2026 tax year · US · Updated May 18, 2026
Self-Employment Tax Calculator
If you make money on the side as a freelancer, contractor, gig worker, or sole proprietor, the IRS wants Social Security and Medicare tax on top of regular income tax. This calculator estimates what you owe using Schedule SE math.
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Estimated 2026 self-employment tax
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Self-employment tax cheat sheet
The 2026 rates, quarterly due dates, safe-harbor rule, and a deductions checklist on one page. Delivered to your inbox right now.
- All 2026 SE tax numbers in one place
- Quarterly due dates + safe-harbor rule
- Common Schedule C deductions checklist
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How self-employment tax works
When you’re an employee, you and your employer each pay 7.65% for Social Security and Medicare (FICA). When you’re self-employed, you pay both halves — 15.3% total — on the first $184,500 of earnings, then 2.9% Medicare on the rest, plus a 0.9% surtax above certain income thresholds.
The IRS lets you reduce the taxable amount by 7.65% first (the 92.35% factor), which roughly mirrors the deduction employers get. You also get to deduct half of your SE tax from your gross income when figuring income tax.
Worked example: $75,000 net earnings, single filer
Let’s walk through every line for a freelancer with $75,000 in net self-employment earnings (after deducting business expenses on Schedule C):
- Apply the 92.35% factor — multiply net earnings by 0.9235 to get the amount subject to SE tax. $75,000 × 0.9235 = $69,263.
- Social Security portion — 12.4% on earnings up to the $184,500 wage base. $69,263 × 0.124 = $8,589. Well under the cap, so the full amount is taxed.
- Medicare portion — 2.9% on all earnings, no cap. $69,263 × 0.029 = $2,009.
- Additional Medicare surtax — 0.9% on earnings over $200,000 (single). $69,263 is under the threshold, so this is $0.
- Total SE tax owed = $10,597 (~14.1% effective rate on your net earnings).
- Deductible half — half of the SS + Medicare portion comes off your gross income when calculating income tax: $5,299.
- Quarterly estimated payment— divide the total by 4 for the SE tax portion of each quarter’s 1040-ES payment: $2,649. Your actual quarterly payment will also include estimated income tax.
Quarterly payments
Self-employment tax isn’t withheld from your paychecks, so the IRS expects you to send it in four installments throughout the year using Form 1040-ES. Due dates for the 2026 tax year are April 15, June 15, September 15, 2026, and January 15, 2027.
A common safe harbor: pay at least 100% of your prior-year tax (110% if your AGI was over $150,000), or 90% of your current-year tax, whichever is less. Hit that and you avoid the underpayment penalty even if you owe more at filing time.
We’ve got a deeper guide: How to pay quarterly self-employment tax.
These are estimates, not tax advice. If your situation is unusual (multiple businesses, W-2 plus 1099, church employee income), talk to a CPA.