Paying family members through your business can be a legitimate tax strategy, but it must be done correctly. You can pay your spouse or children for legitimate work, which can shift income to lower tax brackets and reduce self-employment tax. However, you must pay reasonable compensation for actual work performed, and there are child labor law considerations. Understanding how to do this correctly is critical for both tax benefits and compliance. This comprehensive guide explains everything freelancers need to know about paying family members in 2026.
Table of Contents
- The Tax Strategy Explained
- Paying Your Spouse
- Paying Your Children
- Reasonable Compensation Requirement
- Child Labor Law Considerations
- Tax Benefits and Calculations
- How to Set It Up Correctly
- Real Examples and Scenarios
- Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Bottom Line: Your Family Employment Strategy
The Tax Strategy Explained
Understanding the concept:
How It Works
The strategy: Pay family members (spouse, children) for legitimate work
Tax benefit:
- Family member pays tax on income (often at lower rate)
- You deduct as business expense (reduces your taxable income)
- Can reduce self-employment tax (family member pays FICA 7.65% instead of you paying SE tax 15.3%)
The Key Requirement
Must be legitimate work:
- Family member must actually perform work
- Work must be necessary for business
- Compensation must be reasonable
- Can't just pay family for nothing (IRS will challenge)
Real Benefit Example
Scenario: Pay child $10,000 for legitimate work
Your tax:
- Deduct $10,000 as business expense
- Save ~$3,000 in taxes (30% rate)
Child's tax:
- Pay tax on $10,000 (but child may be in lower bracket or below standard deduction)
- Pay FICA: $765 (7.65%)
- Total: ~$765 (if child below standard deduction)
Family savings: ~$2,235 (you saved $3,000, child paid $765)
Paying Your Spouse
Understanding spouse employment:
How It Works
Pay spouse for legitimate work performed for your business
Tax benefit:
- You deduct as business expense
- Spouse pays tax on income (may be in lower bracket)
- Can reduce self-employment tax (spouse pays FICA 7.65% instead of you paying SE tax 15.3%)
Legitimate Work Examples
Spouse can do:
- Bookkeeping, accounting
- Administrative tasks
- Marketing, social media
- Customer service
- Any work necessary for business
Must be: Actual work, not just paying spouse for being spouse
Tax Benefits
Example: Pay spouse $20,000 for bookkeeping
Your tax:
- Deduct $20,000 as business expense
- Save ~$6,000 in taxes
Spouse's tax:
- Pay tax on $20,000 (may be in lower bracket if spouse has no other income)
- Pay FICA: $1,530 (7.65%)
- Total: ~$2,000-$3,000 (depending on bracket)
Family savings: ~$3,000-$4,000 (depending on brackets)
Paying Your Children
Understanding child employment:
How It Works
Pay children (age 7+) for legitimate work
Tax benefits:
- Child may pay no tax (if below standard deduction)
- Child pays FICA 7.65% (instead of you paying SE tax 15.3%)
- You deduct as business expense
Age Requirements
Minimum age: 7 years old (for family business)
Child labor laws: Must follow state and federal child labor laws
Best age: 14+ (fewer restrictions, can do more work)
Legitimate Work Examples
Children can do:
- Filing, organizing
- Social media posts
- Website updates
- Data entry
- Cleaning office
- Any age-appropriate work
Must be: Actual work, age-appropriate, necessary for business
Tax Benefits
Example: Pay child (age 16) $12,000 for legitimate work
Your tax:
- Deduct $12,000 as business expense
- Save ~$3,600 in taxes
Child's tax:
- Standard deduction: $14,600 (2026)
- Taxable income: $0 (below standard deduction)
- Pay FICA: $918 (7.65%)
- Total: $918
Family savings: ~$2,682 (you saved $3,600, child paid $918)
Plus: Child learns about work, earns money, builds work history
Reasonable Compensation Requirement
This is critical:
What Is Reasonable?
Reasonable compensation = What you would pay someone else to do the same work
Factors:
- Type of work performed
- Skills required
- Market rates for similar work
- Hours worked
- Your business's ability to pay
IRS will challenge if compensation is unreasonably high
How to Determine Reasonable
Research:
- What would you pay a non-family member?
