Freelancers pay 15.3% self-employment tax plus 10–37% income tax — but business deductions can reduce your tax bill by 25–50%. Here’s everything you need to know about freelance taxes in 2026, including quarterly payments, deductions, and how to minimize what you owe.

Freelance Tax Basics: What Makes It Different

Employee (W-2) vs Freelancer (1099) Taxes

Tax Component W-2 Employee 1099 Freelancer
Income tax 10–37% 10–37%
Social Security tax 6.2% (employer pays 6.2%) 12.4% (you pay all)
Medicare tax 1.45% (employer pays 1.45%) 2.9% (you pay all)
Total payroll tax 7.65% 15.3%
Withheld automatically? Yes No (you pay quarterly)
Business deductions? No Yes
Employer benefits? Often (health, 401k) No (you’re self-employed)

Key difference: As a freelancer, you pay both the employee and employer portions of Social Security and Medicare taxes (= 15.3% self-employment tax), but you can also deduct business expenses to reduce taxable income.

Understanding Self-Employment Tax

The 15.3% Self-Employment Tax

Self-employment tax = Social Security (12.4%) + Medicare (2.9%) = 15.3%

Social Security portion:

  • 12.4% on first $176,100 of net self-employment income (2026 limit)
  • $0 on income above $176,100
  • Maximum Social Security tax: $21,876 (12.4% × $176,100)

Medicare portion:

  • 2.9% on all net self-employment income (no cap)
  • Additional 0.9% on income over $200,000 single / $250,000 married (= 3.8% total Medicare tax)

Self-Employment Tax Calculation Example

Scenario: You earned $80,000 freelancing in 2026.

Step 1: Calculate net earnings

  • Gross income: $80,000
  • Business deductions: $15,000 (home office, equipment, software, mileage, etc.)
  • Net profit (Schedule C): $65,000

Step 2: Calculate self-employment tax

  • Self-employment income: $65,000 × 92.35% = $60,028 (IRS allows 7.65% deduction)
  • Self-employment tax: $60,028 × 15.3% = $9,184

Step 3: Deduct half of self-employment tax (above-the-line deduction)

  • Deduction: $9,184 ÷ 2 = $4,592
  • Adjusted net income: $65,000 - $4,592 = $60,408

Step 4: Calculate income tax

  • Taxable income: $60,408 - $14,600 standard deduction = $45,808
  • Income tax (22% bracket): ~$5,156 (simplified)

Total taxes owed:

  • Self-employment tax: $9,184
  • Income tax: $5,156
  • Total: $14,340 (18% of gross income, 22% of net profit)

How to Calculate Your Self-Employment Tax

Quick formula:

  1. Net Profit = Gross Income - Business Deductions
  2. SE Tax Base = Net Profit × 0.9235
  3. Self-Employment Tax = SE Tax Base × 0.153 (or 0.029 if above Social Security limit)

Online calculators:

  • IRS Self-Employment Tax Calculator (irs.gov)
  • QuickBooks Self-Employed
  • TurboTax Self-Employment Tax Estimator

Quarterly Estimated Tax Payments

When You Must Pay Quarterly Taxes

If you expect to owe $1,000+ in taxes, you must pay quarterly estimated taxes.

Due dates (2026):

  • Q1 (Jan 1 – Mar 31): April 15, 2026
  • Q2 (Apr 1 – May 31): June 15, 2026
  • Q3 (June 1 – Aug 31): September 15, 2026
  • Q4 (Sept 1 – Dec 31): January 15, 2027

Penalty for not paying: IRS charges 8% annual interest (0.67% per month) on underpaid amounts.

