Updated January 2026
Self-Employment Tax: The Complete 2026 Guide for Freelancers
Whether you are a freelancer, 1099 contractor, sole proprietor, or side-hustler, self-employment tax is one of the largest — and most misunderstood — taxes you face. This guide explains exactly how SE tax works, how to calculate it, and what strategies can reduce what you owe.
What Is Self-Employment Tax?
Self-employment tax (SE tax) is the tax that covers your contributions to Social Security and Medicare. As an employee, you share these costs with your employer — each pays 7.65% for a combined 15.3%. When you are self-employed, you are both the employee and the employer, so you pay the full 15.3% yourself.
Who Must Pay Self-Employment Tax?
You must pay SE tax if your net self-employment income is $400 or more in a year. This applies to:
- Freelancers and independent contractors receiving 1099-NEC forms
- Sole proprietors reporting income on Schedule C
- Partners in a partnership (on their distributive share of income)
- Gig economy workers (rideshare, delivery, etc.)
- Anyone with a side business earning $400+ net profit
2026 Self-Employment Tax Rates
The 2026 SE tax rates and limits are as follows:
| Component | Rate | Income Limit |
|---|---|---|
| Social Security | 12.4% | First $184,500 of net SE income |
| Medicare | 2.9% | All net SE income (no limit) |
| Additional Medicare Tax | 0.9% | Above $200,000 (single) / $250,000 (married) |
| Total SE Tax | 15.3% | Up to $184,500; 2.9% above that |
The $184,500 Social Security wage base is for 2026. This limit increases annually based on national average wage changes. The Additional Medicare Tax of 0.9% applies to earned income above the threshold — for self-employed individuals, this is calculated on Schedule SE.
How SE Tax Is Calculated (Step by Step)
The SE tax calculation has a nuance most people miss: you do not pay 15.3% on your total net profit. Instead, the IRS allows you to reduce your net profit by 7.65% (equivalent to the "employer half" of the tax) before applying the SE tax rate. This is done by multiplying net profit by 92.35%.
The SE Tax Formula
Worked Example: $80,000 Gross Income
| Gross self-employment revenue | $80,000 |
| Less: business expenses (e.g., $6,000) | − $6,000 |
| Net SE income | $74,000 |
| × 92.35% adjustment | × 0.9235 |
| SE tax base | $68,339 |
| × 15.3% SE tax rate | × 15.3% |
| Self-employment tax owed | $10,456 |
To calculate your own SE tax, use our SE Tax Calculator.
The SE Tax Deduction
The tax code provides some relief: you can deduct 50% of your self-employment tax from your gross income. This is an above-the-line deduction — it reduces your adjusted gross income (AGI) even if you do not itemize deductions.
- Reduces your AGI (and taxable income)
- Lowers your federal income tax bill
- Mirrors the deduction that employers get for their half of FICA taxes
- Does not reduce your SE tax itself
- Does not reduce your net SE income for SE tax calculation
- Cannot be taken on Schedule C — it goes on Schedule 1
Example
Using the example from Section 3: SE tax = $10,456. You can deduct $5,228 (50% × $10,456) on Schedule 1, Line 15 of your Form 1040. If you are in the 22% tax bracket, this deduction saves you approximately $1,150 in income taxes.
Reducing Your Self-Employment Tax
Most tax strategies for the self-employed reduce income tax, not SE tax. The only reliable way to reduce SE tax itself is to reduce your net SE income or change your business structure.
Quarterly Estimated Tax Payments
Unlike employees who have taxes withheld from each paycheck, self-employed individuals are responsible for paying taxes throughout the year. If you expect to owe $1,000 or more in federal taxes for the year, you must make quarterly estimated payments.
2026 Quarterly Tax Due Dates
| Payment | Income Period | Due Date |
|---|---|---|
| Q1 2026 | January 1 – March 31 | April 15, 2026 |
| Q2 2026 | April 1 – May 31 | June 16, 2026 |
| Q3 2026 | June 1 – August 31 | September 15, 2026 |
| Q4 2026 | September 1 – December 31 | January 15, 2027 |
The Safe Harbor Rule
To avoid underpayment penalties, you can use the safe harbor rule. You are penalty-free if you pay either:
- 100% of your prior-year tax liability (or 110% if your AGI exceeded $150,000 last year), or
- 90% of your current-year tax liability
For most freelancers, paying 100% (or 110%) of last year's tax in four equal installments is the safest and simplest approach.
Use our Quarterly Estimated Tax Calculator to determine your payment amounts.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
These are the most frequent mistakes that cost freelancers money — and peace of mind:
Many freelancers spend their full income and face a large, unexpected tax bill in April. Best practice: transfer 25–30% of every payment you receive into a dedicated tax savings account immediately.
Many new freelancers budget for income tax but forget the additional 15.3% SE tax. At $60,000 net profit, SE tax alone can be $8,000+. Always factor both taxes into your financial planning.
SE tax is calculated on net profit (revenue minus legitimate business expenses), not your total gross revenue. Deducting all allowable expenses before calculating SE tax is essential.
Missing or underpaying quarterly estimates triggers IRS penalty charges (currently 7–8% annualized). Set calendar reminders for April 15, June 16, September 15, and January 15.
State Self-Employment Tax
There is no separate state "self-employment tax" in the United States. SE tax (Social Security + Medicare) is a federal tax only and does not vary by state.
However, states have their own state income taxes that apply to your self-employment income:
- 9 states have no income tax (Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, Wyoming), meaning no state tax on SE income.
- Most states tax self-employment income at the same rates as wages, using your net profit from Schedule C as the starting point.
- Some states require quarterly estimated tax payments at the state level in addition to federal quarterly payments.
Frequently Asked Questions
Calculate Your SE Tax
See exactly how much SE tax you owe based on your income and expenses.
SE Tax Calculator →Quarterly Tax Calculator
Calculate your quarterly estimated payments to avoid underpayment penalties.
Quarterly Calculator →Schedule SE and self-employment tax instructions:
IRS Schedule SE Instructions ↗