Note: Payroll Features Are Available Only for S Corp Tier Members
Payroll functionality — including adding and managing 401(k) deductions — is currently available only for members on Collective’s S Corp tier. If you are on the LLC tier, payroll is not included in your plan.
Overview
This article continues from Payroll Overview & Getting Started at Collective. Once you’ve agreed to Gusto’s Terms of Service and begun the payroll setup flow, the next steps guide you through answering key assessment questions, migrating any prior payroll, determining reasonable compensation, and completing Gusto onboarding. The sections below follow the same order you will see inside your Collective dashboard.
Step 2: Initial Assessment - Payroll History & Benefits
Before starting the technical setup, we need to understand your payroll and benefits history. This assessment helps us provide the right setup path for your specific situation and ensures all historical data and benefits are properly categorized.
What You'll See
When you start the payroll setup process, you'll be asked two questions that determine your setup path.
Question 1: Have you run payroll before?
What we're asking: Have you previously processed payroll for yourself or employees through another payroll provider (such as ADP, Paychex, QuickBooks Payroll, another Gusto account, etc.)?
Why we're asking: If you've run payroll earlier this calendar year, we need to migrate your historical payroll data to ensure:
- Accurate year-to-date (YTD) tax calculations
- Proper quarterly and annual tax reporting
- No duplicate tax payments or filings
- Seamless transition without compliance gaps
- Correct W-2 generation at year-end
Your options:
- YES, I've run payroll before → Continue to Step 2 (Payroll Migration)
- This includes payroll run anywhere from January 1st of the current year through today
- Even if it was just one or two payrolls, select YES
- NO, this is my first time running payroll → Skip directly to Step 3 (Reasonable Compensation Review)
- You've never processed payroll for this business
- Your S Corp is newly formed and this is your first payroll setup
- Any previous payroll was in a prior calendar year with a different business
Important: If you ran payroll in a previous calendar year but not yet this year, select NO. Historical data from prior years doesn't need to be migrated for current year tax calculations.
Question 2: Are you enrolled in any benefits?
What we're asking: Do you currently have any of the following benefits set up for yourself?
Benefits that require special handling:
- Medical insurance (health insurance coverage)
- Dental insurance
- Vision insurance
- Solo 401(k) (individual retirement account)
- SEP IRA (Simplified Employee Pension)
Why we're asking: Benefits require careful categorization in your payroll setup to ensure:
- Proper tax treatment: Some benefits are pre-tax, others are post-tax
- Correct deductions: Benefits must be deducted at the right time and amount
- Compliance: Deductibility of health insurance and retirement contributions may have specific IRS rules
- Integration: Benefits must sync between Collective, Gusto, and your bookkeeping
- Year-end reporting: Benefits appear on your W-2 and may affect your tax return
Step 3: Payroll Migration (If You've Run Payroll Before)
If you've used a previous payroll provider this calendar year, Collective works with Gusto to migrate all your historical data seamlessly. This ensures continuity in your tax reporting and prevents compliance issues.
Why Migration Matters
Without proper migration, you could face:
- Incorrect year-to-date tax calculations
- Double-payment of payroll taxes
- Gaps in quarterly tax filings
- Inaccurate W-2s at year-end
With proper migration, you get:
- Seamless transition with no compliance gaps
- Accurate cumulative tax calculations
- Complete payroll history in one place
- Correct quarterly and annual reporting
- Peace of mind that everything is handled correctly
How the Migration Works
The migration process is designed to be secure and thorough. Here's what happens:
Step 1: You Grant Access
- Add gepdataservices@gusto.com to your previous third party payroll provider as a “Full Access Administrator” or the equivalent that allows the user to see all employee data, including compensation (typically hidden for limited access admins).
Step 2: Gusto's Secure Access
What happens behind the scenes:
- The Gusto migration team receives your authorization
- They generate a unique, strong password using their password management tool (1Password)
- This ensures secure, temporary access to your previous provider
- Access is limited to only what's needed for data retrieval
- All access is logged and monitored for security
Your role: You don't need to do anything during this step. Gusto handles the technical access securely.