How to Calculate Quarterly Estimated Taxes

Method 1: Estimate annual profit

Let’s say you expect to earn $60,000 net profit in 2026:

  1. Self-employment tax: $60,000 × 0.9235 × 0.153 = $8,471
  2. Deduct half: $8,471 ÷ 2 = $4,236
  3. Adjusted income: $60,000 - $4,236 = $55,764
  4. Taxable income: $55,764 - $14,600 (standard deduction) = $41,164
  5. Income tax (22% bracket): ~$4,600
  6. Total annual tax: $8,471 + $4,600 = $13,071
  7. Quarterly payment: $13,071 ÷ 4 = $3,268

Method 2: Safe harbor (avoid penalties)

Pay 90% of current year tax or 100% of last year’s tax (whichever is lower).

Example: If you owed $10,000 in taxes in 2025, pay $10,000 ÷ 4 = $2,500/quarter in 2026 to avoid penalties, even if you end up owing more.

If your income was over $150,000 last year: Must pay 110% of last year’s tax to use safe harbor.

How to Pay Quarterly Estimated Taxes

Option 1: IRS Direct Pay (free)

  • Go to irs.gov/payments
  • Select “Estimated Tax” and tax year
  • Pay directly from bank account (no fee)

Option 2: EFTPS (Electronic Federal Tax Payment System)

  • Enroll at eftps.gov
  • Schedule future payments in advance (set and forget)

Option 3: Form 1040-ES (mail check)

  • Download Form 1040-ES with payment vouchers
  • Mail check with voucher to IRS address for your state

Option 4: Tax software

  • TurboTax, H&R Block, QuickBooks Self-Employed can calculate and submit payments

State Estimated Taxes

Most states also require quarterly estimated tax payments if you expect to owe $500–$1,000+.

Check your state’s tax website for:

  • Due dates (often same as federal, sometimes different)
  • Payment methods
  • Minimum threshold

Business Deductions for Freelancers

Overview: Ordinary and Necessary Expenses

You can deduct any expense that is “ordinary and necessary” for your business.

Ordinary: Common and accepted in your industry
Necessary: Helpful and appropriate for your business

Home Office Deduction

Two methods:

Simplified method (easiest):

  • Deduct $5 per square foot of home office space
  • Maximum 300 sq ft = $1,500 deduction
  • No tracking of actual expenses needed

Actual expense method (more complex, often better):

  • Calculate % of home used for business (e.g., 200 sq ft office ÷ 2,000 sq ft home = 10%)
  • Deduct 10% of: rent/mortgage interest, utilities, insurance, repairs, depreciation
  • Example: $2,000/month rent = $24,000/year × 10% = $2,400 deduction

Requirements:

  • Space must be used regularly and exclusively for business
  • Must be your principal place of business (or where you meet clients)
  • Cannot deduct if you’re an employee working from home (only self-employed)

Which to choose?

  • Simplified: If you have small office (under 200 sq ft) or low housing costs
  • Actual expense: If you have large office (200+ sq ft) or high housing costs (rent/mortgage)

Equipment and Supplies

100% deductible:

  • Computer, laptop, tablet, monitor
  • Desk, chair, filing cabinets
  • Software subscriptions (Adobe, Microsoft 365, Dropbox, etc.)
  • Printer, ink, paper, office supplies
  • Camera equipment (photographers, videographers)
  • Tools (contractors, handymen)

Depreciation vs Section 179 deduction:

Purchase Price Tax Treatment Deduction Timing
Under $2,500 Expense immediately 100% deduction in year of purchase
$2,500 – $1,220,000 Section 179 election 100% deduction in year of purchase (if elected)
Over $1,220,000 Depreciate Spread over 3–7 years

Most freelancers elect Section 179 to deduct equipment purchases immediately rather than depreciating over multiple years.

