If you're trading prop firms seriously — running multiple Apex accounts, grinding TopStep combines, scaling Tradeify or FTMO challenges — your tax situation is much closer to a small business than a hobby. And almost every serious prop trader we work with eventually hits the same wall: the IRS doesn't see prop firm income the way it sees trading gains. It sees it as self-employment income, and they tax it like it.

The fix most CPAs miss is structural. By running your prop trading through an LLC (and often electing S-Corp tax treatment), you can legally cut your self-employment tax bill, protect every dollar of evaluation fees as a deductible business expense, and present a much cleaner picture to the IRS if they ever look closely at your return.

The Real Cost of Trading Prop Firms on Personal

Most prop traders start the same way: they buy an evaluation under their personal name, pass it (or fail it and try again), and eventually start receiving 1099-NECs from Apex, TopStep, FTMO, or similar firms. That income hits Schedule C, and from there — full self-employment tax (15.3%), no liability protection, no real entity behind the activity.

For a trader pulling $80,000 in payouts in a year, that's roughly $11,300 in self-employment tax alone — before federal income tax even enters the picture. And we routinely see prop traders spending $10,000+ per year on evaluations, resets, and platform fees that they're either not deducting or are deducting in a way that draws attention.

⚠️ The IRS scrutiny problem. When a personal Schedule C shows $40K of "consulting" income from prop firms with $10K of "miscellaneous" deductions for evaluation fees, it doesn't look like a real business. It looks like a hobby with deductions. An LLC running the same activity with a business bank account, EIN, and clean books looks like exactly what it is — a trading business.

What an LLC Actually Does for a Prop Trader

An LLC by itself is a state-level legal entity. It doesn't change how you're taxed by default — a single-member LLC is a "disregarded entity," meaning your prop income still flows to Schedule C. So why bother?

The S-Corp Election Is Where the Money Is

This is the part most traders haven't been told about. Once you have an LLC, you can file Form 2553 to have it taxed as an S-Corporation. Now your prop firm income flows through a different mechanism:

Real Example

$120,000 prop firm payouts.

On Schedule C (no entity): Full $120K hit with 15.3% SE tax = ~$18,360 in SE tax.

Through an S-Corp: $50K reasonable salary (15.3% payroll = $7,650) + $70K distribution (no SE tax) = ~$7,650 in SE/payroll tax.

Net savings: ~$10,710 per year.

That's before you add back the deductions for retirement plan contributions (Solo 401(k), SEP-IRA), health insurance premiums paid through the S-Corp, and the QBI deduction — all of which compound the savings.

When LLC Alone Is Enough — And When You Need the S-Corp

The S-Corp election adds complexity: payroll, separate tax return (1120-S), reasonable compensation analysis. It's not free. So when does it actually make sense?

What About Multi-Account Apex Setups?

Apex traders running 5, 10, even 20 PA accounts have a particularly strong case for entity formation. The eval costs scale fast — $10,000–$30,000 a year is common — and the IRS is increasingly looking at large 1099 totals from a single prop firm. Running everything through an LLC with clean monthly bookkeeping changes the conversation entirely if your return ever gets a second look.

Pro tip: Start the entity before you have a profitable year. Eval fees paid through the LLC starting January 1 are deductible business expenses. Eval fees paid personally before you formed the LLC are messier and harder to defend.

What State Should You Form In?

For 95% of prop traders, the answer is your home state. The "Wyoming LLC" and "Delaware LLC" hype you see online is mostly aimed at people running operating businesses with employees in multiple states — it doesn't apply to a solo trader. Forming out-of-state usually creates the obligation to register as a "foreign LLC" in your home state anyway, which means you pay both state's fees.

The exception: California, which charges an $800 minimum franchise tax annually on every LLC, regardless of income. Some California traders form the LLC in Wyoming or Nevada to avoid this — but you have to weigh the franchise tax against the cost and complexity of foreign registration.

What Setup Actually Costs

State filing fees vary widely — from about $50 (Kentucky, Mississippi) to $300+ (Massachusetts, Tennessee). On top of that, a proper LLC setup typically includes:

All-in, expect $200 to $800+ depending on your state and what level of bundling you want, plus annual state fees and the California $800 franchise tax if applicable.

Want a CPA to Walk You Through This?

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Setup typically runs $200–$500 + state filing fees · most all-in under $800
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The Mistakes That Make This Backfire

An LLC done wrong is worse than no LLC at all. The traps we see most often:

The Bottom Line

If you're a hobby prop trader making a few thousand a year, you don't need an entity. If you're spending real money on evaluations, generating real payouts, and treating prop trading like the business it is — you almost certainly do. The combination of LLC + S-Corp election is one of the highest-leverage tax moves available to active traders, and it's designed specifically to be used by people in your situation.

The single most expensive mistake we see is waiting. Every month of prop firm income running through your personal Schedule C is a month of unnecessary self-employment tax and weakening deductions. Get the structure in place, and the entire next year of trading runs through it cleanly.

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