Timeline: Secure access is typically established within 1-2 business days of your authorization and migration is complete in the next 1-2 weeks.
Step 4: Review Payroll Tax Savings Strategies
Before finalizing your payroll setup, it's crucial to determine your reasonable compensation - the salary you'll pay yourself as an S Corp owner. This is one of the most consequential financial decisions you'll make for your business, as it directly impacts your tax savings and IRS compliance.
Why Reasonable Compensation Matters
Reasonable compensation isn't just a suggestion—it's an IRS requirement for S Corp owners. Understanding this concept is essential to maximizing your tax benefits while staying compliant and crucial for following reasons as well:
- Tax Optimization: Proper salary structuring maximizes payroll tax savings
- Financial Impact: This number directly affects both your personal and company finances
- Distribution Strategy: You can take additional profits as distributions (which have lower tax rates than salary)
What You'll See
In this step, you'll access Collective's Reasonable Salary Calculator (powered by Gusto) and work through a guided process to determine an appropriate salary for yourself.
Why Reasonable Compensation Matters
Reasonable compensation isn't just a suggestion—it's an IRS requirement for S Corp owners. Understanding this concept is essential to maximizing your tax benefits while staying compliant.
What is "Reasonable Compensation"?
Reasonable compensation is a salary comparable to what other employers would pay for similar services in your industry and role.
Factors that determine reasonable compensation:
- Your role and responsibilities
- Industry standards and benchmarks
- Geographic location
- Company profitability
Using the Reasonable Salary Calculator
Collective provides a sophisticated calculator that analyzes these factors using real data to recommend a salary range based on:
- IRS guidelines and requirements
- Occupational data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics
- Your specific role and industry
- Market compensation data
Step 5: Complete Gusto Onboarding
Once you've determined your reasonable compensation, Gusto's guided onboarding experience takes over. This is where the integration between Collective and Gusto really shines - most of the hard work is already done for you.
What to Expect
Seamless, Pre-filled Experience: Thanks to the integration between Collective and Gusto, most of your company and personal details will be automatically pre-filled for your review. You won't need to re-enter information you've already provided to Collective.
- Company information from your Collective account
- EIN and business registration details
- Owner/employee information
- Reasonable compensation amount from Step 4
Your role: Simply review the pre-filled information for accuracy and complete any remaining fields. This typically takes 10-15 minutes.
Onboarding Steps
1. Company Addresses Review
What you'll see: Your company addresses pre-populated from Collective
What to do:
- Verify mailing and filing addresses are correct and update if necessary.
- Select “I’ve added all addresses” to move forward.
Why it matters: Accurate company information ensures proper tax filing and compliance with federal and state requirements.
2. Update federal tax details
What you'll see: Your company federal details pre-populated from Collective
What to do:
- Verify EIN, tax payer type and legal name are correct and update if necessary.
- Select “Save & continue” to move forward.
Why it matters: Accurate company information ensures proper tax filing and compliance with federal and state requirements.
3. Company Industry
What you'll see: Your company industry code pre-populated from Collective
What to do:
- Verify NAICS code is closely aligned with the industry that best matches your business.
- Select “Save & continue” to move forward.
4. Bank Account Setup
What you'll see: You connect your business account for running payroll. This account must be a checking account and other types are not accepted.
What to do:
- Select Plaid to connect your account or enter details manually.
- Pre-loading bank account details is coming soon! This will automatically pick up the business bank account that you have connected with Collective earlier.
Important: This account must have sufficient funds available by the payroll debit date. Set up alerts in your banking app to avoid insufficient funds.
Pro tip: Some business owners prefer to maintain a separate "payroll account" to better track payroll expenses and ensure funds are always available.
5. Add Yourself as an Employee
What you'll see: You'll already be added as the first employee (owner-employee) with basic information pre-filled from your Collective account.