Internet and Phone

Deduct the business-use percentage:

Example:

  • Total cell phone bill: $100/month = $1,200/year
  • Business use: 60%
  • Deduction: $720

How to determine business use:

  • Track calls/data for 1–2 months
  • Calculate % business vs personal
  • Apply that % to annual cost

Home internet:

  • Harder to justify 100% business use (IRS assumes some personal use)
  • Safe approach: Deduct 50–75%

Vehicle Expenses (Mileage Deduction)

Two methods:

Standard mileage rate (easiest):

  • $0.67 per mile (2026 rate)
  • Track all business miles (client meetings, errands, supply pickups)
  • Commuting to your regular office is NOT deductible
  • Example: 5,000 business miles × $0.67 = $3,350 deduction

Actual expense method (more complex):

  • Track all vehicle costs (gas, insurance, repairs, depreciation)
  • Calculate business-use %
  • Deduct that % of total costs
  • Usually not worth the extra tracking

Apps for tracking mileage:

  • Stride (free)
  • MileIQ ($5.99/month after 40 free trips)
  • Everlance ($8/month)

Professional Development

100% deductible:

  • Online courses, workshops, conferences related to your field
  • Books, magazines, subscriptions (Wall Street Journal, industry publications)
  • Certifications and licenses
  • Coaching or consulting fees
  • Membership dues (professional associations)

NOT deductible:

  • Education to enter a new field (e.g., going to law school)
  • General education (MBA, degree programs)

Health Insurance Premiums

Self-employed health insurance deduction:

  • Deduct 100% of premiums for you, spouse, and dependents
  • This is an above-the-line deduction (reduces adjusted gross income)
  • Available even if you don’t itemize
  • Cannot deduct if you’re eligible for employer-sponsored insurance (through spouse’s job)

Example:

  • Health insurance premiums: $800/month = $9,600/year
  • Deduction: $9,600
  • Tax savings (22% bracket): $2,112

Retirement Contributions

Self-employed retirement plans are deductible:

Plan Type 2026 Contribution Limit Who Should Use It
Solo 401(k) $23,500 (employee) + 25% of profit (employer) = max $69,000 High earners with consistent income
SEP IRA 25% of net profit, max $69,000 Simple setup, less admin
SIMPLE IRA $16,500 (or $20,000 if 50+) Requires employer contribution

Example: Solo 401(k)

  • Net profit: $100,000
  • Employee deferral: $23,500 (max)
  • Employer contribution: $100,000 × 20% = $20,000 (simplified)
  • Total deduction: $43,500
  • Tax savings (24% bracket + 15.3% SE tax): $17,117

Business Insurance

Deductible:

  • Liability insurance (general, professional)
  • Business property insurance
  • Cyber insurance (data breach, hacking)
  • Errors and omissions insurance (E&O)
  • Workers’ compensation (if you have employees)

NOT deductible:

  • Life insurance (you’re the beneficiary)
  • Disability insurance for yourself

Meals and Entertainment

50% deductible (meals with business purpose):

  • Meals with clients, prospects, partners
  • Must discuss business (document who, what was discussed)
  • Meals while traveling for business
  • Example: $3,000 in client meals → $1,500 deduction

100% deductible (office snacks/meals):

  • Meals provided to employees in the office
  • Office snacks, coffee, drinks

NOT deductible (after 2017 tax law):

  • Entertainment (concerts, sporting events, golf)
  • Even if with clients — entertainment is no longer deductible

Travel Expenses

100% deductible if primarily for business:

  • Airfare, train, bus tickets
  • Hotel, Airbnb
  • Taxi, Uber, rental car
  • 50% of meals while traveling
  • Conference or event registration fees

Requirements:

  • Trip must be primarily for business (more than half the days)
  • Document business purpose (client meetings, conference, trade show)
  • Keep receipts

Example: 4-day business trip

  • Flights: $400
  • Hotel: $600 (3 nights)
  • Meals: $200 (50% deductible = $100)
  • Uber: $80
  • Total deduction: $1,180

Contractors and Freelancers You Hire

Payments to subcontractors are deductible:

  • Freelance designers, writers, developers you hire
  • Virtual assistants
  • Accountant, bookkeeper
  • Attorney fees (business-related)

Requirements:

  • Must issue 1099-NEC if you paid $600+ in a year
  • Due to contractor by Jan 31, filed with IRS by Jan 31

Marketing and Advertising

100% deductible:

  • Website hosting and domain registration
  • Google Ads, Facebook Ads
  • Business cards, flyers, brochures
  • Logo design, brand consulting
  • Email marketing software (Mailchimp, ConvertKit)
  • Social media management tools (Hootsuite, Buffer)

Bank and Credit Card Fees

Deductible:

  • Business checking account fees
  • Merchant account fees (Stripe, Square, PayPal)
  • Credit card processing fees
  • Annual fees on business credit cards

NOT deductible:

  • Personal credit card interest and fees

Subscriptions and Software

100% deductible:

  • Adobe Creative Cloud ($60/month = $720/year)
  • Microsoft 365, Google Workspace
  • Zoom, Slack, Asana, Trello
  • Hosting (Bluehost, SiteGround)
  • Industry-specific software (accounting, design, project management)

Common Mistakes That Trigger Audits

Claiming 100% business use of car or phone (IRS knows you use personally too)
Round numbers ($5,000 exactly — looks made up)
Home office for W-2 employees (only self-employed can deduct)
Excessive meals and entertainment (over $10,000/year gets scrutiny)
No documentation (keep receipts, take photos with phone)
Deducting lavish or unreasonable expenses ($500 dinner, luxury car)
Mixing personal and business (use dedicated credit card for business)

Filing Taxes as a Freelancer

Required Tax Forms

Schedule C (Profit or Loss From Business):

  • Report all income and expenses
  • Calculate net profit
  • Attached to Form 1040

Schedule SE (Self-Employment Tax):

  • Calculate self-employment tax (15.3%)
  • Attached to Form 1040

Form 1040 (Individual Income Tax Return):

  • Your main tax return
  • Includes all income sources (freelance, W-2, investment, etc.)

1099-NEC (Nonemployee Compensation):

  • Issued TO you by clients if you earned $600+
  • You should receive by January 31
  • Report all income even if you don’t receive 1099

1099-K (Payment Card and Third Party Network Transactions):

  • Issued by PayPal, Venmo, Stripe if you processed $600+ (2026 threshold)
  • Double-check to avoid reporting income twice (1099-NEC and 1099-K from same source)

How to File

Option 1: DIY with tax software

  • TurboTax Self-Employed (~$120–$150)
  • H&R Block Premium (~$100–$130)
  • FreeTaxUSA (cheapest, $15 for state)

Pros: Save money, learn your taxes
Cons: Must input everything yourself, miss deductions if you don’t know about them

Option 2: Hire a CPA or tax professional

  • Cost: $300–$1,500 depending on complexity
  • Worth it if: You earn $50,000+, have complex deductions, multiple income sources, own business

Pros: Expert finds all deductions, handles everything
Cons: Expensive

Option 3: In-person tax prep (H&R Block, Jackson Hewitt)

  • Cost: $200–$500
  • In-between DIY and CPA

When to File

Tax return deadline: April 15, 2027 (for 2026 tax year)

Extension: File Form 4868 to extend deadline to October 15 (but you still owe taxes by April 15 — extension is for filing, not payment)

Business Structures: Sole Proprietor vs LLC vs S-Corp

Sole Proprietor (Default)

What it is: You and your business are the same legal entity

Taxes:

  • Report income/expenses on Schedule C
  • Pay self-employment tax (15.3%) on net profit
  • Pass-through taxation (business income = personal income)

Pros:

  • No formation costs
  • Simplest structure
  • No separate tax return

Cons:

  • No liability protection (personal assets at risk)
  • Pay self-employment tax on all profit

Best for: Side hustlers, new freelancers earning under $30,000/year

LLC (Limited Liability Company)

What it is: Separate legal entity that protects personal assets

Taxes (single-member LLC):

  • Taxed exactly like sole proprietor (no difference unless you elect S-Corp)
  • Still report on Schedule C
  • Still pay self-employment tax

