Freelancers carry a heavier tax burden than W-2 employees — 15.3% self-employment tax on top of income tax. But they also have access to deductions employees can’t touch. Done right, the tax bill on $100,000 in freelance income can be lower than the tax on a $100,000 salary.
How Freelance Income Is Taxed: The Full Picture
The Two Tax Bills Every Freelancer Owes
| Tax | Rate | Income This Applies To |
|---|---|---|
| Self-employment tax | 15.3% | First $176,100 of net SE income |
| SE tax (Medicare portion only) | 2.9% | Net SE income above $176,100 |
| Additional Medicare tax | 0.9% | Net SE income above $200K (single) / $250K (married) |
| Federal income tax | 10–37% | Taxable income after deductions |
| State income tax | 0–13.3% | Varies by state |
Total Federal Tax by Net Freelance Income (Before Deductions)
| Net Income | SE Tax | Income Tax* | Total Federal | Effective Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $30,000 | $4,239 | $1,643 | $5,882 | 19.6% |
| $50,000 | $7,065 | $4,133 | $11,198 | 22.4% |
| $75,000 | $10,598 | $8,025 | $18,623 | 24.8% |
| $100,000 | $14,130 | $12,615 | $26,745 | 26.7% |
| $150,000 | $19,914 | $24,615 | $44,529 | 29.7% |
| $200,000 | $23,536 | $37,715 | $61,251 | 30.6% |
After standard deduction ($15,000 single), SE tax deduction, and QBI deduction. Single filer, no other income.
The SE Tax Deduction: A Built-In Offset
You can deduct 50% of self-employment tax directly from gross income — before calculating income tax. This partially compensates for paying the employer half of FICA.
On $100,000 net SE income:
- SE tax: $14,130
- SE tax deduction (50%): −$7,065
- This reduces your taxable income by $7,065 before any other deductions
- Tax savings at 22%: $1,554
The Five Most Valuable Freelancer Deductions
1. QBI Deduction (20% of Net Business Income)
The Section 199A deduction gives most freelancers a 20% deduction on qualified business income — with no cash outlay required.
| Net Profit | QBI Deduction | Tax Savings (22%) | Tax Savings (24%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| $50,000 | $10,000 | $2,200 | $2,400 |
| $75,000 | $15,000 | $3,300 | $3,600 |
| $100,000 | $20,000 | $4,400 | $4,800 |
| $150,000 | $30,000 | $6,600 | $7,200 |
Phase-out for certain freelancers (2026): Above $197,300 (single) / $394,600 (married), the deduction begins phasing out for “specified service” businesses — which includes: consultants, lawyers, accountants, financial advisors, athletes, and performers. If you fall in this category and are near these income levels, consult a CPA.
2. Solo 401(k) or SEP IRA
Retirement contributions are the most powerful dollar-for-dollar tax reduction available.
| Contribution | Solo 401(k) | SEP IRA |
|---|---|---|
| Employee deferral | $23,500 (+ $7,500 catch-up age 50+) | None |
| Employer contribution | Up to 25% of net SE income | Up to 25% of net SE income |
| 2026 combined max | $70,000 ($77,500 age 50+) | $70,000 |
| Deadline to open | December 31 of tax year | Tax filing deadline (+ extension) |
| Income required | Net SE income must support it | Same |
Worked example: $100,000 net profit, Solo 401(k)
- Employee deferral: $23,500
- Employer contribution (25% of $92,935 net SE income): $23,234
- Total deductible: $46,734
- Tax savings (22% income + reduces SE tax base): ~$11,500
3. Health Insurance Premiums
Self-employed individuals deduct 100% of health, dental, and long-term care insurance premiums — for themselves, a spouse, and dependents. This deduction is taken on Form 1040 (not Schedule C), and reduces adjusted gross income directly.
Important interaction: If you or your spouse are eligible for employer-sponsored health insurance (including through a spouse’s job), you cannot claim this deduction. You also cannot claim it in months when you were eligible for employer coverage.
ACA marketplace interaction: If you buy insurance through HealthCare.gov and receive a premium tax credit, the self-employed health insurance deduction and the premium tax credit interact. Work with a tax software tool or CPA to optimize — the calculation iterates between your AGI and credit eligibility.
4. Home Office Deduction
A dedicated workspace in your home qualifies — but it must be used regularly and exclusively for business.
| Method | Calculation | Maximum | Record-Keeping |
|---|---|---|---|
| Simplified | $5 × business sq ft | $1,500/year | Just square footage |
| Actual expense | (Office sq ft ÷ total sq ft) × home expenses | No limit | All home expense receipts |
The actual method typically yields 2–3× the simplified method deduction. On a home costing $30,000/year in mortgage interest, taxes, insurance, utilities, and maintenance, a 10% office = $3,000 deduction — double the simplified $1,500 max.
