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1099 Tax Calculator for Freelancers & Contractors

1099 Tax Calculator 2026 for Freelancers & Independent Contractors

1099 TAX CALCULATOR 2026 — FREELANCERS & CONTRACTORS

As a 1099 independent contractor or freelancer, you pay self-employment (SE) tax of 15.3% on top of regular federal income tax — covering both the employee and employer share of Social Security and Medicare. This calculator handles the full Schedule SE and Schedule C workflow: business expense deductions, the 50% SE tax deduction, QBI deduction (made permanent by OBBBA), retirement plan contributions, quarterly estimated payments, and your true net take-home income.

Full 1099 Tax Estimator
Quarterly Payment Calculator
Retirement Tax Savings
S-Corp vs. Sole Prop
SCHEDULE C — GROSS INCOME & EXPENSES
Total revenue from all 1099-NEC, 1099-K, and unreported cash clients.
Home office, equipment, software, mileage, phone, professional fees, etc.
ADJUSTMENTS TO INCOME
100% deductible above-the-line.
SEP IRA (max $72k), Solo 401(k), SIMPLE IRA.
Affects SS cap; W-2 employer already paid SS on these wages.
FILING & DEDUCTIONS
OBBBA made QBI permanent. Phase-out: $197,300–$272,300 (Single), $394,600–$544,600 (MFJ) 2026.
2026 Quarterly Estimated Tax Due Dates: Q1 → April 15, 2026 | Q2 → June 16, 2026 | Q3 → September 15, 2026 | Q4 → January 15, 2027. Pay via IRS Direct Pay, EFTPS, or IRS2Go app.
From prior year Form 1040, line 24. Used to calculate safe harbor amount.
2026 Self-Employed Retirement Contribution Limits: SEP IRA $72,000 | Solo 401(k) employee $23,500 ($31,000 age 50–59; $34,750 age 60–63) + employer profit-sharing up to combined max $72,000 | SIMPLE IRA $17,000 ($21,000 age 50+)
S-Corp Tax Savings: By electing S-Corp status, you split income into (1) a reasonable W-2 salary — subject to FICA — and (2) an S-Corp distribution — NOT subject to SE tax. The savings come from paying FICA only on the salary portion, not on distributions. This can save $10,000–$20,000+ annually for high-income freelancers, but involves payroll setup costs (~$2,000–$3,000/yr) and S-Corp filing fees.
IRS requires a “reasonable” salary. Typically 30–50% of net income, or market rate.
Payroll service, state fees, extra accounting, S-Corp filing. Typical: $2,000–$4,000/yr.
2026 Key Numbers for 1099 Workers: SE tax: 15.3% on 92.35% of net earnings. Social Security wage base: $184,500 (up from $176,100 in 2025). Quarterly payment deadlines: Apr 15 · Jun 16 · Sep 15 · Jan 15. SEP IRA max: $72,000. Solo 401(k) max: $72,000. QBI deduction: 20% of net income — made permanent by OBBBA. Standard mileage: 72.5 cents/mile (2026). File Schedule SE if net SE income ≥ $400.
The 3-Tax Problem for 1099 Workers — You Pay More Than Employees:
As a 1099 contractor, you face three separate taxes on your income: (1) Self-Employment Tax (15.3%) — you pay both the employee and employer halves of Social Security and Medicare; a W-2 employee only pays half (7.65%). (2) Federal Income Tax — same brackets as employees, but applied after SE tax deductions. (3) State Income Tax — same as employees. On $80,000 net freelance income, SE tax alone is approximately $11,305 (before income tax). The good news: several deductions are designed specifically for the self-employed — the 50% SE tax deduction, QBI deduction (up to 20%), health insurance deduction, and retirement plan contributions — which can dramatically reduce your true tax burden.

HOW 1099 / SELF-EMPLOYMENT TAX IS CALCULATED — STEP BY STEP

Example — Single freelancer, $80,000 gross, $8,000 business expenses, no retirement plan:

Step 1 — Schedule C net profit: $80,000 − $8,000 = $72,000
Step 2 — SE tax basis (92.35%): $72,000 × 0.9235 = $66,492
Step 3 — SE tax (15.3%): $66,492 × 15.3% = $10,173
Step 4 — 50% SE deduction: $10,173 × 50% = $5,087
Step 5 — AGI: $72,000 − $5,087 = $66,913
Step 6 — Standard deduction: $66,913 − $16,100 = $50,813
Step 7 — QBI deduction (20%): $50,813 × 20% ≈ $10,163 (limited to 20% of QBI)
Step 8 — Taxable income: $50,813 − $10,163 = $40,650
Step 9 — Federal income tax: ~$4,750 (12% bracket)

Total tax: $10,173 + $4,750 = $14,923 | Net take-home: $80,000 − $8,000 − $14,923 = $57,077
Effective total rate: $14,923 ÷ $80,000 = 18.7%

1099 VS. W-2 EMPLOYEE — TAX COMPARISON

Factor 1099 Freelancer / Contractor W-2 Employee
Social Security (6.2%)Pays BOTH employee + employer = 12.4%Pays employee portion only: 6.2%
Medicare (1.45%)Pays BOTH = 2.9%Pays employee portion only: 1.45%
SE tax basis92.35% of net earningsN/A — employer withholds automatically
50% SE tax deductionYes — reduces AGINo
Business expense deductionsYes — Schedule CVery limited (mostly gone after 2017 TCJA)
QBI deduction (20%)Yes — permanent under OBBBANo
Self-employed health insurance100% deductiblePre-tax through employer plan only
Retirement plan limitsSEP IRA $72,000 / Solo 401k $72,000401(k) employee deferral $23,500 only
Tax payment timingQuarterly estimated paymentsWithheld from each paycheck automatically
Minimum SE filing threshold$400 net self-employment incomeN/A

