2026 Tax Year · Freelancers & 1099 Workers

Self-Employment Tax Calculator 2026

Calculate your SE tax, quarterly estimated payments, QBI deduction, S-Corp savings analysis, and every deduction available to freelancers and contractors.

SE Tax 15.3%Quarterly PaymentsQBI 20% DeductionS-Corp ComparisonAll 50 StatesFree Forever

Your Business & Tax Info

Business Income
$
Total income before expenses — from 1099-NEC, 1099-K, invoices
$
Software, equipment, professional services, supplies, etc.
Net profit: $65,000
$
Affects Social Security wage base ($184,500 cap is shared)
$
Interest, dividends, rental income, etc.
Your Tax Situation
Health Insurance
$
100% deductible above-the-line if not eligible for employer coverage through a spouse
Retirement (Reduce Income Tax)
These reduce income tax but NOT self-employment tax
Business Type
Specified Service Trade (SSTB)?
SSTB: Law, accounting, health, consulting, financial, athletics, performing arts.
Non-SSTB: Tech, manufacturing, retail, construction, engineering, architecture, real estate.
Only affects QBI deduction if AGI > $201,775 (single) / $403,550 (married).
Quarterly Planning
$
From line 24 of your 2025 Form 1040 — for safe harbor calculation
$
Total paid so far this year to IRS (all quarters combined)

Estimates based on 2026 IRS rates. Actual tax liability may vary. Consult a tax professional.

Total Self-Employment Tax
$9,184
15.3% on $60,028 (SE tax base after 92.35% adjustment)
SE Effective Rate
14.13%
Total Effective Rate
20.31%
As a W-2 employee earning the same, you'd pay only $4,592 (7.65%) — you pay $4,592 more as self-employed.
Complete Tax Breakdown
Gross Business Revenue$80,000
− Business Expenses$15,000
= Net SE Income$65,000
× 92.35% IRS Adjustment = $60,028
Social Security (12.4%)$7,443
Medicare (2.9%)$1,741
= Total SE Tax$9,184
SE Deduction (50%)$4,592
= Adjusted Gross Income$60,408
− Standard Deduction$16,100
− QBI Deduction (20%)$8,862
= Taxable Income$35,446
Federal Income Tax$4,015
Self-Employment Tax$9,184
= Total Annual Tax$13,199
Net Take-Home$66,801
20% QBI Deduction Applied — $8,862 SavedNEW
The Section 199A Qualified Business Income deduction (made permanent by OBBBA 2026) reduces your taxable income by 20% of net business income.
Why 92.35%?
The IRS multiplies your net income by 92.35% before applying SE tax rates. This mirrors the benefit employees get — they only pay FICA on their wages, not on their employer's share. The 7.65% reduction (100% − 7.65% = 92.35%) creates equal treatment.
Set Aside for Taxes
Each Month
$1,100
Each Week
$254
20.31% of gross revenue goes to taxes
Taxes: 20.31%Take-home: 79.69%

Self-Employment Taxes Explained for 2026

Why Self-Employed Workers Pay More Tax

When you work for an employer, FICA taxes are split 50/50 between you and your employer — each pays 7.65%. As a self-employed worker, you pay both halves — the full 15.3% — because you are both the employer and the employee. On $100,000 of net self-employment income, that is $14,130 in SE tax alone (calculated on 92.35% of net income), before any federal or state income tax.

The 92.35% Adjustment Explained

The IRS multiplies your net self-employment income by 92.35% before calculating SE tax. This percentage equals 100% minus 7.65% (the employer's share of FICA). This adjustment ensures self-employed workers are treated equally to employees, who pay FICA only on wages and not on the employer's matching contribution. It reduces your SE tax base by 7.65% of net income.

The 50% SE Tax Deduction

You can deduct half of your self-employment tax as an above-the-line deduction when calculating income tax. This does not reduce SE tax itself, but it reduces your adjusted gross income and therefore your federal income tax. On $15,000 of SE tax, the $7,500 deduction at a 22% marginal rate saves $1,650 in income taxes.

Quarterly Estimated Tax Payments

Unlike W-2 employees who have taxes withheld automatically, self-employed workers must pay estimated taxes four times per year. The 2026 deadlines are April 15, June 15, September 15, and January 15, 2027. Missing these deadlines results in IRS underpayment penalties. The safe harbor rule protects you if you pay at least 90% of current year tax or 100% of prior year tax (110% if prior year AGI exceeded $150,000).

The QBI Deduction: 20% Off Your Business Income

The Qualified Business Income deduction allows most self-employed workers to deduct 20% of net business income from taxable income, made permanent by the OBBBA in 2025. On $80,000 of net SE income, the QBI deduction reduces taxable income by $16,000 — saving approximately $3,520 in taxes at the 22% bracket. High-income workers in specified service trades may see this deduction phased out above $201,775 (single) or $403,550 (married).

