Whether you’re a full-time freelancer or earned $500 on a side project, you need to report it. Here’s exactly how to do it without overpaying or triggering an audit.

Quick answer: Report all freelance income on Schedule C of your tax return. Deduct all business expenses to reduce taxable income. You’ll owe income tax + 15.3% self-employment tax on net profit. Make quarterly estimated payments if you’ll owe $1,000+ at tax time.

How Freelance Income Is Taxed

Tax Component Rate On What
Federal income tax 10–37% Net profit (after deductions)
Self-employment tax 15.3% (12.4% SS + 2.9% Medicare) 92.35% of net profit
State income tax 0–13.3% Net profit
Additional Medicare tax 0.9% Net SE income over $200K

Forms You’ll Use

Form Purpose When to File
Schedule C Report business income and expenses With annual tax return
Schedule SE Calculate self-employment tax With annual tax return
Form 1040 Main tax return April 15 (or extension)
Form 1040-ES Quarterly estimated tax payments Quarterly deadlines
Form 8829 Home office deduction With Schedule C

Common Freelance Deductions

Deduction Examples
Home office $5/sq ft simplified or actual expenses
Computer and equipment Laptop, monitor, desk, chair
Software and subscriptions Adobe, Slack, project management, hosting
Internet Business-use percentage
Phone Business-use percentage
Professional development Courses, books, conferences
Professional services Accountant, lawyer, virtual assistant
Marketing and advertising Website, ads, business cards
Travel Business trips, flights, hotels, meals (50%)
Mileage $0.70/mile (2026) for business driving
Health insurance 100% deductible (self-employed deduction)
Retirement contributions Solo 401(k), SEP IRA
Bank/payment processing fees PayPal, Stripe, Wave fees
Office supplies Paper, ink, postage

Step-by-Step: Filing Freelance Taxes

Step Action When
1 Track all income (even without 1099s) Ongoing
2 Track all business expenses with receipts Ongoing
3 Calculate quarterly estimated tax Each quarter
4 Pay quarterly estimates (1040-ES) Apr 15, Jun 15, Sep 15, Jan 15
5 Gather all 1099s in January January
6 Complete Schedule C (income minus expenses) Tax time
7 Complete Schedule SE (self-employment tax) Tax time
8 File Form 1040 with all schedules April 15

Freelance Tax Example

Item Amount
Gross freelance income $75,000
Home office deduction -$2,400
Computer/equipment -$2,000
Software/subscriptions -$1,200
Internet (50% business) -$600
Phone (60% business) -$720
Health insurance -$7,200
Solo 401(k) employee contribution -$23,500
Net profit (Schedule C) $37,380
Self-employment tax $5,282
Federal income tax (~12% bracket) ~$2,400
Total tax on $75K gross ~$7,682 (10.2%)

With aggressive but legal deductions, the effective tax rate on $75K gross is about 10%.

Record Keeping Requirements

What to Keep How Long Why
Income records (invoices, 1099s, bank statements) 7 years IRS audit window
Expense receipts 7 years Prove deductions
Mileage log 7 years IRS requires contemporaneous record
Home office measurements Duration of deduction Calculate deduction
Asset purchase records Life of asset + 7 years Depreciation records
Tax returns Indefinitely Reference for future years

Bottom Line

Freelance tax filing is straightforward once you know the process: track income and expenses throughout the year, pay quarterly estimates, and file Schedule C with your annual return. The key to keeping taxes low is maximizing legitimate deductions — home office, health insurance, retirement contributions, and equipment can slash your taxable income dramatically. Don’t fear the self-employment tax — most of it is building your own Social Security benefit.

For related guides, see 1099 tax guide, quarterly tax payments, and self-employment tax.

Sources

  • Internal Revenue Service. “Tax Information for Individuals.” irs.gov
  • Social Security Administration. “Benefits and Eligibility Information.” ssa.gov/benefits
  • Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. “Medicare Program Information.” medicare.gov

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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