The company's ongoing income tax does not change just because a trust owns it. A US Employee Ownership Trust (EOT) is a private trust holding the company's shares. Apart from the profit-sharing mechanic below, it is taxed like any other shareholder, and the operating company keeps filing and paying federal and applicable state income tax exactly as its entity type requires.
- C corporation: the company pays corporate income tax on its profits at the entity level.
- S corporation or other pass-through: taxable income flows through to the shareholder rather than being taxed at the company level. One sharp contrast with ESOPs: a 100% ESOP-owned S corporation pays no federal income tax on its profits, and there is no EOT equivalent. Who bears the tax depends on the trust's structure. For an EOT, an S corporation's shares realistically have to sit in a grantor trust, in which case the founder still reports the company's income personally; a non-grantor trust stands on its own tax footing but generally means the company cannot stay an S corporation and may convert to a C corporation. So whether to convert turns on the grantor-versus-non-grantor design, not on the EOT label.
Profit-sharing is the main recurring tax event. An EOT-owned company typically shares ongoing profits with employees, paid at the corporate level as compensation.
- For the company: these payments are generally a deductible business expense (subject to reasonable-compensation rules), reducing taxable income for the year.
- For employees: cash profit-sharing is taxed as ordinary income, treated like a bonus and subject to payroll taxes; amounts routed into a qualified 401(k) follow normal retirement-plan rules instead.
Payroll and operating taxes are unchanged. The company still withholds and remits employment taxes on wages and profit-sharing, and still owes any sales, property, and other state and local taxes its operations trigger.
One US-versus-UK clarification: the UK gives EOTs a statutory capital-gains exemption on qualifying sales to the trust; the US has no comparable break, on either the sale or ongoing distributions. A few states have floated EOT tax bills, but those are proposals, not current law.
This is general education, not legal or tax advice; the right answer depends on your entity type, state, and deal structure, so confirm with a CPA or an attorney experienced in employee-ownership transitions.
If you have run an EOT-owned company through a tax year, please refine this with the entity-type or state-specific details you saw in practice.