Pros:

  • Liability protection (personal assets shielded)
  • Professional image
  • Can elect S-Corp status later

Cons:

  • Formation costs ($50–$500 depending on state)
  • Annual fees in some states ($0–$800/year)
  • More complexity (separate bank account, operating agreement)

Best for: Freelancers earning $30,000–$60,000/year who want liability protection

S-Corp (LLC electing S-Corp status)

What it is: LLC that elects to be taxed as S-Corporation

Taxes:

  • You become an employee and pay yourself a “reasonable salary”
  • Pay self-employment tax (15.3%) only on salary, NOT on distributions
  • Remaining profit is distributed as dividend (no SE tax)

Example:

  • Net profit: $100,000
  • Reasonable salary: $60,000 (pay SE tax on this)
  • Dividend distribution: $40,000 (save 15.3% SE tax = $6,120)

Pros:

  • Save on self-employment tax (can save $3,000–$10,000/year)
  • More tax planning opportunities

Cons:

  • Must file separate business tax return (Form 1120-S)
  • Must run payroll (costs $500–$1,500/year)
  • More complexity and legal requirements
  • IRS scrutiny (must pay “reasonable” salary)

Best for: High earners ($70,000+ profit) who can save more on SE tax than the extra costs ($1,000–$2,000/year)

Rule of thumb: If you can save $3,000+ per year on SE tax, S-Corp is worth it.

When to Switch Structures

Annual Net Profit Recommended Structure
$0–$30,000 Sole proprietor (simplest)
$30,000–$70,000 LLC (liability protection, option to elect S-Corp later)
$70,000–$100,000 S-Corp (SE tax savings justify extra costs)
$100,000+ Definitely S-Corp (substantial SE tax savings)

How to Minimize Freelance Taxes (Legally)

1. Maximize Business Deductions

Every $1,000 in deductions saves $250–$500 in taxes (depending on bracket + SE tax).

Common missed deductions:

  • Home office (actual expense method often better than simplified)
  • Mileage (track every business mile)
  • Health insurance premiums (above-the-line deduction)
  • Retirement contributions (Solo 401k, SEP IRA)
  • Subscriptions and software
  • Professional development (courses, books, conferences)

2. Contribute to Retirement Accounts

Solo 401(k) or SEP IRA contributions are deductible and save 30–50% of the contribution in taxes.

Example:

  • Contribute $20,000 to Solo 401(k)
  • Tax savings: $20,000 × 39.3% (24% income + 15.3% SE) = $7,860
  • Net cost of saving $20k for retirement: $12,140

3. Time Large Expenses Strategically

If you have a high-income year:

  • Buy equipment before Dec 31 (deduct in current year)
  • Prepay annual subscriptions/expenses in December
  • Maximize retirement contributions

If you have a low-income year:

  • Defer equipment purchases to next year
  • Spread out large expenses

4. Hire Family Members

Pay your spouse or kids for legitimate business work:

  • Deductible expense for you
  • They’re in lower tax bracket (or pay zero tax if under standard deduction)
  • Must be reasonable pay for actual work performed

Example:

  • Pay your spouse $10,000 for bookkeeping, admin, marketing
  • You deduct $10,000 (saves $3,930 in taxes at 39.3%)
  • Spouse reports $10,000 income, owes ~$1,500 tax (15% bracket)
  • Net tax savings: $2,430

5. Health Savings Account (HSA)

If you have a high-deductible health plan:

  • Contribute to HSA: $4,150 (individual) or $8,300 (family) in 2026
  • Triple tax advantage:
    1. Contribution is deductible
    2. Growth is tax-free
    3. Withdrawals for medical expenses are tax-free

Example:

  • Contribute $4,150 to HSA
  • Tax savings: $4,150 × 39.3% = $1,631
  • Use for medical expenses (prescriptions, doctor visits, dental, vision)

6. Consider S-Corp Election (If Profitable)

If net profit is $70,000+, electing S-Corp status saves $3,000–$10,000/year in self-employment tax.

