Insights and Resources
Hiring family members in your small business: tax advantages and mistakes to avoid
Article | June 02, 2026
Authored by Your Firm LLC
You may already know that hiring a family member in your small business can create tax advantages. In the right situation, the arrangement can support a business deduction, shift income within the family, potentially reduce payroll taxes, and create earned income for retirement savings.
But, it’s not as simple as just putting a relative on payroll. You have to identify a legitimate business role, pay reasonable compensation, and structure the arrangement in a way that matches the tax rules. That’s where many owners get into trouble. The tax benefits can be meaningful, but only when the arrangement is handled with the same discipline as any other employment relationship.
Start with the right question
Hiring a relative works best when you start with substance. Is there real work in your business that a family member can perform?
That’s how these arrangements usually begin. A child might be able to help with inventory, filing, basic marketing tasks, or seasonal work. A spouse may already be handling bookkeeping, scheduling, or client communication. A parent may be helping with administrative support. The tax benefit is not the reason the role exists; it’s the byproduct of formalizing a role the business actually needs.
Once that role exists, formality matters. The IRS looks to the actual facts of the relationship, not just what you call it. A written job description, time tracking, reasonable pay, and proper payroll reporting help establish that this is real employment, not a personal payment dressed up as a wage.
Where the tax advantages can be real
Wages paid for legitimate services are generally deductible whether the employee is related to you or not. The opportunity here is that, in the right circumstances, hiring a family member can stack several planning benefits at once.
You may be able to deduct the wages at the business level, move income to a family member in a lower tax bracket, reduce payroll taxes if you are hiring a child through the right type of entity, and create earned income that can support an IRA contribution. That combined effect is what makes the strategy valuable.
But those results depend heavily on structure and execution.
Hiring your child
Hiring your child is where the tax planning opportunity is usually strongest, but only when the facts support it.
In a sole proprietorship, or in a partnership in which each partner is a parent of the child, wages paid to a child under 18 are generally exempt from Social Security and Medicare taxes, and wages paid to a child under 21 are generally exempt from FUTA. Those wages are still subject to income tax withholding rules. If the business is a corporation, or a partnership in which even one partner is not that child’s parent, the special exception generally doesn’t apply.
That can add up quickly in practice. Let’s say your sole proprietorship pays your 16-year-old child $10,000 for legitimate summer and after-school work, and the pay is reasonable for the job. The business may deduct the $10,000 wage, reducing the income that would otherwise flow through to you as the owner. Because the child is under 18 and employed in a parent’s sole proprietorship, those wages are generally not subject to Social Security and Medicare taxes. Using the current combined 15.3% FICA rate, that’s about $1,530 of payroll tax avoided.
The income-tax side can be just as meaningful. If that same $10,000 had remained in the business, it generally would have flowed through to you and been taxed at your marginal rate. If your combined marginal tax rate is around 30%, that is about $3,000 of tax on the same $10,000. By contrast, if your child has no other income, a $10,000 wage would generally be fully sheltered by the dependent standard deduction for 2026, which is earned income plus $450, up to $16,100. In that fact pattern, the child would typically owe no federal income tax on the $10,000. So between the income-tax shift and the payroll-tax savings, the family-level benefit on $10,000 of wages could easily exceed $4,500, depending on your tax bracket and overall facts.
And the benefit doesn’t have to end there. If the child is otherwise eligible, some of those wages may also be contributed to an IRA. For 2026, the IRA contribution limit is $7,500, or the amount of the child’s taxable compensation if less. That can turn a short-term payroll decision into long-term tax-advantaged savings. And those dollars aren’t necessarily untouchable for decades. IRA rules generally include exceptions to the 10% early distribution penalty for certain higher education expenses and up to $10,000 for a first-time home purchase, although a traditional IRA withdrawal is generally still taxable.
None of this means any amount of pay works. It still has to be reasonable. Paying a teenager an inflated salary for minor tasks is exactly the kind of fact pattern that turns planning into a problem.
Hiring your spouse or parent
Hiring your spouse is usually less about a special payroll-tax break and more about aligning compensation with reality. Wages paid to a spouse in your trade or business are generally subject to income tax withholding and Social Security and Medicare taxes, but not FUTA. That can still matter if your spouse is already doing meaningful work and formal compensation may support retirement plans or benefit participation that depends on employee status, compensation, and plan terms.
Hiring a parent can also make sense, but the rules are different. In a child’s trade or business, wages paid to a parent are generally subject to income tax withholding and Social Security and Medicare taxes, but not FUTA. As with any family hire, the work has to be real, the pay has to be reasonable, and the records need to support the arrangement.
The mistakes to avoid
The biggest risk in family payroll planning is not that you hired a relative. It’s failing to treat the arrangement like real employment.
The first mistake is unreasonable pay. If compensation is inflated, poorly documented, or disconnected from the work performed, the deduction becomes harder to defend.
The second is worker misclassification. A family relationship does not let you skip the employee-versus-contractor analysis. If you control what work is done and how it is done, the worker may well be an employee.
The third is ignoring labor law. Tax rules and employment rules are not the same system, especially when minors are involved. Federal youth-employment rules may allow children to work in a parent-owned business in some cases, but hazardous occupation restrictions still apply, and state law may be stricter.
A fourth issue to review is the impact on any retirement plan your business already sponsors. If you have a 401(k) or other qualified plan, adding relatives to payroll can affect the analysis because family attribution rules may cause a spouse, child, parent, or grandparent of a 5% owner to be treated as a 5% owner for highly compensated employee purposes. That can affect nondiscrimination testing and other plan compliance considerations, so it’s worth reviewing before you add family members to payroll.
The simplest way to protect yourself is to create the same paper trail you would want for any employee. Write down the role. Describe the duties. Track hours. Use payroll. Pay by check or direct deposit, not with vague year-end adjustments. Match the wage to market reality.
The real planning opportunity
Hiring a family member can be smart tax planning, but only when it reflects a real job, a reasonable wage, and correct payroll treatment. The opportunity is not in treating relatives casually. It’s in treating them formally enough that the tax benefits are actually defensible.
If you’re considering hiring a family member, this is a good issue to review before you run payroll, not after. Our office can help you evaluate whether the role is structured properly, whether the wages are reasonable, and whether the expected tax benefits actually apply to your entity and family situation. Reach out if you would like guidance before putting a relative on payroll.
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