MHP Owner Salary vs Distributions: What Makes More Tax Sense






MHP Owner Salary vs Distributions: What Makes More Tax Sense | The MHP Accountant®

MHP Owner Salary vs Distributions: What Makes More Tax Sense

By Harry Shurek, EA | The MHP Accountant®

You structured your mobile home park operations with an S-Corp management company. Someone told you it would save you on self-employment tax. They were right — but only if you do it correctly. And doing it correctly means understanding one of the most audited positions in the IRS’s small business playbook: the salary vs. distribution split.

Get it wrong and you’re looking at back taxes, penalties, and interest on years of improper distributions. Get it right and you’re saving thousands annually in SE tax while maximizing your §199A qualified business income deduction.

This post breaks down every dimension of the salary vs. distributions question for MHP operators specifically — because running a mobile home park is not the same as running a dental practice or a consulting firm, and the reasonable compensation analysis is different.

When This Question Applies to MHP Owners

The salary vs. distribution question only matters if you have an S-Corporation involved in your ownership structure. For most MHP operators, this surfaces as a management company S-Corp that charges a management fee to the park-owning entity (typically an LLC taxed as a partnership or a land trust).

If your MHP ownership sits entirely in an LLC taxed as a disregarded entity or partnership — with no S-Corp in the structure — then you’re paying self-employment tax on all net self-employment income by default, and the salary conversation doesn’t apply yet. But it might be worth having.

The Basic S-Corp Advantage: Self-employment taxes (15.3% on the first dollar, 2.9% Medicare above the Social Security wage base) apply to W-2 wages from your S-Corp — but NOT to S-Corp distributions. By paying yourself a reasonable salary and taking the rest as a distribution, you reduce the portion of your income subject to SE tax. The catch: the IRS requires that salary to be “reasonable.”

The SE Tax Stakes for MHP Operators

Self-employment tax consists of the employee and employer portions of Social Security (12.4% combined) and Medicare (2.9% combined), totaling 15.3% on the first $168,600 of net SE income (2024 figure; the Social Security wage base adjusts annually). Above that threshold, the 2.9% Medicare tax continues, plus a 0.9% Additional Medicare Tax if your income exceeds applicable thresholds.

For an MHP management company generating $200,000 in net income, the difference between running everything through W-2 wages versus a reasonable salary plus distributions can be substantial. An improperly structured S-Corp that takes zero salary and 100% distributions is flagged routinely by IRS algorithms. An improperly paid W-2 that’s too low achieves short-term savings at the cost of significant audit exposure.

IRS Reasonable Compensation: What It Means for an MHP Operator

The IRS does not publish a formula for reasonable compensation. The standard, established across decades of Tax Court cases, is what a hypothetical employer would pay a hypothetical employee to perform the same services in an arm’s-length transaction.

For a mobile home park operator, the relevant services include:

  • Day-to-day management oversight of the park
  • Tenant relations and lease enforcement
  • Vendor management and capital project oversight
  • Financial reporting and bank management
  • Acquisition due diligence and lender coordination

The analysis depends heavily on hours worked, number of parks managed, complexity of operations (POH portfolio vs. pure lot-rent), and comparable market salaries for property management professionals in your region. A self-managed operator running a 100-lot park full-time is in a different position than a passive investor who owns a third-party-managed park and spends 5 hours per month reviewing reports.

Documentation Is Your Defense: The IRS wins reasonable compensation cases when owners can’t demonstrate what services they actually performed and what those services are worth. Keep a service log. Benchmark your compensation against property management salaries in your market. The MHP Accountant® helps clients build and maintain this documentation annually.

The §199A QBI Deduction Interaction

Section 199A allows qualifying pass-through business owners to deduct up to 20% of qualified business income (QBI). For MHP operators structured with an S-Corp management company, this deduction applies to QBI from the S-Corp — but QBI excludes W-2 wages paid by the S-Corp to its owner-employees.

This creates a direct tension: the higher your W-2 salary, the lower your QBI and the smaller your §199A deduction. At the same time, the higher your salary, the more SE tax you’re paying (which §199A partially offsets). Finding the optimal split requires running the numbers both ways.

The §199A deduction has limitations for higher-income owners. If your taxable income exceeds the applicable threshold (adjusted annually by the IRS), your §199A deduction may be limited based on W-2 wages paid and the unadjusted basis of qualified property. For S-Corp owners above the threshold, paying a reasonable W-2 salary actually helps preserve the §199A deduction by increasing the W-2 wage limitation.

This is why a blanket strategy — “always minimize salary” — is wrong. The optimal answer depends on your taxable income level, your total W-2 wages paid (including to employees other than yourself), and your qualified property basis.

How to Determine Reasonable Comp for Your Specific MHP Operation

A defensible reasonable compensation analysis for an MHP operator typically involves three inputs:

  1. Time tracking: Document the hours you spend on management activities vs. investment activities. Time spent analyzing acquisitions or managing your balance sheet is investor activity, not operator activity.
  2. Market benchmarking: Research what a property manager at a comparable community would earn in your market. Online salary databases (BLS, industry surveys) provide reference ranges. Third-party property management rates (8–12% of EGI for most parks) provide an alternative benchmark.
  3. Services scope: Operators who self-manage a POH-heavy park, handle resident relations, coordinate maintenance, and manage collections are doing more compensable work than someone whose third-party manager handles all day-to-day operations.

