Does a Single-Member LLC Need to File a Pennsylvania State Tax Return?

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A single-member LLC does not file a separate Pennsylvania state income tax return. Your LLC’s income flows directly to your personal return — that’s how disregarded entities work. But that doesn’t mean no filings at all. Here’s exactly what you’re responsible for.

Your LLC Is a Disregarded Entity

By default, a single-member LLC is a “disregarded entity” for both federal and Pennsylvania state tax purposes. The IRS and the PA Department of Revenue treat your LLC’s income as if it’s your personal income — there’s no LLC-specific tax return to file.

At the federal level, you report business income and expenses on Schedule C attached to your Form 1040. At the state level, the same principle applies: you report business income on PA Schedule C attached to your PA-40 Personal Income Tax Return. Pennsylvania’s flat personal income tax rate is 3.07%.

You are not filing on behalf of the LLC as an entity. You’re filing as yourself, with LLC income included on your personal return.

Federal Self-Employment Tax Still Applies

Being a disregarded entity doesn’t exempt you from self-employment (SE) tax. On your LLC’s net profit, you still owe:

  • 12.4% Social Security tax — on the first $168,600 of net self-employment income (2024 figure; adjusts annually)
  • 2.9% Medicare tax — no cap; higher earners add a 0.9% Additional Medicare Tax above $200,000
  • Total: 15.3% — half of this (7.65%) is deductible from your adjusted gross income

SE tax is separate from income tax. You report it on Schedule SE and it adds to your total federal tax bill. Many first-year LLC owners are surprised by this — they expected income tax but not the SE tax on top of it.

Pennsylvania Income Tax: What You Actually Owe

FilingRateOn What
PA-40 (state income tax)3.07% flatNet profit from LLC
Federal income tax10%–37% depending on bracketNet profit from LLC
Federal self-employment tax15.3%Net profit from LLC

Pennsylvania does not have a graduated income tax bracket — every dollar of taxable income is taxed at 3.07%, regardless of total income.

Pennsylvania also does not charge an annual franchise tax on LLCs. No annual fee to the state beyond the $7 annual report.

Make Quarterly Estimated Tax Payments

If your LLC is profitable, you’ll owe taxes throughout the year — not just in April. The IRS and Pennsylvania both require quarterly estimated payments if you expect to owe more than $1,000 (federal) or $246 (PA) for the year.

  • Federal estimated payments: IRS Form 1040-ES, due April 15, June 15, September 15, and January 15
  • PA estimated payments: PA-40 ES, same quarterly schedule

Skipping estimated payments doesn’t mean you avoid the tax — it means you pay it in April, often with a penalty. If you’re consistently profitable, set aside 25–30% of net income as a rough tax reserve.

If You Operate in Philadelphia

Philadelphia imposes its own Business Income and Receipts Tax (BIRT) on businesses with activity in the city — including services performed there, employees working there, or revenue sourced there. This applies regardless of where your LLC is formed or where you personally live.

The BIRT rate is 1.415% on gross receipts plus 5.81% on net income (2024 rates). There’s a $100,000 gross receipts exemption for qualifying small businesses. If your LLC has any Philadelphia activity, check with a CPA on whether you’re required to file.

Multi-Member LLCs File Differently

If your LLC has more than one member, it’s treated as a partnership by default — and that changes the tax filings entirely.

  • Federal: File Form 1065 (Partnership Return); each member receives a K-1 and reports their share on their personal 1040
  • Pennsylvania: File PA-20S/PA-65 (PA S Corporation/Partnership Return); each member reports their share on their PA-40

A multi-member LLC does file a state-level entity return, even though the LLC itself doesn’t pay income tax. The return is informational — it tracks who earned what.

Can You Reduce Self-Employment Tax with an S-Corp Election?

Yes, and this is one of the most common tax strategies for profitable single-member LLCs. When your LLC nets roughly $40,000 or more per year, electing S-Corp status with the IRS (via Form 2553) can lower your SE tax bill.

The mechanics: as an S-Corp, you pay yourself a reasonable salary (subject to payroll taxes) and take the remaining profit as a distribution — which is not subject to self-employment tax. The savings can be meaningful at higher income levels.

There are additional costs — payroll administration, Pennsylvania S-Corp filings, potentially a CPA — so it’s a math problem. It typically makes sense above $50,000–$60,000 in net LLC income.

Frequently Asked Questions

Pennsylvania personal income tax returns are due April 15, same as federal. If April 15 falls on a weekend or holiday, the deadline shifts to the next business day.

No. Pennsylvania does not charge an annual franchise tax on LLCs. The only state-level fees are the $125 one-time formation fee and the $7 annual report fee.

A net loss from your LLC reduces your total personal income on both your federal 1040 and PA-40. If the loss exceeds your other income, you may owe little or no income tax for the year. Federal rules also allow you to carry losses forward in certain situations.

Not legally required, but often worth it in the first year. A CPA familiar with Pennsylvania small business taxes can set up your chart of accounts correctly, identify deductible expenses you’d otherwise miss, and make sure you’re making estimated payments on the right schedule.

No. The PA Annual Report is a compliance filing with the Pennsylvania Department of State — not a tax return. It’s due September 30 each year, costs $7, and just confirms your LLC’s registered office and leadership. It has nothing to do with the Department of Revenue or income taxes.

If your LLC hires employees, you become responsible for payroll taxes: withholding federal and PA income tax from employee wages, paying employer-side Social Security and Medicare, filing quarterly 941s with the IRS, and registering with Pennsylvania for employer withholding and unemployment tax (UC) accounts.

Ready to take the first step?

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