Rhode Island corporate income tax is 7.0%. Does not conform to federal bonus depreciation.
Key Planning Insight:
Rhode Island PTET election is available. The state does not conform to bonus depreciation. Rhode Island also has a minimum corporate tax of $400.
Rhode Island-Specific Tax Strategies
These strategies are especially powerful or unique in Rhode Island. Click any strategy to learn more.
Rhode Island's PTET election allows pass-through entities to pay state income tax at the entity level. Owners receive a credit on their individual returns while the entity deducts the payment federally.
Section 179 allows businesses to deduct the full purchase price of qualifying equipment, vehicles, and software in the year of purchase rather than depreciating over time. The 2026 federal limit is over $1 million. Some states cap or limit Section 179 conformity — check your state rules.
S-Corp owners must pay themselves a "reasonable salary" subject to payroll taxes (15.3%), but remaining profits distributed as shareholder distributions avoid self-employment tax entirely. Optimizing the salary-to-distribution ratio is one of the most impactful tax strategies for business owners earning $60,000+ in net profit.
A SEP-IRA allows self-employed individuals and small business owners to contribute up to 25% of net self-employment income (max ~$69,000 for 2026) as a tax-deductible retirement contribution. This is one of the simplest and most powerful ways to reduce taxable income while building retirement savings.
The home office deduction (IRC §280A) allows self-employed individuals and business owners to deduct a portion of rent, mortgage interest, utilities, insurance, and repairs based on the percentage of your home used exclusively for business. The simplified method allows $5/sq ft up to 300 sq ft ($1,500 max).
Choosing the right business structure is the single biggest tax decision you'll make. Here's what Rhode Island LLC and S-Corp owners need to know.
Rhode Island LLC Formation
Rhode Island LLCs are taxed as pass-through entities by default. All profits flow to your personal return and are taxed at 5.99%. Electing S-Corp status can significantly reduce your self-employment tax burden.
LLC vs. S-Corp in Rhode Island
Rhode Island offers a Pass-Through Entity Tax (PTET) election — a major advantage for LLC and S-Corp owners. By paying state income tax at the entity level, you bypass the $10,000 federal SALT deduction cap and deduct the full state tax bill on your federal return.
Top LLC Write-Offs in Rhode Island
Rhode Island LLC owners can deduct: business expenses (IRC §162), home office (IRC §280A), vehicle mileage (IRC §179), Section 179 equipment expensing, retirement contributions (Solo 401k or SEP-IRA), health insurance premiums, and business meals. Note: Rhode Island does not conform to federal bonus depreciation — an add-back on your state return may be required.
Rhode Island Business Tax Note
Rhode Island corporate income tax is 7.0%. Does not conform to federal bonus depreciation.
These federal strategies apply to Rhode Island residents and business owners. Click any strategy to see full details, savings estimates, and eligibility requirements.
Common questions about Rhode Island LLC taxes, S-Corp elections, and business write-offs — answered by Uncle Kam's tax advisors.
Rhode Island's top marginal income tax rate is 5.99%. Business owners and self-employed individuals pay this rate on their net business income. Strategies like the S-Corp election, pass-through entity tax (PTET) election, and maximizing deductions can significantly reduce your effective Rhode Island tax rate.
The most powerful write-offs for Rhode Island LLC owners include: the S-Corp election to reduce self-employment taxes, Section 179 and bonus depreciation for equipment and real estate, the home office deduction, vehicle and mileage deductions, Solo 401(k) or SEP-IRA contributions, and business meals and travel. Rhode Island-specific strategies like the PTET election and state-specific credits can add further savings.
Yes. Rhode Island offers a pass-through entity tax election that allows S-Corps and partnerships to pay state income tax at the entity level. This is a powerful SALT workaround that lets business owners deduct state taxes on their federal return, bypassing the $10,000 SALT cap. Uncle Kam's tax advisors can help you determine if the Rhode Island PTET election is right for your business.
Rhode Island does not fully conform to federal bonus depreciation rules. You may need to add back bonus depreciation on your Rhode Island state return and depreciate assets over a longer schedule. However, Section 179 expensing may still be available up to Rhode Island's state cap. A tax advisor can help you navigate this.
For most Rhode Island business owners earning over $60,000 in net profit, electing S-Corp status can save $5,000–$20,000 per year in self-employment taxes. The right choice depends on your income level, Rhode Island's franchise or minimum tax requirements, and your business structure. Uncle Kam's advisors specialize in Rhode Island entity structuring — book a free call to get a personalized recommendation.
Self-employed individuals in Rhode Island can reduce state taxes by: maximizing business deductions (home office, vehicle, equipment), contributing to a Solo 401(k) or SEP-IRA, electing S-Corp status to reduce self-employment tax, using the PTET election if available, and timing income and deductions strategically. A Rhode Island-based tax strategy session with Uncle Kam can identify your biggest opportunities.
Real estate investors in Rhode Island benefit most from cost segregation studies (accelerating depreciation on commercial and rental properties), the 1031 exchange (deferring capital gains on property sales), bonus depreciation (if Rhode Island conforms), the short-term rental loophole, and real estate professional status (REPS). Rhode Island's specific tax rules can significantly impact your real estate ROI — get a free strategy review from Uncle Kam.
The Rhode Island PTET election can save S-Corp and LLC owners thousands by bypassing the $10,000 SALT cap — most accountants don't file it proactively.
Rhode Island does NOT conform to federal bonus depreciation — you may need a state add-back, which many taxpayers miss.
Most taxpayers leave the QBI deduction unclaimed — it reduces taxable income by up to 23% starting 2026 under the OBBBA.