The number that emerges from this analysis should be documented in writing before you file, not constructed after an IRS inquiry arrives.

IRS Reclassification Risk

If the IRS reclassifies distributions as wages, the consequences include back SE taxes, the employer’s share of payroll taxes, interest, and accuracy-related penalties. The statute of limitations for payroll tax assessments can extend beyond the standard three-year income tax window in cases of substantial understatement.

The IRS uses automated matching to flag S-Corps with distributions significantly disproportionate to wages. Parks with strong management company revenue and zero or nominal W-2 wages draw scrutiny. Audit risk in this area is real and has increased as the IRS has received additional funding for small business compliance.

State Tax Considerations

State tax treatment of S-Corp wages vs. distributions varies. Some states impose their own payroll taxes or treat S-Corp income differently from federal. States with no income tax (like Florida and Texas — two active MHP markets) simplify the analysis. States with significant income tax rates or separate S-Corp franchise taxes add another variable.

Additionally, some states have minimum franchise taxes on S-Corps based on income, payroll, or assets. Ensure your management company’s state-level obligations are reviewed alongside the federal strategy.

Comparison: Salary vs. Distribution Tax Treatment

Factor W-2 Salary (Owner) S-Corp Distribution
SE / Payroll Tax Subject to full FICA Not subject to SE tax
§199A QBI Inclusion Excluded from QBI Included in QBI
Retirement Plan Contribution Base Counts as compensation Does not count
IRS Scrutiny if Disproportionate Low (high salary is fine) High if salary is below reasonable comp
Social Security Credits Accrues credits No credits earned
Unemployment / Workers Comp Covered Not covered

See also our post on year-end tax planning for how to coordinate your salary determination with Q4 payroll processing.

A Note on Pension and Retirement Plan Contributions

Your W-2 compensation is the foundation for calculating retirement plan contribution limits — SEP-IRA, Solo 401(k), and defined benefit plans. If you want to maximize tax-deferred retirement contributions, you need meaningful W-2 wages. An aggressive low-salary strategy sacrifices retirement plan headroom along with Social Security credits.

For high-income MHP operators looking to shelter significant income, a defined benefit plan funded through the S-Corp payroll can be a powerful tool — but it requires adequate W-2 wages to support the contribution.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does the salary vs. distribution question apply if my MHP is in an LLC?

The salary vs. distribution analysis applies specifically to S-Corporations. If your MHP is owned by an LLC taxed as a disregarded entity or partnership, and you have no S-Corp in your structure, all net self-employment income is subject to SE tax. To access the SE tax savings, you would need to elect S-Corp status for an entity that provides services to the park — typically a management company LLC making an S-Corp election.

How does the IRS determine if my MHP management salary is “reasonable”?

The IRS looks at the services actually performed, the time spent, the complexity of operations, and what an arm’s-length employer would pay for equivalent work. For MHP operators, comparable market data includes third-party property management rates and regional property manager salary surveys. The analysis is fact-specific — two parks of the same size can justify different reasonable comp figures based on how actively the owner is involved in operations.

What happens if the IRS reclassifies my S-Corp distributions as wages?

The IRS can reclassify distributions as wages and assess the employer and employee portions of FICA taxes on the reclassified amount, plus interest and accuracy-related penalties. The company also becomes liable for failure-to-deposit penalties if payroll taxes weren’t remitted on time. In serious cases, the IRS can look back multiple years. Proper documentation of your reasonable compensation determination is your primary defense.

Does taking a lower salary hurt my §199A deduction?

It depends on your income level. For owners below the §199A taxable income thresholds, a lower W-2 salary increases QBI and the potential §199A deduction. For owners above the phase-in thresholds, the §199A deduction is limited by W-2 wages paid — so a very low salary can actually reduce the deduction. The optimal salary requires running both calculations at your specific income level.

Can I change my salary mid-year if my park’s income changes significantly?

Yes, S-Corp owner-employee salaries can be adjusted prospectively during the year. However, aggressive mid-year adjustments — particularly large drops in salary coinciding with high distribution periods — draw scrutiny. The IRS looks at the annual totals and the pattern. A year-end bonus through payroll is generally safer than a retroactive salary reduction. Work with your MHP accountant to model this before Q4.

Your MHP Structure Should Be Working as Hard as Your Park

The MHP Accountant® reviews owner compensation strategies for mobile home park operators every day. We model the salary/distribution split, document your reasonable compensation, and make sure your S-Corp structure actually delivers the savings it was designed for.

Call 844-PARK-TAX or email info@themhpaccountant.com

Book a Free Strategy Call

External Resource: See IRS.gov — S Corporation Compensation and Medical Insurance Issues for the IRS’s guidance on reasonable compensation.


Disclaimer: This post is for educational purposes only and does not constitute tax, legal, or financial advice. Tax law is complex and changes frequently. Every MHP owner’s situation is unique. Consult a qualified tax professional before making decisions based on this content. The MHP Accountant® is available for individual consultations at the contact information above.


About the Author

Harry Shurek, EA

Harry Shurek is an Enrolled Agent and founder of The MHP Accountant — the only CPA firm built exclusively for mobile home park owners. Learn more →

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