Health insurance premiums can become powerful deductions when handled correctly. By reimbursing premiums through payroll, reporting them on your W-2, and choosing the right coverage strategy—whether individual plans, group policies, or HRAs—you'll reduce taxable income while staying compliant.
Most solopreneurs think health insurance is just another business expense, but S Corp health insurance is your strategic advantage for serious tax savings. When set up correctly, S Corporation owners can have the business deduct health insurance premiums and then personally claim the self-employed health insurance deduction on their individual tax returns, reducing taxable income while accessing the same strategic advantages that established corporations use.
Here's what changes when you get this right: You're about to discover how to choose the right coverage, maximize every deduction, and turn your health insurance premiums into meaningful tax savings for your business-of-one. No more guessing about compliance rules or missing out on legitimate tax breaks because the process feels overwhelming.
Lettuce's automated systems can handle the complex reporting requirements and payroll steps that make S Corp health insurance work seamlessly. Get started today and prepare to make your health coverage work as hard as you do.
S Corp status changes how you deduct health insurance. Unlike sole proprietors or LLC owners who deduct premiums directly, S Corp owners must run premiums through payroll to qualify. Because the IRS sees you as both employee and owner, your corporation has to pay or reimburse premiums and report them as wages on your W-2.
Done right, this creates a double benefit: your corporation deducts the premiums as a business expense, and you also claim the self-employed health insurance deduction personally.
Pro Tip: Automate premium reimbursements in your payroll system from day one. It locks in the W-2 reporting requirement and ensures you never miss a deduction. Master this step early, and what feels like extra work becomes a steady tax advantage year after year.
S Corps used to be intimidating for solopreneurs, but Lettuce has automated the entire experience. What used to be a maze of admin is now as simple as signing up.
Knowing the rules is one thing, but seeing the numbers makes the value clear. Imagine your S Corp pays $6,000 in annual health insurance premiums. Because those premiums flow through payroll and show up on your W-2, your business deducts the $6,000 as an expense.
On top of that, you personally claim the self-employed health insurance deduction. Together, these tax breaks can put $1,500 or more back in your pocket each year, about $125 a month you keep instead of sending to the IRS.
These savings scale with your premiums. If your coverage costs $12,000 a year for a family plan, the combined deductions could double your benefit—freeing up cash you can redirect into retirement contributions, business reinvestment, or simply reducing your personal tax burden. The key is making sure every step is handled through payroll and W-2 reporting so the IRS recognizes the deductions.
Pro Tip: Always run the math with your actual premiums. Even a few thousand dollars in annual costs can translate into meaningful monthly savings when handled correctly.
As an S Corp owner, you have three main ways to structure your health coverage: group health insurance plans, Health Reimbursement Arrangements (HRAs), and self-employed health insurance deductions. Each approach carries different tax advantages and requirements, so the best choice depends on your needs and how much complexity you want to manage.
Don’t let the word “group” mislead you: your S Corp can set up a plan even with only one employee (although some states require 2 participants). Group coverage can include medical, dental, and vision benefits, and when premiums are paid through payroll, they’re fully deductible. These plans may also offer better pricing than individual coverage, especially once you factor in tax savings.
HRAs allow businesses to reimburse medical expenses tax-free, but they’re less practical for solopreneurs. To qualify, you must be treated as an employee of your S Corp and be less than a 2% shareholder, and the IRS closely scrutinizes documentation. Some solos make it work if a spouse is an employee, but for most, HRAs introduce more complexity than benefit.
For many business-of-one S Corps, individual coverage is the simplest and most effective option. You buy your own plan, have the S Corp reimburse you through payroll, and then claim the deduction on your personal tax return. This approach gives you complete flexibility in choosing coverage while still unlocking the full tax savings.
Pro Tip: Always have your S Corp handle reimbursements in the same tax year you pay premiums. This small detail keeps you compliant and ensures you capture the full deduction.
Getting health insurance right as an S Corp owner isn’t complicated if you follow the right sequence. Here’s a step-by-step roadmap to set up your coverage and unlock the tax savings.
Step 1: Set your reasonable compensation.
Establish your shareholder-employee salary and start payroll. The IRS expects this to be in place before you treat premiums as an employee benefit.
Step 2: Choose your coverage path.
Decide between an individual plan reimbursed through payroll or a true group plan. Pick the option that fits your needs, budget, and admin tolerance.
Step 3: Check small-employer tax credits.
If you have fewer than 25 employees and use a qualified small group plan, you may be eligible for a credit that can cover a significant portion of premiums.
Step 4: Route premiums through payroll.
Have the S Corp pay or reimburse premiums and include the amount in Box 1 of your W-2. For a more-than-2% owner, it is not subject to Social Security or Medicare wages. This is the trigger that unlocks your personal health insurance deduction.
Step 5: Align timing.
Reimburse premiums in the same tax year they are paid so records match and deductions are clean.
Step 6: Document everything.
Keep the policy, invoices, proof of payment, reimbursement entries, payroll reports, and W-2 copies. Good records protect the deduction.
Step 7: Reconcile at year-end.
Confirm that the total premiums paid or reimbursed match the payroll and W-2 reporting, then claim the self-employed health insurance deduction on your return.
With Lettuce, every step is handled automatically, from payroll setup to W-2 reporting, so you can capture the full tax benefit without the compliance headaches.
Smart solopreneurs ask the right questions about S Corp health insurance. Here are the answers that save you money.
Have your S Corp pay or reimburse premiums through payroll and report them as wages on your W-2. Then claim the self-employed health insurance deduction on your personal return.
Individual health plans deliver the most flexibility and cost-effectiveness for solopreneurs. You buy the coverage yourself, have your S Corp reimburse you through payroll, and claim the deduction on your personal return. Group plans work too if you find a carrier that offers them to single-employee businesses, though they typically cost more and require additional management.
Most solopreneurs can't use HRAs because they require you to have employees other than yourself and your spouse. If you do qualify, an HRA lets your S Corp reimburse medical expenses tax-free, but the setup and compliance requirements are substantial. For most businesses-of-one, the self-employed health insurance deduction is simpler and more accessible.
Paying premiums personally instead of running them through payroll is the most expensive mistake you can make. Shareholders who own more than 2% of their health insurance premiums must have their health insurance premiums reported correctly to avoid IRS scrutiny, even though it increases their reported wages. This is exactly how the system works—the payroll step unlocks the deduction.
deductions?
You need payroll that properly tracks health insurance reimbursements; this isn't optional. Lettuce's integrated system handles formation, payroll, tax filings, and compliance all in one platform, replacing the manual work and cost of multiple vendors.
Health insurance doesn’t have to be another line of stress on your to-do list. When you run premiums through your S Corp the right way, you turn a personal cost into a business deduction and unlock a second deduction on your personal return. That’s not a loophole, but it’s how the IRS designed the S Corps to work, and it’s one of the smartest ways solopreneurs can cut their tax bills.
The challenge isn’t knowing the rule. Instead, it’s following every step without slipping up on payroll, W-2 reporting, or recordkeeping. Missing one detail will cause you to lose the benefit. That’s why systems matter.
Lettuce’s Complete Financial System for Businesses-of-One handles the details automatically, from payroll setup to year-end reporting, so you don’t leave money on the table. Get started with Lettuce today and make your S Corp work the way it was meant to.