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.

WealthVieu
Written by WealthVieu

WealthVieu researches and writes data-driven personal finance guides using primary sources including the IRS, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Federal Reserve, and Census Bureau.

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