
- Regular employee: Treated as regular employee
- Full employment taxes: Pay all employment taxes
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Documentation Requirements
Proper documentation is essential for deducting payments to children.
Required Documentation
- Time records: Hours worked, dates
- Work descriptions: What work was performed
- Payment records: Amounts paid, dates paid
- W-2 or 1099: Issue proper tax forms
- Business records: Keep in business records
Best Practices
- Time sheets: Have child fill out time sheets
- Work logs: Keep logs of work performed
- Payment records: Keep canceled checks, bank records
- Separate account: Consider separate bank account for child
- Regular payments: Pay regularly (weekly, biweekly)
If Audited
- Be prepared: IRS may ask for documentation
- Show real work: Be able to show child actually worked
- Justify pay: Be able to justify pay rate
- Business purpose: Show work was for business
Real-World Examples
Example 1: Teenager Doing Office Work
You own business, pay 16-year-old child $8,000 per year for office work (filing, data entry, answering phones)
Requirements:
- Legitimate work: ✅ (office work)
- Reasonable pay: ✅ (if $8,000 is reasonable)
- Actually paid: ✅ (must actually pay)
- Business expense: ✅ (office work for business)
- Documentation: ✅ (keep records)
Tax Benefits:
- Your deduction: $8,000
- Your tax savings (24% bracket): $1,920
- Child's tax: $0 (income below standard deduction)
- Total benefit: $1,920
Employment Taxes:
- No FICA (child under 18, sole proprietorship)
- No FUTA (child under 21)
- Issue W-2: ✅ Yes
Example 2: College Student Doing Marketing
You own business, pay 20-year-old child $15,000 per year for marketing work (social media, website, etc.)
Requirements:
- Legitimate work: ✅ (marketing)
- Reasonable pay: ✅ (if $15,000 is reasonable)
- Actually paid: ✅
- Business expense: ✅
- Documentation: ✅
Tax Benefits:
- Your deduction: $15,000
- Your tax savings (24% bracket): $3,600
- Child's tax: $0 (income equals standard deduction)
- Total benefit: $3,600
Employment Taxes:
- FICA applies: ✅ (child 18+, must pay)
- FUTA applies: ✅ (child 21+, must pay)
- Issue W-2: ✅ Yes
Example 3: Multiple Children
You own business, pay 3 children (ages 14, 16, 18) for various business tasks, $6,000 each
Tax Benefits:
- Total deduction: $18,000
- Your tax savings (24% bracket): $4,320
- Children's tax: $0 each (below standard deduction)
- Total benefit: $4,320
Common Mistakes
Mistake 1: Paying for Personal Work
Problem: Paying child for personal chores (cleaning home, etc.) Result: Deduction denied, potential penalties Solution: Only pay for legitimate business work
Mistake 2: Not Actually Paying
Problem: Recording payments but not actually paying child Result: Deduction denied, potential fraud charges Solution: Must actually pay the child
Mistake 3: Excessive Pay
Problem: Paying more than work is worth Result: IRS may disallow excess, penalties Solution: Pay reasonable, fair market rates
Mistake 4: No Documentation
Problem: Not keeping records of work and payments Result: Cannot prove deduction if audited Solution: Keep detailed records of work and payments
Mistake 5: Not Issuing W-2
Problem: Not issuing W-2 to child Result: Penalties, child can't file return properly Solution: Issue W-2 if child is employee
Special Situations
Sole Proprietorship
- Special rules: Children under 18 exempt from FICA
- Still W-2: Still issue W-2
- Income tax: Child still subject to income tax
Partnership
- If parents are partners: Similar rules to sole proprietorship
- Children under 18: May be exempt from FICA
- Check rules: Verify specific rules for your situation
Corporation
- Regular employee: Child is regular employee
- All taxes apply: FICA, FUTA, income tax
- No special rules: No exceptions for children
LLC
- Depends on taxation: Rules depend on how LLC is taxed
- If taxed as partnership: May have similar rules
- If taxed as corporation: Regular employee rules
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I pay my child and deduct it as a business expense?
Yes, if the child performs legitimate work for your business, you pay reasonable compensation, actually pay them, and keep proper documentation.
What work can my child do for my business?
Any legitimate business work: office work, marketing, cleaning, inventory, customer service, etc. It must be real work for your business, not personal chores.
How much can I pay my child?
You can pay any reasonable amount. The pay should be fair market rate for the work performed. You cannot overpay just for tax benefits.
Do I need to issue a W-2 to my child?
Yes, if your child is an employee. You must issue a W-2 and may need to pay employment taxes (depending on child's age and your business structure).
Are there employment tax exceptions for children?
Yes. If your child is under 18 and works for your sole proprietorship or partnership, they're exempt from FICA (Social Security/Medicare). Children under 21 are exempt from FUTA.
Can I pay my child for personal work?
No. You can only deduct payments for legitimate business work. Personal chores (cleaning your home, etc.) don't qualify as business expenses.
What if my child doesn't actually work?
You cannot deduct payments if the child doesn't actually work. The work must be real and legitimate. Paying without work is not deductible and could be considered fraud.
How do I document payments to my child?
Keep time records, work descriptions, payment records, and issue proper tax forms (W-2). Be able to show the child actually worked and the pay was reasonable.
Bottom Line
You can pay your children and deduct it as a business expense if done correctly:
✅ Legitimate work: Child must perform real work for your business ✅ Reasonable pay: Pay must be fair market rate ✅ Actually paid: Must actually pay the child ✅ Business expense: Work must be for business, not personal ✅ Proper documentation: Keep records of work and payments ✅ Tax forms: Issue W-2 if child is employee
Key Benefits:
- Business deduction: Reduces your taxable business income
- Shifts income: From your higher bracket to child's lower bracket
- Child's tax: Child may pay no tax (below standard deduction)
- Learning experience: Teaches child about work and taxes
- Combined savings: Can save significant money in taxes
Action Items:
- Ensure child performs legitimate business work
- Pay reasonable, fair market rates
- Actually pay the child (don't just record it)
- Keep detailed records of work and payments
- Issue W-2 if child is employee
- Understand employment tax rules (exceptions for children under 18/21)
- Be prepared to justify if audited
Remember: Paying your children can be a legitimate tax strategy, but you must follow all the rules. The work must be real, the pay must be reasonable, and you must keep proper documentation. If done correctly, it can provide significant tax benefits by shifting income from your higher tax bracket to your child's lower bracket (or no tax if below standard deduction). However, if done incorrectly, it can result in denied deductions, penalties, and potential fraud charges.