Paying Family Without Payroll Taxes: A SharpCFO-Level Strategy Most Advisors Miss
Precision at speed. This is one of those plays that works beautifully… right up until it doesn’t.
The Idea Everyone Knows… and the Part They Miss
Most advisors stop at the obvious:
“Put your kid on payroll.”
Fine. Basic. Safe. Boring.
That works great if:
- You’re a Schedule C
- Your child is under 18
- You’re okay running full payroll
But here’s the part almost nobody leans into:
You can often pay family members — including older children — without payroll taxes at all… if structured correctly.
And that’s where things go from “tax tip” to strategic tax engineering.
The Strategy in Plain English
Instead of wages, you structure a one-time, project-based payment to a family member.
If done properly:
- You deduct the full amount at your higher tax rate
- They report the income at a lower rate (often near zero after standard deduction)
- No payroll taxes apply
- No self-employment tax applies
Yes… that last part is where this gets interesting.
This isn’t theory — it’s grounded in IRS position and case law.
A Real-World Example (The Kind That Makes Clients Pay Attention)
Let’s say:
- You’re in a 37% federal bracket
- You pay your 20-year-old $23,225 for a legitimate project
- They have no other income
What happens?
- You deduct: $23,225
- Tax savings to you: ~$8,593
- Their taxable income after standard deduction (~$16,100): $7,125
- Their tax: ~$713
Net family benefit:
💰 ~$7,880
That’s before state tax considerations… and before layering in self-employment savings.
Not bad for a “side strategy.”
Why This Works (And Why It Also Blows Up for People)
The IRS draws a hard line around one concept:
Is this a trade or business… or just a one-time activity?
If it becomes a “business”:
- You trigger self-employment tax
If it looks like wages:
- You trigger payroll tax
So the entire strategy lives in a narrow lane:
A legitimate, one-time, non-recurring project.
What Qualifies as a “Clean” Project
From the article (and confirmed by case law), strong examples include:
- Building a website
- Creating marketing materials
- Painting or improving a property
- Installing equipment or fixtures
Notice the theme:
✔ Defined
✔ Finite
✔ Not recurring
The IRS Isn’t Dumb: Classification Still Matters
You don’t get to just “declare” someone a contractor.
The IRS looks at:
- Behavioral control
- Financial control
- Relationship of the parties
Even a one-time worker can still be an employee if structured poorly.
Where Most People Screw This Up
Here’s where this strategy usually dies in the wild:
❌ The “Looks Like Payroll” Problem
- Weekly/hourly payments
- Time sheets
- Ongoing duties
Congrats. You just built a payroll system without realizing it.
❌ The “Accidental Business” Problem
- Multiple projects
- Ongoing availability
- Repeating work
Now your kid is “in business”… and self-employment tax walks in like it owns the place.
❌ The Documentation Black Hole
- No written scope
- Vague descriptions like “helped around the office”
- No proof of completion
That’s not a tax strategy. That’s a future audit exhibit.
How to Do This Like a Professional
This is where you separate amateurs from operators.
✔ Structure it like a contract
- Clear description
- Defined scope
- One-time deliverable
Example:
“Paint exterior of office building at [address]”
✔ Pay a lump sum
- Not hourly
- Not weekly
- Not recurring
✔ Have the business buy materials
Cleaner. More defensible. Less noise.
✔ Document completion
- Before/after photos
- Basic proof of work
✔ Pay reasonable market value
Too low = fake
Too high = suspicious
Goldilocks wins.
The Case Law Backbone (Why This Isn’t Just Creative Thinking)
The Tax Court has supported this approach when properly structured.
In Batok, a one-time window installation:
- Was not continuous
- Was not a business
- Avoided self-employment tax
Contrast that with cases where repeated activity turned into a trade or business… and taxes followed.
CFO Perspective: When This Strategy Makes Sense
This is not for everyone.
It works best when:
- You’re in a high tax bracket
- You have real project work that needs to be done anyway
- The family member has low or no income
- You can document like a professional, not a hobbyist
Where I Push Back (Because Someone Has To)
This strategy gets abused.
A lot.
If your plan is:
“I’ll just pay my kid $25k to exist near my business”
That’s not tax planning. That’s audit bait with a bow on it.
Final Thought: This Is a Scalpel, Not a Hammer
Used correctly, this is:
- Clean
- Defensible
- Highly efficient
Used poorly, it’s:
- Reclassified
- Re-taxed
- Potentially penalized
The difference isn’t the idea.
It’s the execution.
Sharp CFO Takeaway
If you can’t explain the project in one sentence, document it in two pages, and defend it in five minutes… don’t do it.