TOP TAX DEDUCTIONS FOR 1099 WORKERS IN 2026

Deduction Where Taken 2026 Limit / Rate Reduces SE Tax?
Business expenses (Schedule C)Schedule C — reduces net profitOrdinary & necessary expensesYes
Home office deductionSchedule C — Form 8829 or simplified$5/sq ft, max 300 sq ft ($1,500) simplifiedYes
Business mileageSchedule C72.5 cents/mile (2026)Yes
50% of SE tax paidSchedule 1, Line 15Exactly 50% of SE taxNo — only income tax
Self-employed health insuranceSchedule 1, Line 17100% of premiumsNo — only income tax
SEP IRA contributionSchedule 1, Line 16$72,000 max (2026)No — only income tax
Solo 401(k) contributionSchedule 1, Line 16$72,000 max (2026)No — only income tax
QBI deduction (Section 199A)Form 8995, Schedule 1 reduction20% of QBI — permanent (OBBBA)No — only income tax
Professional development & subscriptionsSchedule COrdinary & necessaryYes
Phone & internet (business %)Schedule CBusiness-use percentage onlyYes
OBBBA 2026 Changes That Benefit Freelancers: The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (signed July 4, 2025) made the Section 199A QBI deduction permanent — eliminating the December 31, 2025 expiration that would have ended this up to 20% deduction for sole proprietors. New for 2026: a minimum $400 QBI deduction for anyone with at least $1,000 of QBI. OBBBA also expanded the SSTB (specified service trade or business) phase-out range for MFJ filers from $100k to $150k wide, meaning more high-income consultants, lawyers, and doctors can claim a partial deduction. Additionally, the standard deduction increased to $16,100 (Single) / $32,200 (MFJ) for 2026, and the OBBBA tips deduction (up to $25,000 for service workers) may benefit certain 1099 service providers.

QUARTERLY ESTIMATED TAX — 2026 DUE DATES & SAFE HARBOR RULES

Quarter Covers Income Earned Due Date IRS Payment Method
Q1 2026January 1 – March 31, 2026April 15, 2026IRS Direct Pay / EFTPS
Q2 2026April 1 – May 31, 2026June 16, 2026IRS Direct Pay / EFTPS
Q3 2026June 1 – August 31, 2026September 15, 2026IRS Direct Pay / EFTPS
Q4 2026September 1 – December 31, 2026January 15, 2027IRS Direct Pay / EFTPS
Safe Harbor Rule — Avoid Underpayment Penalties: The IRS waives the underpayment penalty if you pay the lesser of: (1) 90% of your current year’s tax liability, or (2) 100% of your prior year’s tax liability (110% if your prior year AGI exceeded $150,000). If your income varies significantly from year to year, the safe harbor based on the prior year’s tax is the simplest protection — just divide last year’s Form 1040, Line 24 by 4 and pay that amount each quarter.

1099 TAX CALCULATOR — FAQs

What is the self-employment tax rate for 1099 workers in 2026?
The SE tax rate is 15.3% — 12.4% Social Security + 2.9% Medicare — applied to 92.35% of your net self-employment earnings. The effective SE tax rate on gross net earnings is approximately 14.13%. Social Security applies only on the first $184,500 of combined wages and net SE income. An additional 0.9% Medicare surtax applies above $200,000 (Single) / $250,000 (MFJ).

How do quarterly estimated taxes work for freelancers?
The IRS expects tax payments as you earn income — not just at April 15. If you expect to owe $1,000 or more, you must make quarterly payments by April 15, June 16, September 15, and January 15 (for Q4). Use Form 1040-ES or pay via IRS Direct Pay. Divide your estimated annual SE + income tax by 4 for equal quarterly payments, or use the annualized income installment method for uneven income.

What is the QBI deduction and how does OBBBA affect it in 2026?
The Section 199A Qualified Business Income deduction allows eligible sole proprietors to deduct up to 20% of their qualified business income from taxable income, reducing the effective top income tax rate from 37% to 29.6%. The OBBBA (signed July 4, 2025) made this deduction permanent, eliminating the 2025 expiration. New for 2026: a minimum $400 deduction for anyone with at least $1,000 of QBI. Phase-out begins at $197,300 taxable income (Single) / $394,600 (MFJ).

What is the maximum SEP IRA contribution for self-employed in 2026?
The SEP IRA maximum is $72,000 for 2026 (up from $69,000 in 2025). The effective contribution rate for a sole proprietor is approximately 20% of net self-employment income after the SE tax deduction — so you need roughly $360,000 in net income to reach the $72,000 cap. Contributions can be made up to the tax filing deadline including extensions (October 15).

When does it make sense to elect S-Corp status?
An S-Corp election typically saves money when net self-employment income exceeds approximately $80,000–$100,000 per year. The strategy splits income into a reasonable W-2 salary (subject to FICA) and distributions (not subject to FICA), reducing the 15.3% SE tax on the distribution portion. Administrative costs of $2,000–$4,000/year must be weighed against the FICA savings. Use Mode 4 of this calculator to model your specific situation.