Claim this deduction. Many freelancers skip it out of audit anxiety. The risk is low; the deduction is real and legal.
5. Self-Employment Tax Deduction (50%)
Already covered above — but emphasized here because it’s automatic and often overlooked. Every freelancer deducts half of their SE tax from gross income. On $100,000 in net profit, this is a $7,065 deduction you get without doing anything extra.
Deduction Checklist: What Else to Track
| Expense | Deductibility | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Computer and equipment | 100% (Section 179 or depreciation) | Business use only |
| Software and apps | 100% | CRM, invoicing, design tools, etc. |
| Internet (home) | Business % | If also used personally, prorate |
| Phone | Business % | Keep a call log or estimate % |
| Vehicle — standard mileage | $0.70/mile (2026) | Log every business trip |
| Vehicle — actual expense | Prorate by business miles | Gas, insurance, maintenance |
| Professional development | 100% | Courses, books, conferences in your field |
| Marketing and website | 100% | Hosting, ads, design, social media tools |
| Professional memberships | 100% | Trade associations, industry groups |
| Legal and accounting fees | 100% | CPA fees for your return are deductible |
| Business meals (50%) | 50% | Must have business purpose; document it |
| Business travel | 100% | Airfare, hotel; 50% on meals |
| Client gifts | $25/client limit | Keep receipts with client names |
| Bank fees | 100% | Business account fees, merchant processing |
| Subscriptions | 100% | Business-purpose only |
Record-Keeping System: What to Track Throughout the Year
Scrambling at tax time costs money and results in missed deductions. Set this up now:
| Record | How to Track | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Gross income | Separate business bank account | Ongoing |
| Business expenses | Bookkeeping app (Wave, FreshBooks, QuickBooks) | Weekly |
| Mileage | MileIQ, Everlance, or paper log | Every trip |
| Home office sq footage | Note it once; photo of dedicated space | Annually |
| Invoice and receipts | Cloud storage (Google Drive, Dropbox) | As incurred |
| Quarterly payments made | IRS Direct Pay confirmation emails | Quarterly |
Quarterly Estimated Taxes: How Much and When
Freelancers who will owe $1,000+ at filing must make quarterly payments.
2026 Due Dates
| Quarter | Due Date | Covers Income From |
|---|---|---|
| Q1 | April 15, 2026 | January–March |
| Q2 | June 16, 2026 | April–May |
| Q3 | September 15, 2026 | June–August |
| Q4 | January 15, 2027 | September–December |
How Much to Set Aside Per Payment Received
| Your Expected Tax Bracket | Set Aside This % of Each Payment |
|---|---|
| 12% income tax bracket | 25–28% (SE tax + income tax) |
| 22% income tax bracket | 30–33% |
| 24% income tax bracket | 32–35% |
| 32% income tax bracket | 40–43% |
Simplest safe harbor: Divide last year’s total tax liability by 4 and pay that amount each quarter. You’ll owe no underpayment penalty at filing regardless of income fluctuations.
Paying: Use IRS Direct Pay (Free, Takes 2 Minutes)
Go to irs.gov/payments → IRS Direct Pay → select “Estimated Tax” → enter your bank routing and account numbers. No account registration required. Free.
What Happens If You Don’t Pay Quarterly
Missing quarterly payments doesn’t mean you’ll owe a huge penalty — but you will owe interest. The underpayment penalty rate in 2026 is approximately 8% annualized on the amount you should have paid, from the due date until payment.
Example: You should have paid $5,000 on April 15 but paid $0. You file and pay the full amount on April 15 of next year — that’s ~12 months late. Penalty ≈ $5,000 × 8% = $400.
Large underpayments over multiple quarters compound. Pay quarterly if you can — it is less painful than a lump-sum penalty at filing.
S-Corp Election: When to Consider It
If your annual freelance profit consistently exceeds $60,000–$80,000, forming an S-corp and electing S-corp tax treatment can save significant money.
| Annual Profit | Est. SE Tax Saved | Annual S-Corp Cost | Net Annual Saving |
|---|---|---|---|
| $80,000 | $3,825 | $2,500 | $1,325 |
| $100,000 | $5,355 | $2,500 | $2,855 |
| $150,000 | $9,945 | $3,000 | $6,945 |
| $200,000 | $14,535 | $3,500 | $11,035 |
Based on taking 45% of profit as salary; remaining 55% as distribution. S-corp cost includes payroll service + additional return.
The S-corp adds payroll administration (quarterly 941 filings, W-2 for yourself), but the savings are real. Work with a CPA before making this election — timing and “reasonable salary” determination matter.
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