- What do similar businesses pay?
- What are market rates?
Document: Keep records of work performed, hours, rates
Example:
- Bookkeeping: $25-$50/hour (market rate)
- Pay spouse $30/hour for 10 hours/week = $15,600/year
- Reasonable: Yes (within market range)
What Happens If Unreasonable?
IRS can challenge:
- Disallow deduction
- Reclassify as non-deductible payment
- Assess penalties
Best practice: Pay reasonable rates, document work
Child Labor Law Considerations
Understanding the rules:
Federal Child Labor Laws
Ages 7-13:
- Can work in family business (with restrictions)
- Limited hours during school
- No hazardous work
Ages 14-15:
- Can work more hours (with restrictions)
- Still limited during school
Ages 16-17:
- Fewer restrictions
- Can work more hours
18+:
- Treated as adult employee
State Laws
Each state has its own rules:
- May be more restrictive than federal
- Check your state's child labor laws
Best practice: Follow both federal and state laws
Documentation
Keep records:
- Hours worked
- Type of work
- Age-appropriate tasks
- Compliance with labor laws
Why: May need to prove compliance if questioned
Try the tool
Tax Benefits and Calculations
Understanding the savings:
The Self-Employment Tax Savings
Key benefit: Family member pays FICA 7.65% instead of you paying SE tax 15.3%
Savings: 7.65% on that portion of income
Example: Pay child $10,000
- You would pay SE tax: $1,530 (15.3%)
- Child pays FICA: $765 (7.65%)
- Savings: $765 (on that $10,000)
Income Tax Shifting
Additional benefit: Income shifts to family member (may be in lower bracket)
Example:
- You're in 24% bracket
- Child is in 0% bracket (below standard deduction)
- Save 24% on income shifted (plus SE tax savings)
Real Total Savings Example
Scenario: Pay child $12,000 for legitimate work
Your tax savings:
- Business expense deduction: $12,000
- Income tax saved: ~$2,880 (24% bracket)
- SE tax saved: ~$918 (7.65% on $12,000)
- Total saved: ~$3,798
Child's tax:
- Income: $12,000
- Standard deduction: $14,600
- Taxable: $0
- FICA: $918 (7.65%)
- Total: $918
Net family benefit: $3,798 - $918 = $2,880 (plus child earns money and learns)
How to Set It Up Correctly
Here's the process:
Step 1: Determine Legitimate Work
Identify work family member can do:
- Must be necessary for business
- Must be age-appropriate (if child)
- Must be actual work (not made-up)
Examples: Bookkeeping, filing, social media, data entry, etc.
Step 2: Set Reasonable Compensation
Research market rates:
- What would you pay someone else?
- What are market rates for this work?