What you need to review and complete::
-
Verify Personal Information:
- Confirm your full legal name matches your Social Security card exactly
- Verify your date of birth and start date are correct
- Confirm work address - Please ensure you enter your physical work location.
- If you work from home, provide your home address.
- If you work from an office, enter the office address.
- Check that your SSN is accurate (this is encrypted but critical for tax reporting)
- Confirm your email address for payroll notifications
-
Verify Compensation:
- Annual salary: The reasonable compensation amount you determined in Step 3 will be pre-filled
- Review this amount to ensure it's correct
- As an owner-employee, you need to be 2% shareholder. So this option should stay selected.
- Gusto will automatically calculate your per-payroll amount based on your selected pay schedule
-
Verify Home Address
- Confirm home address - Please make sure this is your physical home address
-
Verify federal tax withholding
- Select your filing status (single, married filing jointly, etc.)
- Indicate number of dependents (if applicable)
- Choose whether to have extra tax withheld (recommended if you have other income)
- Gusto will calculate your federal income tax withholding based on your selections
-
Verify state tax details
- Complete your state's withholding form (format varies by state)
- Some states use the federal W-4, others have their own form
- Gusto will guide you through your state's specific requirements
- If your state has income tax, ensure proper withholding is set up
-
Add Payment method:
- Use direct deposit to connect your personal bank account via Plaid OR
- Add your personal bank account for receiving paycheck
- Enter your bank name, routing number, and account number
- Choose account type (checking or savings)
- You can split deposits between multiple accounts if desired (e.g., 80% to checking, 20% to savings)
-
Add Employee deductions
- As an employee if you need to deduct money from your paycheck, you can add one time or ongoing deduction for every pay period.
Why it matters: Setting yourself up correctly as an employee ensures you receive proper W-2 documentation and maintain IRS compliance as an S Corp owner.
6. Sign Required Forms
Forms You'll Need to Sign as the Company
When it's required: Must be signed before running payroll with direct deposit
Why it matters: After your initial setup is complete, there are several important forms that need to be signed before you can run your first payroll. These forms authorize Gusto to handle various aspects of your payroll and tax obligations.
Who Signs Company Forms?
Designated signatory requirements:
- You must designate someone as the authorized signatory for company documents
- For S Corps with a single owner, this is typically you (the owner)
- This person must have legal authority to bind the company
Required company forms typically include:
1. Form 8655 - IRS Authorization
- IRS Form 8655 authorizes Gusto to file and pay federal payroll taxes on your behalf
- This is the legal document that allows Gusto to interact with the IRS for your company
2. Direct Deposit Authorization
- Authorizes Gusto to initiate ACH debits and credits to your business bank account
- Important: This authorization allows Gusto to automatically debit funds on payroll dates. Ensure your account always has sufficient funds.
3. State-Specific Authorization Forms
- Similar to Form 8655, but for state tax agencies
- Each state where you have employees may require separate authorization
- Allows Gusto to file and pay state payroll taxes on your behalf
Forms You'll Need to Sign as an Employee
In addition to company forms, you (as an employee of your S Corp) need to sign several employee-related forms.
When it's required: Must be completed and signed before receiving your first paycheck.
1. Federal W-4 (Employee's Withholding Certificate)
- This is the official IRS document that determines how much federal income tax is withheld from your paychecks
- Confirming your filing status (single, married filing jointly, etc.)
2. Direct Deposit Authorization (Employee)
- Authorizes Gusto to deposit your paychecks into your personal bank account
- Separate from the company's direct deposit authorization
Important: You will be able to access your documents in the payroll dashboard under “Signatory & Company documents”
Once you’ve completed these steps, continue to Payroll Setup Steps at Collective, Part II: Account Approval and Completing Payroll Migration.
Disclaimer: The information contained in this document is provided for informational purposes only and should not be construed as legal, financial, or tax advice. It is not intended to be a substitute for obtaining legal, accounting, or other financial advice from an appropriate and/or licensed adviser, or for the purpose of avoiding U.S. Federal, state or local tax payments and penalties.