Comparison
Quick answer
An S-Corp is a pass-through entity that avoids corporate-level federal tax but has strict eligibility rules (max 100 shareholders, US citizens/residents only, one class of stock). A C-Corp pays corporate tax at the entity level but has no ownership restrictions, can issue multiple share classes, and is the only structure that can raise venture capital. For most early-stage companies seeking institutional funding, C-Corp is the default; for profitable small businesses with no VC ambitions, S-Corp can reduce self-employment taxes.
If there is any realistic chance you will raise institutional capital, use a Delaware C-Corp from day one — converting later is expensive and creates tax complexity. If you are building a profitable lifestyle business or professional practice with no VC ambitions, an S-Corp election can meaningfully reduce your tax burden. Consult a CPA and business attorney before choosing — the decision has multi-year tax and legal consequences.
Hourly rate
$150–$500/hr
Varies widely based on background and specialization
Per session
$200–$800
For a structured 60–90 minute strategy or advisory session
Monthly retainer
$3,000–$15,000/month
For ongoing strategic advisory or fractional executive roles