Set rate: Based on market research, not arbitrary
Document: Why this rate is reasonable
Step 3: Set Up Payroll
If paying as employee:
- Get EIN (if don't have one)
- Set up payroll
- Withhold FICA (7.65%)
- File payroll tax returns
If paying as contractor:
- Issue 1099-NEC (if $600+)
- No FICA withholding (but they pay SE tax - less beneficial)
Best: Pay as employee (FICA 7.65% vs. SE tax 15.3%)
Step 4: Keep Records
Document:
- Work performed
- Hours worked
- Compensation paid
- Why compensation is reasonable
- Compliance with labor laws (if child)
Why: May need to prove legitimacy if questioned
Step 5: Report on Tax Return
Deduct as business expense:
- Wages paid to family member
- On Schedule C (if sole proprietor)
- Or business tax return (if LLC/corporation)
Family member reports:
- As W-2 income (if employee)
- Or 1099 income (if contractor)
Real Examples and Scenarios
Let's work through scenarios:
Example 1: Paying Spouse
Scenario:
- Pay spouse $15,000/year for bookkeeping
- Spouse has no other income
- You're in 24% bracket
Your tax:
- Deduct $15,000 as business expense
- Save: ~$3,600 (income tax) + $1,148 (SE tax) = $4,748
Spouse's tax:
- Income: $15,000
- Standard deduction: $14,600
- Taxable: $400
- Income tax: ~$40
- FICA: $1,148 (7.65%)
- Total: $1,188
Net family benefit: $4,748 - $1,188 = $3,560
Example 2: Paying Child
Scenario:
- Pay child (age 16) $10,000/year for social media work
- Child has no other income
- You're in 24% bracket
Your tax:
- Deduct $10,000 as business expense
- Save: ~$2,400 (income tax) + $765 (SE tax) = $3,165
Child's tax:
- Income: $10,000
- Standard deduction: $14,600
- Taxable: $0
- Income tax: $0
- FICA: $765 (7.65%)
- Total: $765
Net family benefit: $3,165 - $765 = $2,400
Plus: Child earns $10,000, learns about work, builds work history
Example 3: Paying Multiple Family Members
Scenario:
- Pay spouse $20,000 (bookkeeping)
- Pay child $8,000 (social media)
- Total: $28,000
Your tax savings: ~$8,400 (from $28,000 deduction)
Family members' tax: ~$2,000-$3,000 (depending on brackets)
Net family benefit: ~$5,400-$6,400
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Learn from others' mistakes:
Mistake #1: Paying for No Work
The problem: You pay family member but they don't actually do work
The solution: Must be legitimate work (IRS will challenge if no work performed)
Mistake #2: Unreasonable Compensation
The problem: You pay $50,000 for work worth $10,000
The solution: Pay reasonable rates (based on market research)
Mistake #3: Not Documenting Work
The problem: You can't prove work was performed if questioned
The solution: Keep detailed records (work performed, hours, etc.)
Mistake #4: Violating Child Labor Laws
The problem: You have child work in violation of labor laws
The solution: Follow federal and state child labor laws
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I Pay My Spouse?
Yes, if spouse performs legitimate work for your business. Must be reasonable compensation for actual work.
Can I Pay My Children?
Yes, if children perform legitimate work (age 7+, must follow child labor laws). Must be reasonable compensation.
How Much Can I Pay?
Reasonable compensation for work performed. Research market rates, pay what you would pay a non-family member.
Do I Need to Set Up Payroll?
If paying as employee: Yes, need payroll (withhold FICA, file payroll returns)
If paying as contractor: Issue 1099-NEC (if $600+), but less beneficial (they pay SE tax)
What If IRS Challenges?
Must be able to prove:
- Work was actually performed
- Compensation is reasonable
- Compliance with labor laws (if child)
Keep good records: Documentation is critical
Bottom Line: Your Family Employment Strategy
Paying family members can be a legitimate tax strategy. Here's your plan:
Immediate Actions
- Identify legitimate work (that family member can do)
- Research reasonable compensation (market rates)
- Set up payroll (if paying as employee)
- Get necessary information (SSN, etc.)
- Keep detailed records (work performed, hours, compensation)
Ongoing Actions
- Pay reasonable compensation (based on market rates)
- Document work (keep records of what was done)
- Comply with labor laws (if paying children)
- File payroll returns (if paying as employee)
- Deduct on tax return (as business expense)
Key Takeaways
✅ Can pay family members (if legitimate work, reasonable compensation)
✅ Tax benefits: Reduce your taxes, shift income to lower brackets, reduce SE tax
✅ Must be legitimate work (actual work, not just paying family)
✅ Reasonable compensation required (based on market rates, not arbitrary)
✅ Follow child labor laws (if paying children)
✅ Keep good records (documentation is critical if questioned)
✅ Set up payroll (if paying as employee - better tax benefits)
Final Thought
Paying family members through your business can be a legitimate tax strategy, but it must be done correctly. The key is ensuring there's actual work performed, paying reasonable compensation, keeping good records, and complying with all laws (including child labor laws if applicable). When done correctly, it can save your family thousands of dollars in taxes while teaching children about work and providing income. But when done incorrectly, it can trigger audits and penalties. Do it right, and it's a win-win.