Consult a CPA to see if it makes sense for your situation.

7. Separate Business and Personal Finances

Open a dedicated business checking account and credit card:

  • Makes tracking expenses much easier
  • Cleaner audit trail if IRS ever questions
  • Professional appearance to clients
  • Easier to calculate business-use % of expenses

8. Track Everything (Use Software)

Accounting software saves time and finds deductions:

  • QuickBooks Self-Employed ($15–$30/month)
  • Wave (free)
  • FreshBooks ($15–$50/month)

Mileage tracking:

  • Stride (free)
  • MileIQ ($5.99/month)

Receipt tracking:

  • Take photo of every receipt immediately
  • Store in Dropbox, Google Drive, or accounting software

Common Freelance Tax Questions

Do I need an EIN (Employer Identification Number)?

Not required if you’re a sole proprietor with no employees (you can use your SSN).

Get an EIN if:

  • You form an LLC or S-Corp
  • You hire employees or contractors
  • You want to keep SSN off 1099 forms (privacy)

How to get one: Apply free at irs.gov/ein (takes 5 minutes, instant approval)

How do I make estimated tax payments?

Online (easiest):

  • Go to irs.gov/payments → Direct Pay
  • Select “Estimated Tax” and tax year
  • Pay from bank account (no fee)

Mail check:

  • Download Form 1040-ES with vouchers
  • Mail check with voucher to IRS address for your state

What if I can’t afford quarterly estimated taxes?

Pay as much as you can to minimize penalties:

  • IRS charges 8% annual interest (0.67%/month) on underpaid amounts
  • Even paying 50–75% reduces penalties significantly

Set up a payment plan:

  • IRS offers payment plans if you owe taxes you can’t pay
  • Setup fee: $31–$225 depending on plan
  • Monthly payments over 6–72 months

Can I deduct meals if I work from home?

Generally no — your lunch while working from home is personal.

Exception: Meals with clients or while traveling for business (50% deductible).

What’s the difference between 1099-NEC and 1099-K?

1099-NEC:

  • Issued by CLIENT who paid you $600+ directly
  • Reports payments for services

1099-K:

  • Issued by PAYMENT PROCESSOR (PayPal, Stripe, Venmo)
  • Reports total payments processed (threshold: $600 in 2026)
  • Can overlap with 1099-NEC (careful not to double-report)

Do I have to report cash income?

Yes. All income must be reported, even if:

  • You didn’t receive a 1099
  • You were paid in cash
  • Client paid you through Venmo/Zelle “Friends & Family”

IRS has ways to find unreported income: Bank deposits, lifestyle audits, informants.

Can I deduct my coworking space?

Yes, 100% deductible if you use it regularly for business.

You cannot also claim home office deduction if you have a coworking space (it’s your principal place of business).

Bottom Line

Freelancers pay 15.3% self-employment tax + 10–37% income tax on net profit, but business deductions can save 25–50% in taxes.

Key strategies to minimize taxes:

  1. Maximize deductions: Home office, mileage, equipment, software, health insurance
  2. Contribute to retirement: Solo 401(k) or SEP IRA (deductible + lowers tax bracket)
  3. Pay quarterly estimated taxes: Avoid 8% underpayment penalties
  4. Track everything: Mileage, receipts, expenses (apps make this easy)
  5. Consider S-Corp: If net profit is $70,000+, can save $3,000–$10,000/year
  6. Use accounting software: QuickBooks, Wave, FreshBooks (find missed deductions)
  7. Hire a CPA: If earning $50,000+, professional tax help pays for itself

Most important: Keep clean records (receipts, mileage logs, bank statements) and pay quarterly estimated taxes on time to avoid penalties. The IRS doesn’t like surprises — consistent quarterly payments keep you in good standing.