A business that is legally completely separate from its
owners. Most
publicly-traded companies (and all major ones) fall under this classification. For United States tax purposes, C corporations are required to pay
income taxes on their
profits. The advantage to a C corporate structure is the fact that, unlike
S corporations, there is no limit to the number of shareholders. A disadvantage is the fact that, because a C corporation is taxed itself and its individual
shareholders are taxed on
dividends, it is subject to double taxation.