Deductions

Every Deduction Self-Employed Workers Can Take

These reduce your net SE income — lowering BOTH SE tax and income tax

🏠
Home Office
(Office sq ft / Total sq ft) × home costs OR simplified: $5 × sq ft (max $1,500)
💡 Must be used regularly and exclusively for business
🚗
Vehicle & Mileage
$0.725 per business mile (2026) OR actual expenses × business use %
💡 Keep a mileage log — IRS requires documentation
📱
Phone & Internet
Business-use percentage of monthly bills
💡 Typical: 50–80% for most freelancers
💻
Equipment & Tech
100% in year of purchase (Section 179)
💡 Includes computers, cameras, tools, software
🏥
Health Insurance
100% of premiums (above-the-line)
💡 Includes medical, dental, vision, long-term care
🏦
Retirement Plans
SEP-IRA: up to $70,000 (25% of net income) Solo 401(k): up to $23,500 + employer contributions
💡 Reduces income tax — not SE tax
📋
Professional Services
100% of CPA, lawyer, business coach fees
💡 Including tax preparation and planning costs
📚
Education & Training
Courses, books, conferences related to business
💡 Must maintain or improve current business skills
🛡️
Business Insurance
100% of business liability, E&O, other policies
💡 Includes professional liability and cyber insurance
Methodology

How Self-Employment Tax Is Calculated

Every step in order, using 2026 IRS-published rates.

STEP 01
Net Business Income
Subtract all legitimate business expenses from gross revenue. This is your Schedule C net profit — the starting point for all SE tax calculations.
STEP 02
92.35% Adjustment
The IRS multiplies net income by 92.35% before applying SE tax. This equals 100% minus 7.65% — the same employer FICA share W-2 workers don't pay.
STEP 03
Social Security Tax (12.4%)
Applied to the first $184,500 of SE income in 2026 (up from $176,100 in 2025). Above this Social Security wage base, only Medicare applies.
STEP 04
Medicare Tax (2.9%)
Applied to ALL SE income — no wage base cap. High earners above $200,000 (single) or $250,000 (married) pay an additional 0.9% Additional Medicare Tax.
STEP 05
50% SE Deduction
Half of your SE tax is deductible above-the-line when calculating income tax. This mirrors the employer's ability to deduct their share of payroll taxes.
STEP 06
QBI Deduction (20%)
Self-employed workers can deduct up to 20% of net business income from taxable income under Section 199A. Made permanent by the OBBBA in July 2025.
STEP 07
Federal Income Tax
After all deductions, remaining taxable income is taxed at progressive 2026 federal brackets (10%–37%). SE tax is separate and on top of income tax.
STEP 08
Quarterly Estimated Payments
Unlike W-2 employees, no taxes are withheld from self-employment income. Pay 25% of estimated annual tax each quarter to avoid underpayment penalties.
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the self-employment tax rate for 2026?+
The 2026 self-employment tax rate is 15.3% total — 12.4% for Social Security and 2.9% for Medicare. However, SE tax is calculated on 92.35% of net self-employment income (not the full amount), because the IRS allows a deduction for the employer-equivalent portion. The effective SE tax rate on gross net income is approximately 14.13%. High earners above $200,000 (single) or $250,000 (married) pay an additional 0.9% Medicare surtax.
What is the Social Security wage base for self-employment in 2026?+
The 2026 Social Security wage base is $184,500 — up from $176,100 in 2025. The 12.4% Social Security portion of SE tax only applies to net self-employment income up to this limit. Medicare (2.9%) applies to all SE income with no cap.
When are quarterly estimated tax payments due in 2026?+
The 2026 quarterly estimated tax due dates are: Q1 on April 15, 2026; Q2 on June 15, 2026; Q3 on September 15, 2026; and Q4 on January 15, 2027. If you expect to owe $1,000 or more in federal tax for 2026, you must make these quarterly payments to avoid the IRS underpayment penalty.
Can I deduct half of my self-employment tax?+
Yes. You can deduct 50% of your self-employment tax as an above-the-line deduction on Schedule 1 of Form 1040. This deduction reduces your adjusted gross income and therefore your federal income tax — but it does not reduce the SE tax itself. For example, if your SE tax is $10,000, you deduct $5,000 from income, potentially saving $1,100 or more in income taxes.
What is the QBI deduction for self-employed workers in 2026?+
The Qualified Business Income (QBI) deduction allows self-employed individuals to deduct up to 20% of qualified business income from taxable income. This deduction was made permanent by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) signed in July 2025. For most freelancers and contractors, this is one of the largest available deductions. High-income earners in Specified Service Trades (law, accounting, consulting, health) may see the deduction phased out above $201,775 (single) or $403,550 (married) AGI.
When does forming an S-Corporation save on self-employment tax?+
An S-Corporation generally saves on self-employment tax when net SE income consistently exceeds $75,000–$80,000 per year. As an S-Corp owner, you pay yourself a reasonable salary (subject to payroll taxes) and take remaining profits as distributions (not subject to SE tax). The SE tax savings on distributions must exceed S-Corp overhead costs of $3,500–$5,000 per year (payroll service, Form 1120-S filing). The IRS requires the salary to be 'reasonable' — typically 40–60% of net income.
What business expenses can self-employed workers deduct?+
Self-employed workers can deduct: home office expenses (either $5/sq ft simplified or actual costs), vehicle mileage at $0.725/mile in 2026, business phone and internet, equipment and software (100% via Section 179), self-employed health insurance premiums (100%), retirement contributions (SEP-IRA up to $70,000, Solo 401k up to $23,500), professional services (CPA, lawyer), business insurance, and education related to current business skills. These deductions reduce both SE tax and income tax.

Explore More Free Calculators

All free, all updated for 2026

Paycheck Calculator
See your exact take-home pay after all deductions
Calculate
Income Tax Estimator
Estimate your federal tax refund or amount owed
Calculate
Capital Gains Tax
Calculate tax on stocks, real estate & crypto
Calculate