If you're new to freelancing, quarterly taxes are probably the most confusing and stressful part of the tax system. Unlike employees who have taxes automatically withheld, freelancers must estimate and pay taxes four times per year. This guide explains quarterly taxes in simple terms: what they are, when to pay, how much to pay, and how to avoid costly mistakes.
Table of Contents
- What Are Quarterly Taxes?
- Why Freelancers Must Pay Quarterly
- Who Must Pay Quarterly Taxes?
- When Are Quarterly Payments Due?
- How Much Should You Pay Each Quarter?
- Three Methods to Calculate Payments
- How to Make Quarterly Payments
- What Happens If You Miss a Payment?
- Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Real Examples and Scenarios
- Quarterly Taxes vs. Annual Filing
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Bottom Line: Your Quarterly Tax Action Plan
What Are Quarterly Taxes?
Quarterly taxes (also called "estimated tax payments") are advance payments you make to the IRS four times per year to cover your tax liability. Instead of paying all your taxes in April (like employees do), freelancers pay throughout the year as they earn income.
The Simple Explanation
Employees:
- Taxes are withheld from each paycheck
- They've paid taxes all year
- File return in April, get refund or pay small balance
Freelancers:
- No taxes withheld from payments
- Must estimate and pay taxes four times per year
- File return in April, pay any remaining balance
Why They Exist
The IRS requires you to pay taxes as you earn income, not wait until the end of the year. This is called the "pay-as-you-go" system. For employees, withholding handles this automatically. For freelancers, quarterly payments are how you comply.
What They Cover
Quarterly payments cover:
- Federal income tax (10%-37% based on brackets)
- Self-employment tax (15.3% for Social Security and Medicare)
- State income tax (if applicable, varies by state)
Note: You make separate payments for federal and state (if your state requires it).
Why Freelancers Must Pay Quarterly
Understanding the "why" helps you remember the "what":
The Pay-As-You-Go Requirement
IRS Rule: You must pay at least 90% of your current year's tax liability OR 100% of last year's tax liability (whichever is smaller) throughout the year.
If you don't: You face penalties and interest on the underpayment.
The Problem with Waiting Until April
Scenario: You earn $60,000 as a freelancer in 2026, don't make quarterly payments, and wait until April 2027 to pay.
What happens:
- You owe: ~$18,000 in taxes
- Plus penalties: ~$900-$1,800 (0.5% per month on underpayment)
- