Category: Freelancer Taxes

  • Self-Employment Tax Explained: Why You Owe 15.3% Before Your Income Tax Starts


    A freelance copywriter wraps her first full year on her own — $87,000 in invoices paid — and sits down with TurboTax in late March. She expects a tax bill somewhere around $15,000. The number on the screen is $26,400. She stares at it. Then she googles "why do I owe so much in self-employment tax" at 11pm, and that is where this article finds her.

    The tax isn't wrong. That's the hardest part. The software calculated it correctly. What nobody told her — not the client who sent the 1099, not the accountant she didn't hire, not the onboarding paperwork for her LLC — is that there's a 15.3% tax running underneath federal income tax. It hits before your income tax bracket even enters the picture. And when you're used to W-2 withholding quietly handling all of this, the first April as a sole prop can feel like a mugging.

    This article explains exactly how to calculate self employment tax, why the number is what it is, and which levers actually lower it.


    The Tax Nobody Explains to You When You Go 1099

    When you had a W-2 job, your employer paid half of your FICA taxes — 7.65% — and withheld the other 7.65% from your paycheck before you ever saw it. You paid half. They paid half. You never noticed either amount because neither one showed up as a line item you had to cut a check for.

    Go 1099 and that changes completely. You are now both the employee and the employer. Both halves are yours. All 15.3%.

    This is SE tax — self-employment tax — and it is separate from federal income tax. It's calculated on Schedule SE and it funds Social Security and Medicare. If your net profit from self-employment reaches $400 or more in a year, you file Schedule SE. No exceptions (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 1).

    On $87,000 net profit, the SE tax exposure alone — before a single dollar of federal income tax — is roughly $12,300. Then income tax stacks on top. The combined number is why that TurboTax screen looked like a mistake.

    The deeper problem is that most new freelancers spend their gross revenue like it's net income. Every invoice that hits your account, somewhere between 25% and 30% of it isn't yours yet. It belongs to the quarterly estimate you haven't made. When you skip four quarters of estimated taxes and face the whole year in April — plus an underpayment penalty — the bill doesn't just feel large. It is large.

    The missed-deduction problem makes it worse. SE tax is calculated on net profit, not gross revenue. Every legitimate write-off you don't take — the home office you forgot to deduct, the software subscriptions you paid personally, the portion of your phone bill — sits on top of your net profit and gets taxed at 15.3% plus your income tax rate. A $3,000 missed deduction doesn't cost you $660 in income tax. It costs you $660 in income tax and $459 in SE tax. Missed write-offs hurt twice.


    How Self-Employment Tax Actually Works — Step by Step

    Here is the actual calculation sequence. Work through it with your own numbers.

    Step 1: Calculate Net Profit on Schedule C

    Gross revenue minus legitimate business deductions equals net profit. This is the number SE tax runs on — not your gross invoices. If you invoiced $87,000 and had $12,000 in deductible expenses — software, a home office, professional development, mileage at the 2025 IRS standard rate of 70 cents per mile (IRS Notice 2025-5) — your net profit is $75,000, not $87,000. That difference matters.

    For this example, assume she took no deductions. Net profit: $87,000.

    Step 2: Multiply Net Profit by 92.35%

    The IRS doesn't apply SE tax to your full net profit. It applies it to 92.35% of net profit. The reason: a regular employee's share of FICA wasn't included in their wages to begin with, so the IRS mirrors that by letting you exclude 7.65% before calculating (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 1).

    $87,000 × 0.9235 = $80,344 in SE earnings.

    Step 3: Apply the 15.3% SE Tax Rate

    The 15.3% rate breaks down as 12.4% for Social Security and 2.9% for Medicare. The Social Security portion only applies to the first $176,100 of SE earnings in 2025 — above that, you pay only the 2.9% Medicare rate (IRS Pub 505, Chapter 2; SSA Fact Sheet 2025). At $80,344, you're fully subject to both.

    $80,344 × 0.153 = $12,293 in SE tax.

    Step 4: Deduct Half of SE Tax From Your AGI

    The IRS gives you a deduction equal to half of what you pay in SE tax. This goes on Schedule 1 (Form 1040), line 15 — an above-the-line deduction, meaning it reduces your AGI before the standard deduction and before federal income tax is calculated (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 1).

    $12,293 ÷ 2 = $6,147 deducted from AGI.

    Step 5: Calculate Federal Income Tax on the Reduced Number

    Adjusted gross income after the SE deduction: $87,000 − $6,147 = $80,853. Subtract the 2025 standard deduction for a single filer of $15,000 (IRS Rev. Proc. 2024-40): $80,853 − $15,000 = $65,853 taxable income.

    Using the 2025 tax rate schedule for single filers, $65,853 falls in the 22% bracket. Federal income tax comes to roughly $9,166.

    Total tax bill: $12,293 SE tax + $9,166 income tax = $21,459.

    That's still a meaningful number. But it's not $26,400 — and now you know why it's what it is.

    The Three Levers That Actually Lower It

    Lever 1 — Catch every deductible expense. Because SE tax runs on net profit, every dollar of legitimate write-off reduces both your SE tax and your income tax. A $3,000 home office deduction saves roughly $459 in SE tax ($3,000 × 15.3%) plus income tax on top of that. This is where most 1099 workers leave the most money on the table.

    Lever 2 — Contribute to a retirement account. A Solo 401(k) employee elective deferral — up to $23,500 for 2025 (IRS Pub 560, Chapter 4) — reduces your taxable income for income tax purposes. The employer-side contribution reduces SE net earnings too. At $87K net, modeling this contribution is worth the 20 minutes.

    Lever 3 — S-Corp election above $100K net. Pay yourself a reasonable W-2 salary and take the remainder as a distribution. SE tax only applies to the salary. At $87K net, the compliance costs ($3,500–$5,000/year in payroll and filing fees) barely pencil. At $100K+ net profit, the math improves materially. Worth modeling, not worth rushing.

    On quarterly estimates: Once you know your projected SE tax, you pay it across four installments — April 15, June 15, September 15, and January 15 (IRS Pub 505, Chapter 2). If your AGI last year was above $150,000, the safe harbor is 110% of last year's total tax paid in four equal installments. Below $150,000 AGI, 100% of last year's tax covers you (IRS Pub 505, Chapter 2). Missing a quarterly payment isn't free — there's an underpayment penalty calculated quarterly that compounds. It's avoidable with a calendar reminder and a dedicated tax reserve account.

    For a deeper look at the software that keeps these numbers organized, see Best Accounting Tools for Freelancers 2025: Top Apps + Free Tracker.


    The Fastest Way to Lower Your SE Tax: Stop Missing Deductions

    Tool: Keeper Tax

    Keeper Tax is an app built specifically for 1099 workers that connects to your bank and card accounts, scans transactions continuously, and flags deductible expenses you'd otherwise miss — software subscriptions, home office supplies, professional development, the business portion of your phone bill.

    Because SE tax is calculated on net profit, every missed deduction is a direct tax overpayment: $1,000 in unclaimed write-offs costs a freelancer $153 in excess SE tax plus income tax on top. Keeper's job is to close that gap automatically, which makes it the most direct fix for the new 1099 contractor who suspects they're overpaying but doesn't know where to look.

    [See Keeper Tax →]Keeper Tax


    The Key 2025 Numbers for Self-Employment Tax

    • SE tax rate: 15.3% — 12.4% Social Security + 2.9% Medicare (IRS Pub 505, Chapter 2)
    • Social Security wage base: $176,100 — SE tax above this threshold drops to 2.9% Medicare only (SSA Fact Sheet 2025)
    • 92.35% — the multiplier applied to net profit before SE tax is calculated (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 1)
    • 50% SE tax deduction — above-the-line, Schedule 1 (Form 1040), line 15 (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 1)
    • $400 — minimum net profit that triggers the SE tax filing requirement (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 1)
    • Standard deduction, single filer: $15,000 (IRS Rev. Proc. 2024-40)
    • Solo 401(k) employee deferral limit: $23,500 (IRS Pub 560, Chapter 4)
    • Standard mileage rate: 70 cents/mile (IRS Notice 2025-5)
    • Quarterly estimated tax due dates: April 15, June 15, September 15, January 15 (IRS Pub 505, Chapter 2)
    • Safe harbor threshold: 100% of prior-year tax (AGI ≤ $150,000) or 110% (AGI > $150,000) (IRS Pub 505, Chapter 2)

    What to Do This Week

    The copywriter at the TurboTax screen can't undo the year. But she can stop the same thing from happening next April. Here is the sequence that matters, in order.

    1. Calculate what you actually owe right now. Run Steps 1 through 5 above with your own net profit figure. Write the number down. Ambiguity is what lets the problem grow.

    2. Open a separate tax reserve account today. Every payment that arrives, move 27%–30% of it into that account immediately. Not at month-end. Not at quarter-end. When the deposit clears. This single habit eliminates the April surprise.

    3. Audit your deductions before you file. Pull three months of bank and card statements. Flag every recurring charge — software, subscriptions, tools, professional services. Cross-reference against what you reported on Schedule C. If the gap is larger than $1,000, a tool like Keeper Tax or a one-hour session with a CPA will pay for itself.

    4. Set your four quarterly reminders now. April 15, June 15, September 15, January 15. Put them in your calendar with a two-week lead time. The underpayment penalty is small per quarter but it signals a cash-flow problem worth fixing.

    5. Model the Solo 401(k) contribution. If you have $23,500 available to contribute, run the numbers on what it saves in income tax. At $65,853 taxable income in the 22% bracket, a full contribution saves roughly $5,170 in federal income tax. That's not a rounding error.

    If your net profit is consistently above $80,000, book a conversation with a CPA specifically about S-Corp election timing. The compliance overhead is real, but so is the SE tax savings above the right threshold.

    The calculation isn't complicated. The problem is that nobody walks you through it the first time. Now you have the walkthrough.


    This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute tax, legal, or financial advice. Tax laws change and individual situations vary. Consult a qualified tax professional before making decisions based on this content. + 2.9% Medicare (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 1)

    • Social Security wage base: $184,500 — above this, only the 2.9% Medicare rate applies (IRS Pub 505, Chapter 2)
    • Additional Medicare Tax: 0.9% on net SE earnings above $200,000 (single) or $250,000 (married filing jointly) — filed on Form 8959 (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 1)
    • SE earnings multiplier: 92.35% — multiply net profit by 0.9235 before applying the 15.3% rate (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 1)
    • Deductible half of SE tax: 50% of SE tax paid reduces AGI above the line on Schedule 1, line 15 (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 1)
    • Safe harbor threshold: 110% of prior year's total tax if prior-year AGI exceeded $150,000; 100% if it didn't (IRS Pub 505, Chapter 2)
    • SE filing threshold: $400 in net self-employment earnings triggers Schedule SE (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 1)

    These numbers adjust every January — verify before acting.


    What to Do Before Your Next Invoice Hits

    1. Open a dedicated tax reserve account this week. Route 27% of every deposit into it automatically — before you pay yourself, before you pay any bill. Relay and Mercury both offer free business checking with sub-account functionality. Stop mixing the IRS's money with yours. This is the single habit that makes quarterly estimates survivable.

    2. Run the SE tax calculation on your projected annual net profit right now, using the five steps above. If you're on track for $80,000 or more in net profit, also model a Solo 401(k) contribution — the employee deferral limit for 2025 is $23,500 (IRS Pub 560, Chapter 4), and the income tax savings alone on a 22% bracket are $5,170 on a full contribution.

    3. Sign up for Keeper Tax and connect your accounts. Let it run for 30 days. The deductions it surfaces reduce the net profit figure that SE tax runs on — that's the lever most 1099 workers never pull. At roughly $20/month, one recovered deduction category covers the cost of the year.

    Put the four quarterly deadlines in your phone right now: April 15, June 15, September 15, January 15. The underpayment penalty isn't catastrophic, but it's also entirely avoidable — and it's real money you're handing over for nothing.

    Want the free SE tax calculator worksheet? https://themeridian.blog/free-worksheet


    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can anyone confirm the self-employment tax process — am I understanding Schedule C, SE tax, and quarterly estimates correctly?

    Yes — and the sequence is: Schedule C calculates net profit (gross revenue minus deductions). Schedule SE takes that net profit, multiplies it by 92.35%, and applies the 15.3% SE tax rate to the result (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 1). Half of that SE tax amount is then deducted from your AGI on Schedule 1 before income tax is calculated. Quarterly estimated tax payments — filed using Form 1040-ES — cover both your SE tax and income tax throughout the year, due April 15, June 15, September 15, and January 15 (IRS Pub 505, Chapter 2). That's the full loop.

    Why do I owe so much more in taxes as a freelancer than I did as a W-2 employee?

    As a W-2 employee, your employer paid half of your FICA taxes (7.65%) invisibly, and the other half was withheld from your paycheck before you saw it. You never wrote a check for it. As a 1099 contractor, you pay both halves yourself — all 15.3% — as SE tax, in addition to federal income tax (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 1). Nothing is withheld during the year unless you set it aside yourself, which is why the April bill can look disproportionate to what you earned.

    Does self-employment tax apply to every dollar I earn as a 1099 contractor?

    It applies to your net profit from self-employment — gross 1099 income minus legitimate business deductions — not to gross revenue (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 1). The Social Security portion (12.4%) only applies to net SE earnings up to the $184,500 wage base for 2026; above that, only the 2.9% Medicare portion continues (IRS Pub 505, Chapter 2). If your net earnings from self-employment are under $400 for the year, Schedule SE is not required.


    This article is for educational purposes only and is not tax, legal, or financial advice. Tax rules change and dollar thresholds adjust annually. Consult a qualified CPA, EA, or tax attorney for guidance on your specific situation. Meridian Press and Morgan Hayes disclaim any liability for actions taken based on the contents of this article.


  • Mileage Tracking for Freelancers: The $500–$800 You’re Leaving on the Table Every Year


    A freelance graphic designer wraps up a client meeting across town, gets back in the car, and drives home. She did that 40 times last year. At 72.5¢ a mile, averaging 12 miles round-trip per meeting, that's $348 in deductions — just from those meetings. Add the print shop runs, supply pickups, and the two portfolio reviews downtown, and she's looking at $600–$900 in missed deductions. She has no log. The IRS will not reconstruct it for her.

    That's not a tax law problem. It's a January problem. Nobody set up the app. Nobody wrote down the odometer reading. Nobody built the habit when it was still easy. Now it's April, the accountant is asking for the mileage log, and the honest answer is: there isn't one.

    The mileage deduction for self-employed filers in 2025 is real money — not a rounding error. But the IRS requires contemporaneous records, and "I drove a lot" is not a mileage log. This article is about fixing that before another year disappears.


    Why Freelancers Miss This Deduction Every Single Year

    Most sole props and 1099 workers know, at some level, that business driving is deductible. It comes up every tax season. The problem isn't awareness — it's the gap between knowing and doing.

    Here's what actually happens: you drive to a client's office in February, tell yourself you'll log it later, and log nothing. You do that 39 more times. Then April arrives and you're staring at a Schedule C with no mileage number on Line 9 because there's nothing to put there.

    The IRS requires what it calls contemporaneous records — logs made at or near the time of each trip, not reconstructed from memory months later (IRS Pub 463, Chapter 5). A mental estimate doesn't qualify. A calendar entry that reads "meeting — Sarah's office" might help you partially reconstruct something, but it's a weak record, and a weak record under audit is treated as no record.

    The math on what you're missing is not trivial.

    At 70¢ per mile for 2025 (IRS Rev. Proc. 2024-25) — with the rate adjusted to 72.5¢ per mile for 2026 (IRS Rev. Proc. 2025-37) — consider what a modest business driving profile actually looks like:

    • 40 client meetings at 12 miles round-trip: 480 miles
    • 24 post office or supply runs at 6 miles round-trip: 144 miles
    • 12 coworking space days at 10 miles round-trip: 120 miles
    • 4 portfolio reviews or networking events at 15 miles: 60 miles

    That's 804 business miles — at 2025 rates, a $563 deduction. At a 22% marginal rate, that's $124 in actual tax savings. At 32%, it's $180. Real money that vanished because the log didn't exist.

    What counts as a business mile: client meetings, site visits, temporary work locations, business errands (post office, supply store, bank). What doesn't count: commuting from home to a regular office. But if your home is your principal place of business — which it is for most freelancers who claim a home office deduction — then trips from home to client locations are business miles (IRS Pub 463, Chapter 1).

    This applies whether you're a sole prop, a single-member LLC, or an S-Corp owner driving to client sites. The mileage deduction for self-employed filers is not an edge case. It's a standard Schedule C write-off that a lot of freelancers simply don't capture.


    How to Actually Track Mileage (Without Thinking About It)

    Step 1: Choose Standard Mileage Rate or Actual Expenses

    You have two methods. The standard mileage rate — 70¢ per mile for 2025, 72.5¢ per mile for 2026 (IRS Rev. Proc. 2025-37) — covers everything: gas, oil, insurance, maintenance, depreciation. You multiply your business miles by the rate and you're done.

    The actual expense method tracks what you spend on gas, insurance, repairs, and depreciation, then multiplies by the business-use percentage of the vehicle. More paperwork, occasionally more money for high-mileage drivers with expensive vehicles.

    For most freelancers driving under 25,000 business miles per year, standard mileage rate wins on simplicity. One important rule: if you use the standard mileage rate in the first year you place a vehicle in service for business, you can switch to actual expenses in a later year. If you start with actual expenses, you cannot switch to standard mileage rate later (IRS Pub 463, Chapter 4). Choose standard at the start and you keep your options open.

    Step 2: Know What the IRS Requires for Every Trip

    For each business trip, you need four things (IRS Pub 463, Chapter 5):

    1. Date of the trip
    2. Destination (city or area, or specific address)
    3. Business purpose (client meeting with whom, what errand, for which project)
    4. Miles driven

    That's it. But you need all four, and you need them logged at or near the time of the trip — not in March when you're doing your taxes.

    Step 3: Use an Auto-Tracking App

    This is the only realistic way most people actually maintain a log. Apps like MileIQ, Everlance, or QuickBooks Self-Employed run in the background via GPS, detect when you're driving, and log each trip automatically. You swipe right (business) or left (personal) to classify. Ten seconds per trip. Do it weekly over coffee and you'll never have a gap in your log.

    Install one today. Not next Monday. The miles you drive tomorrow are gone if you don't have the app running.

    Step 4: Export and File

    At year end, every major mileage app generates a report — by date, trip, purpose, miles — that you hand to your accountant or drop into your Schedule C workflow. Line 9 of Schedule C is where business mileage calculated at the standard rate gets reported (IRS Pub 463, Chapter 6). If you're using QuickBooks Self-Employed, the export feeds directly into the Schedule C prep flow.

    What If You Didn't Track Last Year?

    You can sometimes partially reconstruct from Google Maps Timeline, calendar entries, and credit card receipts showing purchases at client locations. It's not a clean record, and an auditor won't treat it favorably — but it's better than nothing and may support an amended return if the amounts are significant. For this year: start today. You cannot fix the past, but you can stop repeating it.


    The App That Runs in the Background and Logs It All

    Tool: QuickBooks Self-Employed

    QuickBooks Self-Employed is a tax and bookkeeping app built specifically for sole props and 1099 workers. It auto-tracks mileage via GPS, connects your bank accounts, categorizes transactions, and calculates your quarterly estimated tax payments — all in one dashboard.

    If you hate running a mileage app separately from the spreadsheet where you track income and the calculator where you figure out your quarterly payment, this is the all-in-one option. Mileage, Schedule C prep, and quarterly estimates in one place. At tax time, you export your mileage report and your income summary together. Nothing falls through the cracks because everything lives in the same tool.

    It's not the cheapest option — dedicated apps like MileIQ cost less if all you need is mileage. But if you're a freelancer managing income tracking, expense categorization, quarterly payments, and mileage, the consolidation is worth the price difference for most people.


    Numbers to Know: Mileage Deduction for Self-Employed Filers, 2025–2026

    These are the figures that matter for your Schedule C.

    Standard mileage rates:

    • 2025: 70¢ per mile (IRS Rev. Proc. 2024-25)
    • 2026: 72.5¢ per mile (IRS Rev. Proc. 2025-37)

    What the deduction is worth at different driving levels (2026 rate, 72.5¢/mile):

    Annual Business Miles Deduction Tax Savings at 22% Tax Savings at 32%
    500 miles $363 ~$80 ~$116
    1,000 miles $725 ~$160 ~$232
    2,000 miles $1,450 ~$319 ~$464
    3,500 miles $2,538 ~$558 ~$812
    5,000 miles $3,625 ~$798 ~$1,160

    Self-employment tax note: The SE tax rate is 15.3% on net self-employment income up to the Social Security wage base of $176,100 for 2025 (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 10). Because the mileage deduction reduces your net profit on Schedule C, it lowers your SE tax base as well as your income tax base. The income-tax-only savings figures in the table above understate your actual total savings. A freelancer in the 22% bracket saving $319 in income tax on 2,000 miles is also saving roughly $49 in SE tax on the same deduction — total savings closer to $368.

    Key record-keeping rule: Logs must be contemporaneous — made at or near the time of each trip, not reconstructed at tax time (IRS Pub 463, Chapter 5).

    Where it goes on your return: Line 9 of Schedule C (IRS Pub 463, Chapter 6).


    Next Steps: Do This Before You Drive Again

    The problem with mileage tracking is that the cost of not starting is invisible until April, at which point it's too late. Every business mile you drive today without a log is a mile you cannot deduct. Here is the exact sequence to fix this:

    This week:

    1. Download a mileage tracking app — QuickBooks Self-Employed, MileIQ, or Everlance. All three auto-track via GPS.
    2. Enable background location access so the app logs trips without you opening it.
    3. Classify the first two or three trips to confirm it's working. Business right, personal left.

    This month:
    4. Decide: standard mileage rate or actual expenses. For most freelancers, standard mileage rate is the right call. Make the decision now so your records match your method from the start of the year.
    5. If you've already driven business miles this year with no log, spend 30 minutes with your calendar and Google Maps Timeline to reconstruct what you can. Document your methodology in writing and keep it with your tax records.

    Ongoing:
    6. Once a week — Sunday evening, Monday morning, whenever — open the app and classify the week's trips. It takes less time than making coffee.
    7. At year end, export the full report before you hand anything to your accountant.

    That's the whole system. It is not complicated. The only reason it doesn't happen is that nobody sets it up. Set it up today.


    Tax rates, mileage rates, and IRS rules referenced in this article are based on information available as of publication and are subject to change. This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute tax, legal, or financial advice. Consult a qualified tax professional for guidance specific to your situation. you're not stitching together three tools in April.

    [See QuickBooks Self-Employed →]Quickbooks Self Employed


    The Key 2026 Mileage Numbers

    • Standard mileage rate, 2025: 70¢ per mile (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 8)
    • Standard mileage rate, 2026: 72.5¢ per mile (IRS Pub 463, Chapter 4)
    • 1,000 business miles: $725 deduction (2026)
    • 2,000 business miles: $1,450 deduction (2026)
    • 3,500 business miles: $2,538 deduction (2026)
    • SE tax rate: 15.3% on net self-employment earnings up to $176,100 SS wage base (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 1)
    • IRS required log fields: date, destination, business purpose, miles — all four, for every trip (IRS Pub 463, Chapter 5)
    • Contemporaneous records: required; reconstructed logs from memory are inadequate under audit
    • Commuting miles: never deductible — trips from home to a regular office are personal; trips from a home office to client locations are business miles
    • Medical/charity mileage rates: separate and lower — not covered here; this article addresses business miles only

    These numbers adjust every January — verify before acting.


    What to Do Before You Close This Tab

    1. Download a mileage tracking app today.
    QuickBooks Self-Employed, MileIQ, or Everlance — pick one, turn on auto-tracking, and leave it running. The miles you drive before you do this are already gone. The ones after are captured automatically.

    2. Recover what you can from Q1.
    Pull up your calendar for January through March. Find every client meeting, site visit, post office run, or business errand you can match to a calendar entry, email, or receipt. Log those trips now, noting the source of each record. It's the last chance to pull anything from the first quarter before the details fade further.

    3. Write down your odometer reading today.
    You'll need it on your Schedule C. Take a photo of your dashboard. Text it to yourself. Put it somewhere you won't lose it. Thirty seconds now saves a headache in April.

    If you're still running all your income and expenses through one bank account and sorting it out every April, Best Accounting Tools for Freelancers 2026: Top Apps + Free Tracker is worth reading next — it covers how to set up a clean system that makes Schedule C prep take an afternoon instead of a week.

    Want the free quarterly tax checklist that tells you exactly what to have ready before each estimated tax deadline? Sign up at https://themeridian.blog/free-worksheet and we'll send it before every due date — Q2 (June 16, 2025 / June 15, 2026) tends to sneak up fast.


    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is the standard mileage rate for self-employed workers in 2026?

    The standard mileage rate for business driving in 2026 is 72.5¢ per mile (IRS Pub 463, Chapter 4). This is up from 70¢ per mile in 2025 (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 8). The rate covers gas, oil, insurance, maintenance, and the depreciation component — you do not deduct those costs separately when using the standard rate. You can add business-related parking fees and tolls on top of the per-mile calculation.

    Can I deduct mileage if I work from home as a freelancer?

    Yes — and this is where home-based freelancers often leave the most money uncaptured. If your home is your principal place of business (which it is for most freelancers who qualify for a home office deduction), then trips from your home to client locations, temporary work sites, supply stores, and business errands are deductible business miles (IRS Pub 463, Chapter 1). The commuting-mile exclusion applies to trips between home and a regular employer office — it does not eliminate deductions for self-employed people whose home is their business base.

    What records does the IRS require for a mileage deduction?

    The IRS requires four elements for each business trip: the date of the trip, the destination or area traveled to, the business purpose of the trip, and the number of miles driven (IRS Pub 463, Chapter 5). These records must be contemporaneous — meaning logged at or near the time of the trip, not reconstructed from memory weeks or months later. A mileage log generated by an auto-tracking app satisfies this requirement; a rough estimate written in April does not.

    Can anyone confirm the self-employment tax process — am I understanding Schedule C, SE tax, and quarterly estimates correctly?

    Yes — here's how the flow works. Your net profit from freelancing is reported on Schedule C (Form 1040), which is where mileage and other business deductions reduce your taxable income. That net profit then feeds Schedule SE, where you calculate self-employment tax at 15.3% on earnings up to the $176,100 Social Security wage base for 2025, with the 2.9% Medicare portion applying above that (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 1). You deduct half of the SE tax on Schedule 1 (Form 1040), line 15. Then, because no employer is withholding from your 1099 income, you send quarterly estimated tax payments using Form 1040-ES — due April 15, June 16, September 15 (2025), and January 15, 2026 (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 1). If you expect to owe more than $1,000 in tax for the year, you're generally required to make these quarterly payments or face an underpayment penalty.


    This article is for educational purposes only and is not tax, legal, or financial advice. Tax rules change and dollar thresholds adjust annually. Consult a qualified CPA, EA, or tax attorney for guidance on your specific situation. Meridian Press and Morgan Hayes disclaim any liability for actions taken based on the contents of this article.


  • Quarterly Estimated Taxes for Freelancers: Deadlines, Safe Harbor, and the 7% Penalty Math


    It is September 13th. A freelance copywriter is staring at a Venmo notification — a $9,400 payment just landed from a brand deal that closed in August. September 15 is 48 hours away. She has no idea what she owes, whether she already owes it, or whether it is too late to avoid a penalty. She has heard the phrase Safe Harbor exactly once, from a Reddit thread she did not finish reading.

    Here is what she does not know: there are four quarterly deadlines and three of them fall during peak work months. Safe Harbor is a specific legal threshold — not a vague concept — that makes the underpayment penalty legally impossible if you hit it. And the penalty itself is 7% compounded daily right now, which on a real number looks like about $52 on a $3,000 miss over 90 days — painful but not catastrophic, and very precisely calculable.

    By the end of this article, you will know your Q3 number, know whether you are already penalty-proof, and have a system that removes the scramble every single quarter going forward.


    Why Quarterly Estimated Taxes Blindside Freelancers Every Single Quarter

    Nobody sends you a calendar invite. That is the core problem with quarterly estimated taxes for self-employed workers.

    When you work a W-2 job, your employer withholds tax from every paycheck. You never see the money. With a 1099, the full invoice amount hits your account and it feels like yours. That $9,400 feels like $9,400. But before she spends a dollar of it, roughly $2,350 to $2,820 of it belongs to the IRS — based on the 15.3% SE tax rate (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 1) on net profit, plus whatever marginal income tax bracket applies. The money was always the IRS's. It just landed in her account first.

    Then there is the deadline structure. The four due dates for quarterly estimated taxes in 2026 are April 15, June 15, September 15, and January 15 of the following year (Form 1040-ES). That Q2 deadline catches people every year: you just filed your annual return on April 15, and Q2 estimated taxes are due eight weeks later. There is no grace period, no reminder, no employer handling it on your behalf.

    The deeper trap is that most people in the 1099 world have never heard of Safe Harbor. Safe Harbor means that if you pay at least 100% of last year's total federal tax bill across four equal quarterly payments — or 110% if your adjusted gross income exceeded $150,000 — the IRS cannot assess an underpayment penalty, even if you end up owing a large sum at year end (IRS Pub 505, Chapter 2). It is not a loophole. It is a written rule. It exists specifically to protect people with variable income.

    When people do not know Safe Harbor exists, they do one of two things: they overpay all year and lose the time value of money sitting in an IRS holding pattern, or they underpay and receive a penalty notice in January with no idea how the number was calculated. The IRS underpayment penalty rate for Q1 2026 is 7% compounded daily (IRS Pub 505, Chapter 2). On a $4,000 underpayment that runs five months, that is roughly $116 in pure penalty — on top of the original tax owed. Not catastrophic. But entirely avoidable.


    How to Calculate, Schedule, and Pay Your Quarterly Estimates Without Guessing

    Step 1: Know the Four Dates Cold

    Right now, before you read another sentence, put these four dates in your phone as hard calendar alerts with a two-day lead:

    • Q1: April 15, 2026
    • Q2: June 15, 2026
    • Q3: September 15, 2026
    • Q4: January 15, 2027

    These come directly from Form 1040-ES. The Q4 payment can be skipped only if you file your full return and pay all remaining tax by February 1, 2027 (Form 1040-ES notes). Otherwise, January 15 is the deadline.

    Step 2: Choose Your Method — Safe Harbor or Current-Year Estimate

    Safe Harbor is the set-it-and-forget-it approach. Pull your 2025 Form 1040, Line 24 — that is your total federal tax for last year. If your AGI was $150,000 or under, your safe harbor target is 100% of that number. If your AGI exceeded $150,000, multiply by 110% (IRS Pub 505, Chapter 2). Divide the result by four. Pay that amount four times. The underpayment penalty cannot legally apply, regardless of what you earn this year.

    Current-year estimate means calculating what you actually expect to owe this year based on projected net profit, deducting half of your SE tax (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 1), and paying 90% of that projected bill across four quarters. This is more accurate if your income is growing fast, but it requires real bookkeeping and a reasonable income projection.

    For most freelancers with reasonably stable income, Safe Harbor is the smarter default.

    Step 3: The Safe Harbor Math With Real Numbers

    Say you earned $85,000 in net profit on your Schedule C in 2025, and your total federal tax on Line 24 was $18,200. Your AGI was under $150,000.

    • Safe harbor target: 100% × $18,200 = $18,200
    • Divided by four quarters = $4,550 per quarter

    You pay $4,550 on April 15, June 15, September 15, and January 15. Even if you earn $140,000 in 2026 and owe $34,000 at year end, no underpayment penalty applies. You will owe the difference in April — but no penalty.

    Step 4: The Penalty Math, Sized Correctly

    If you miss a quarterly payment, the penalty accrues from the due date at 7% annualized, compounded daily (IRS Pub 505, Chapter 2):

    $3,000 underpayment × 7% × (90 ÷ 365) = approximately $52

    A $3,000 miss over 90 days costs you about $52. That is real money, but it is not a disaster. Missing all four quarters on a $180,000 income year is a meaningfully larger number — and the penalty compounds across the full period from each due date. Pay as soon as you realize the error. Every week you wait adds to it.

    Step 5: The 25–30% Reserve Rule

    Every invoice that lands — the moment it hits — move 25–30% of the net amount into a dedicated account. Relay and Mercury both allow automatic split-on-deposit rules at no cost. Label the account "Tax Reserve." Do not touch it. Treat it as the IRS's money sitting temporarily in your name.

    This reserve should account for both SE tax (15.3% on net profit up to the Social Security wage base of $184,500 for 2026, per IRS Pub 505, Chapter 2) and your marginal income tax rate. If you are running legitimate deductions — home office, mileage at 72.5 cents per mile for 2026 (IRS Notice 2026-xx), software subscriptions — your actual taxable net profit is lower than your gross invoice total. That is why tracking deductions in real time matters: you should be reserving on your estimated net profit, not gross revenue.

    Step 6: How to Actually Pay

    Go to irs.gov/payments and use IRS Direct Pay — free, immediate, no account required. For recurring quarterly payments, EFTPS (Electronic Federal Tax Payment System) lets you schedule all four in advance. Save every confirmation number in a folder labeled with the tax year.

    Step 7: The November Catch-Up Move

    By mid-November, you have a clear picture of your full-year income. If you are running significantly ahead of last year and used Safe Harbor based on prior-year tax, you are covered — no action needed. If you used current-year estimates and income spiked, you can make a larger Q4 payment on January 15 to close the gap. A Solo 401(k) contribution of up to $23,500 in employee deferrals before December 31 (IRS Pub 560, Chapter 2) also reduces your taxable income directly, which affects what you actually owe at filing.


    The App That Tracks Deductions Between Quarters So Your Taxable Income Is Actually Accurate

    Tool: Keeper Tax

    Keeper Tax is an AI-assisted bookkeeping app built specifically for 1099 workers — it connects to your accounts, scans transactions continuously, and flags deductible expenses automatically throughout the year.

    The Safe Harbor method works only if your prior-year tax number was based on accurately reported income and deductions. If you missed $4,000 in legitimate deductions last year, your Safe Harbor baseline is inflated — you are voluntarily overpaying. Keeper Tax closes that gap by catching deductions in real time rather than during a frantic April scramble. Home office, software, equipment, mileage, professional development — it flags the categories that 1099 workers most commonly miss. At $20 per month, one missed deduction recovered per quarter more than pays for it.


    The 2026 Quarterly Tax Numbers Worth Memorizing

    These are the figures that govern quarterly estimated taxes self employed workers need to track in 2026:

    • Q1–Q4 due dates: April 15 / June 15 / September 15 / January 15, 2027 (Form 1040-ES)
    • Safe Harbor threshold: 100% of prior-year total tax if AGI ≤ $150,000; 110% if AGI > $150,000 (IRS Pub 505, Chapter 2)
    • Underpayment penalty rate, Q1 2026: 7% compounded daily (IRS Pub 505, Chapter 2)
    • SE tax rate: 15.3% on net self-employment earnings up to the SS wage base (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 1)
    • SS wage base, 2026: $184,500 — above this, only the 2.9% Medicare portion applies (IRS Pub 505, Chapter 2)
    • Standard mileage rate, 2026: 72.5 cents per mile (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 8)
    • Solo 401(k) employee deferral limit, 2026: $24,500 (IRS Pub 560, Chapter 2)
    • Tax reserve rule of thumb: 25–30% of every net invoice

    These numbers adjust every January — verify before acting.


    What to Do Before This Quarter's Deadline

    Action 1: Pull your 2025 Form 1040, Line 24. That is your total federal tax for last year. If your AGI exceeded $150,000, multiply by 1.1. Divide by four. That is your Safe Harbor quarterly payment. Pay it at irs.gov/payments before the next deadline. Takes less than five minutes.

    Action 2: Open a free second checking account — Relay or Mercury both work — and label it Tax Reserve. Set up an automatic transfer of 25–30% every time a payment hits your main account. Configure it once. Stop thinking about it. If you want to tighten that reserve percentage, get Keeper Tax running so your deduction picture is accurate before the next quarterly estimate is due.

    Action 3: Set four hard calendar reminders right now — April 15, June 15, September 15, January 15 — with the title "Quarterly tax due" and a two-day lead alert. Not a to-do. A non-negotiable calendar block.

    If you already missed a quarter: pay what you owe today at irs.gov/payments. The penalty is 7% annualized, compounding daily from the missed due date. Every week you wait adds to it.

    For a full picture of the software stack that keeps self-employed bookkeeping low-friction year-round, see Best Accounting Tools for Freelancers 2026: Top Apps + Free Tracker.

    Want the free quarterly tax planning checklist — the one that covers the November moves that actually reduce what you owe before January 15? Subscribe at https://themeridian.blog/free-worksheet.


    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can anyone confirm the self-employment tax process — am I understanding Schedule C, SE tax, and quarterly estimates correctly?

    Yes — here is the chain. You report net profit on Schedule C (revenue minus deductible business expenses). That net profit flows to Schedule SE, where you calculate the 15.3% SE tax on 92.35% of your net earnings (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 1) — the 92.35% multiplier accounts for the fact that employees only pay half of FICA. You then deduct 50% of the SE tax on Schedule 1 before calculating your income tax. Quarterly estimated taxes are prepayments of both your income tax and your SE tax combined, made four times per year using Form 1040-ES.

    What happens if I miss a quarterly estimated tax payment as a freelancer?

    The IRS assesses an underpayment penalty from the missed due date at the current quarterly interest rate — 7% annualized for Q1 2026, compounded daily (IRS Pub 505, Chapter 2). The penalty is calculated per quarter, so missing Q2 but catching up in Q3 still results in a penalty for the Q2 period. Pay as soon as you realize you missed it. The IRS can calculate the penalty for you using Form 2210, or you can compute it yourself and attach it to your return.

    How do I calculate the Safe Harbor amount for quarterly taxes?

    Find your total federal tax from last year's Form 1040, Line 24. If your AGI that year was $150,000 or under, your safe harbor target is 100% of that number. If your AGI exceeded $150,000, multiply by 110% (IRS Pub 505, Chapter 2). Divide by four. Pay that amount by each quarterly deadline. As long as you make all four payments on time, the IRS cannot charge an underpayment penalty regardless of your actual tax bill for the current year.

    Do I have to pay quarterly taxes if I only made money in one quarter?

    Yes, if your total expected tax liability for the year will be $1,000 or more after subtracting withholding and credits (IRS Pub 505, Chapter 2). The IRS looks at your annual underpayment, not just the quarters where you earned income. However, the annualized income installment method (Form 2210, Schedule AI) lets you calculate each quarterly payment based on income actually earned through that period — meaning a slow Q1 produces a smaller Q1 payment, and a large Q3 produces a larger Q3 payment, without penalty. This is worth computing if your income is highly uneven across the year.


    This article is for educational purposes only and is not tax, legal, or financial advice. Tax rules change and dollar thresholds adjust annually. Consult a qualified CPA, EA, or tax attorney for guidance on your specific situation. Meridian Press and Morgan Hayes disclaim any liability for actions taken based on the contents of this article.


  • S-Corp vs LLC vs Sole Prop: Which One Saves a Freelancer the Most Money


    A freelance developer closes her laptop on a Friday afternoon, checks her accountant's email, and reads: "You should have been an S-Corp last year. You left about $9,200 on the table." It's April. The tax return is already filed. Her net profit last year was $110,000. She paid SE tax on every dollar of it. That $9,200 is gone.

    This is not a story about legal protection, entity complexity, or what kind of business "feels right." It's arithmetic. Sole prop versus LLC versus S-Corp comes down to one question: at your income level, which structure makes you pay the least SE tax? There is a crossover point. It's not a secret. Here's exactly where it is and how to calculate which side of it you're on.


    Why Freelancers Overpay the IRS by Thousands Every Year

    The most common pattern in freelance taxes goes like this: you start on Schedule C as a sole prop, income climbs, you form an LLC because someone told you it was "more professional" or "protected you," and then you keep filing exactly the same way. Nothing changes on your tax return. The LLC costs you $150–$800 a year in state fees and gives you zero tax benefit.

    That's the LLC misconception that burns people. An LLC is a legal box — it exists to limit personal liability. By default, a single-member LLC is a "disregarded entity" for federal tax purposes. The IRS treats it exactly like a sole prop. Your 1099 income still flows to Schedule C. Your net profit is still 100% subject to SE tax.

    Here is what that SE tax looks like in real numbers. The SE tax rate is 15.3% — 12.4% Social Security plus 2.9% Medicare — applied to 92.35% of your net profit (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 1). At $110,000 net:

    • $110,000 × 0.9235 = $101,585 subject to SE tax
    • $101,585 × 0.153 = $15,542 in SE tax

    That's before a single dollar of income tax. You deduct half of SE tax on Schedule 1, which helps at the margin, but the core problem remains: every dollar of net profit on Schedule C generates that SE tax hit.

    The S-Corp mechanism changes this. When you elect S-Corp status, you split your income into two buckets. Bucket one: a W-2 salary you pay yourself — that salary is subject to FICA (the employee-employer equivalent of SE tax). Bucket two: owner distributions — profit you take above the salary — and distributions are not subject to SE tax. The gap between your salary and your total profit is where the savings live.

    The fear that keeps freelancers stuck is real: payroll sounds complicated, "corporation" sounds like something with a boardroom, and the compliance overhead sounds expensive. Some of that fear is warranted at low income levels. At higher income levels, the math simply overrides it.


    Sole Prop vs LLC vs S-Corp: The Real Math at Three Income Levels

    Let's run three scenarios using the 15.3% SE tax rate (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 1) and a realistic estimate of $3,500–$5,000 in annual S-Corp compliance costs (payroll service, bookkeeping, CPA for the 1120-S).

    Scenario 1 — $50,000 Net Profit

    Sole prop / single-member LLC:
    $50,000 × 0.9235 × 0.153 = $7,062 SE tax

    S-Corp with $45,000 reasonable salary:
    $45,000 × 0.9235 × 0.153 = $6,356 SE tax — gross savings of ~$706

    After adding $3,500–$5,000 in compliance costs, the S-Corp costs you money. Stay a sole prop or single-member LLC. If you want liability protection, form the LLC — it costs far less than S-Corp overhead and gives you the legal shield.

    Verdict: Sole prop or LLC. S-Corp not yet.

    Scenario 2 — $110,000 Net Profit

    Sole prop / single-member LLC:
    $110,000 × 0.9235 × 0.153 = ~$15,542 SE tax

    S-Corp with $65,000 reasonable salary:
    $65,000 × 0.9235 × 0.153 = ~$9,185 SE tax

    Gross savings: ~$6,357. Subtract $4,000 in compliance costs. Net savings: ~$2,357 minimum in year one, growing as income grows.

    Verdict: This is the S-Corp crossover. Time to act.

    Scenario 3 — $160,000 Net Profit

    Sole prop / single-member LLC:
    $160,000 × 0.9235 × 0.153 = ~$22,607 SE tax

    S-Corp with $80,000 reasonable salary:
    $80,000 × 0.9235 × 0.153 = ~$11,304 SE tax

    Gross savings: $11,303. Net of compliance: **$6,300–$7,800/year.** And note: the Social Security wage base in 2026 is $184,500 (IRS Pub 505, Chapter 2). Above that threshold, only the 2.9% Medicare rate applies. High earners see an additional structural benefit.

    Verdict: S-Corp math is unambiguous. Every year you delay is money left behind.


    How the S-Corp Election Actually Works: Five Steps

    Step 1 — Form an LLC (if you haven't already). Most freelancers elect S-Corp status through an LLC, not a standalone corporation. Your state's secretary of state website handles this.

    Step 2 — File Form 2553 with the IRS. This is the S-Corp election form. To apply for a given tax year, you must generally file within 75 days of January 1 of that year. Miss the window and you're waiting until next year — there is a late election relief process, but it requires a reasonable cause explanation.

    Step 3 — Set up payroll. You must run actual W-2 payroll for yourself. This means withholding federal and state income taxes, Social Security, and Medicare — then depositing those taxes with the IRS on a regular schedule. This is the piece most freelancers outsource.

    Step 4 — Take distributions. After running payroll, the remaining profit can be distributed to you as an owner distribution. These are reported on your personal return but are not subject to SE tax.

    Step 5 — File Form 1120-S by March 15. The S-Corp return is due March 15 — a full month before your personal 1040. Extensions are available, but the March 15 date catches people off guard their first year.


    What Is a "Reasonable Salary"?

    The IRS requires S-Corp owner-employees to pay themselves a reasonable salary — meaning what you'd pay someone else to do your job. This is not optional language. Under-paying yourself to inflate distributions is an audit flag. The IRS has pursued this actively.

    A working rule: research market salary data (Bureau of Labor Statistics, comparable job postings) for your specific skill. A UX designer billing $130/hr full-time is not reasonably salaried at $30,000. A reasonable salary for that role might be $75,000–$90,000. The remaining profit flows as distributions.

    Getting this wrong has real consequences — back taxes, penalties, and interest on unpaid FICA.


    Two More Benefits Worth Naming

    QBI deduction: S-Corp owners can still claim the 20% Section 199A qualified business income deduction on their Schedule E pass-through income, as long as they're below the phase-out thresholds (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 8). For 2026, that's approximately $201,775 single / $403,550 married filing jointly.

    Solo 401(k): S-Corp owners can still contribute to a Solo 401(k). For 2026, the employee elective deferral limit is $23,500 (IRS Pub 505, Chapter 2). The employer profit-sharing contribution — funded by the S-Corp — can bring the total up to $70,000. Your reasonable salary is the compensation figure used to calculate the employer side.


    The Part Nobody Warns You About: Running an S-Corp Takes Real Work

    The administrative lift is real. You now have payroll obligations, two tax returns (personal 1040 and 1120-S), bookkeeping that needs to stay clean enough to support those returns, and a March 15 deadline that doesn't move.

    Tool: Collective
    Collective is a back-office service built specifically for self-employed people who want to operate as an S-Corp. It handles formation, reasonable salary setup, monthly payroll, bookkeeping, and 1120-S filing under one flat monthly fee — so you don't become your own payroll department.
    This is the direct answer to where this article's problem lives: the freelancer who just crossed $80,000 in net profit, has heard "S-Corp" from their accountant, and wants the tax structure without the administrative overhead.
    See Collective's current pricing and what's included →


    Next Steps: What to Do Before the End of This Tax Year

    The s corp election freelancer taxes window is time-sensitive. Here is a concrete sequence.

    If your net profit this year will exceed $80,000:

    1. Pull your last filed Schedule C. Calculate your actual SE tax paid using the formula above.
    2. Get a quote from a CPA or a service like Collective for S-Corp setup and annual compliance costs.
    3. Run the net savings math: gross SE tax reduction minus compliance costs. If it's positive, the only question is how fast you can file Form 2553.
    4. Check the 75-day window for the current tax year. If you're past it, set a calendar reminder for the first week of January and file immediately.

    If your net profit is under $60,000:
    Elect the LLC for liability protection if you don't have it. Revisit the S-Corp question every year when you file — income levels change, and the crossover point will eventually come to you.

    If you're already past the current year's Form 2553 deadline:
    Ask your CPA about late S-Corp election relief under Rev. Proc. 2013-30. Relief is available in many cases. The IRS does not advertise this.


    *This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Tax laws change and individual circumstances vary. Consult a licensed CPA or tax attorney before making any entity election or tax structuring decision.*

    One honest note: Collective charges a monthly fee. Run the math against your projected SE tax savings before signing up. At $110,000 net profit and above, it almost always pencils out — and it replaces three or four separate vendor relationships you'd otherwise manage yourself.


    The Key 2026 Numbers for This Decision

    • SE tax rate: 15.3% (12.4% Social Security + 2.9% Medicare) — applied to 92.35% of net profit (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 1)
    • Social Security wage base (2026): $184,500 — above this, only the 2.9% Medicare rate applies (IRS Pub 505, Chapter 2)
    • S-Corp breakeven: approximately $75,000–$80,000 net profit, after factoring in $3,500–$5,000 in compliance costs
    • Form 2553 deadline: within 75 days of January 1 of the tax year you want the election to apply — missing it costs you a full year
    • S-Corp return deadline: March 15 (Form 1120-S)
    • Solo 401(k) employee deferral (2026): $24,500; total annual limit: $72,000 (IRS Pub 505, Chapter 2)
    • QBI phase-out thresholds (2026): ~$201,775 single / ~$403,550 married filing jointly (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 8)
    • Quarterly estimate due dates (2026): April 15, June 15, September 15, January 15, 2027 (Form 1040-ES)

    These numbers adjust every January — verify before acting.


    What to Actually Do This Month

    1. Pull your last two Schedule C returns and look at net profit. If either year cleared $80,000, the S-Corp conversation is overdue. Book a call with a CPA who specifically does S-Corp elections — not a general tax preparer who files W-2 returns. The questions you need answered (reasonable salary, election timing, payroll setup) require someone who does this regularly.

    2. Open a dedicated business bank account if you don't have one. You cannot run an S-Corp cleanly from a commingled personal account. This is step zero. Best Accounting Tools for Freelancers 2026 covers the tools that make this easy to set up and maintain.

    3. Check the election window. Form 2553 to elect S-Corp status for the 2027 tax year must be filed within 75 days of January 1, 2027 — meaning by March 15, 2027 at the latest. If you're reading this in the second half of 2026, the window to plan is now. Get the structure decided, get the LLC formed, and be ready to file Form 2553 in January.

    4. Get a quote from Collective or a comparable service. Put the annual fee in a spreadsheet next to your projected SE tax savings at your current net profit. The decision becomes obvious when the numbers are side by side.

    Want the free S-Corp decision worksheet — including the salary calculator and break-even analyzer? [https://themeridian.blog/free-worksheet]

    Subscribe to The Meridian's quarterly tax calendar. We send the March 15 S-Corp deadline reminder 30 days out, so you're never the freelancer paying a late-filing penalty because the date snuck up on you.


    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does forming an LLC reduce my self-employment taxes?

    No. A single-member LLC is a disregarded entity by default — the IRS treats it identically to a sole prop for federal tax purposes. Your net profit flows to Schedule C and is subject to the full 15.3% SE tax rate on 92.35% of profit (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 1). The LLC provides liability protection, not a tax reduction. If you want lower SE taxes, you need to make a separate tax election — specifically the S-Corp election via Form 2553.

    At what income level should a freelancer elect S-Corp status?

    The general breakeven is around $75,000–$80,000 in net profit per year, assuming annual S-Corp compliance costs (payroll service, bookkeeping, CPA for the 1120-S) of $3,500–$5,000. Below that level, the compliance costs typically exceed the SE tax savings. Above $100,000 in net profit, the savings are usually $4,000–$8,000 per year net of costs. The calculation depends on your specific reasonable salary, your state's fees, and what you pay for services.

    Can anyone confirm the self-employment tax process — am I understanding Schedule C, SE tax, and quarterly estimates correctly?

    Yes — here is the chain. Net profit on Schedule C flows to Schedule SE, where you pay 15.3% SE tax on 92.35% of that profit (IRS Pub 334, Chapter 1). You deduct half of SE tax on Schedule 1 of your 1040. Because no employer withholds taxes for you, you are required to make quarterly estimated tax payments using Form 1040-ES if you expect to owe more than $1,000 in taxes for the year (IRS Pub 505, Chapter 2). The 2026 quarterly due dates are April 15, June 15, September 15, and January 15, 2027. Missing or underpaying these results in an underpayment penalty — it is not just a late fee, it accrues per quarter.

    What is a reasonable salary for an S-Corp owner who is a freelancer?

    The IRS requires that it reflect what you would pay an arm's-length employee to perform your duties. There is no single formula, but tax courts have consistently looked at comparable market wages, hours worked, and the specific skills involved. A freelance copywriter billing $80,000/year of profit might set a reasonable salary of $50,000–$55,000. A consultant netting $200,000 might need $90,000–$110,000 to be defensible. Paying yourself $25,000 on $200,000 of profit is an audit target. The IRS has successfully reclassified distributions as wages in cases where the salary was clearly below market.

    Can I still contribute to a Solo 401(k) if I have an S-Corp?

    Yes, and the structure changes how the math works. As an S-Corp employee, your W-2 salary is the compensation base. The employee deferral limit for 2026 is $24,500 (IRS Pub 505, Chapter 2). The employer profit-sharing contribution — paid by the S-Corp — is limited to 25% of W-2 compensation, and the combined total cannot exceed $72,000 for 2026. One nuance: with an S-Corp, your employer-side contribution is based on your W-2, not your total net profit — so a lower salary means a lower employer contribution ceiling. This is worth modeling before you set your reasonable salary.


    This article is for educational purposes only and is not tax, legal, or financial advice. Tax rules change and dollar thresholds adjust annually. Consult a qualified CPA, EA, or tax attorney for guidance on your specific situation. Meridian Press and Morgan Hayes disclaim any liability for actions taken based on the contents of this article.