NFIB Tax Survey: High Taxes Remain a Significant Burden on Small Businesses
RALEIGH – The NFIB Research Center released today a new tax survey of small business owners assessing their biggest tax challenges, implications of potential changes to the tax code, and how tax policy impacts business operations. Most notably, federal income and payroll taxes are significant costs and administrative burdens for small businesses.
“High tax rates have been a long-standing concern and significant burden for small business owners,” said Holly Wade, Executive Director of NFIB’s Research Center. “The majority of owners report high business taxes impose both a significant financial and administrative burden to their businesses. It is crucial that Congress and the administration protect policies that ease those burdens on small businesses, such as making the Small Business Deduction (section 199A) permanent.”
State-specific survey data isn’t available, but NFIB State Director Gregg Thompson said, “This week, the North Carolina House will release its budget proposal and priorities. If they follow what the Senate passed, there will be several state tax reductions including cuts to the franchise tax, personal income tax, and other important changes that would certainly help small businesses in the state. With a $5 billion budget surplus, it is time to reduce taxes and help with the pandemic economic recovery.”
Key findings from the national survey include:
Ninety percent of owners reported federal business income tax was a financial burden for their business. Payroll and state/local income taxes were also highly reported burdens.
More than half of owners (52%) plan to sell their business when it’s time to move on and nearly one-third plan to pass their business to a family member (33%).
If capital gains tax were assessed at the time of business inheritance, owners were most likely (38%) to believe family members inheriting the business would take out a loan to pay the tax, another 26% anticipate that family members would sell part of the business.
Around four-in-five owners (78%) report that the majority of their total household income comes from their primary business.
Nearly half (48%) of owners indicated that the pending expiration of TCJA was a source of uncertainty for future business plans.
Nearly all owners (91%) reported using a professional tax preparer to file their most recent tax returns. Sixty-five percent reported they were most likely to use a tax professional for compliance-related reasons and 59% said the complexity of tax laws was also a major factor.
Federal business income taxes, payroll taxes, and state & local income taxes had the highest reports of posing a financial burden. Federal business income taxes were the most financially burdensome for owners. In addition, federal business income taxes also had the highest administrative burden for respondents. Owners reported that federal taxes, state & local taxes, and payroll taxes were reported to be an administrative burden along with a financial burden.
Most small business owners (52%) plan to sell their business when it’s time to move on and a third (33%) plan to pass it on within the family. If capital gains tax were assessed on inherited business assets, almost two-thirds of owners believe surviving family would sell part of their business or take out a loan to pay the tax.
Respondents were fairly distributed across revenue bands, with the median respondent earning $400,000 - $749,999 of revenue in 2020. However, net income was much more concentrated on the lower end of the spectrum with the median firm retaining $50,000 - $100,000 in 2020. A greater share of respondents experienced net income declines.
Most owners (78%) described the 2017 tax law as having a favorable impact on their business. Nearly half of respondents (48%) reported that uncertainty from the expiring provisions in the new tax law is impacting their business plans.
A majority of pass-through respondents (54%) were at least somewhat familiar with the Small Business Deduction (section 199A). Seventy-eight percent of owners reported that a majority of their total household income comes from their primary business.
Majority of respondents said they legally structure their business as an S-Corp (47%) followed by LLCs (27%) and C-Crops (17%). For federal tax purposes, LLCs file as S-Corps (31%), sole proprietorships (31%), and partnership (27%). Most owners with C-Corps structure their small business as such because it’s always been that way (legacy, 37%) or for liability purposes (37%).