Profit-sharing is one of the defining benefits of an Employee Ownership Trust (EOT): employees share in the company's success through distributions, typically paid as ordinary W-2 compensation and subject to payroll taxes. But an EOT-held company still has to weigh paying out profits against reinvesting to stay competitive and grow.
How that balance gets struck is a governance question, not an automatic payout:
- The board of directors runs the business and is responsible for its capital needs (equipment, hiring, debt service, growth investments) and sets what the company can prudently distribute.
- The trust and any stewardship committee keep employees' interest in profit-sharing in view, so reinvestment decisions are made with the beneficiaries' long-term interest in mind.
- Discipline and transparency matter: healthy EOT companies treat profit-sharing as a result of sustainable performance, reinvesting enough to keep the business strong so distributions can continue year after year.
There is no single rule for the split. In practice, profit-sharing is often tied to a measure like operating income and may scale up over time, sometimes with a tenure threshold for eligibility, but the design is set by the trust's terms, the board's judgment, and the company's stage and capital needs.
This is general education, not legal or tax advice; confirm specifics with a CPA or an attorney experienced in employee-ownership transitions.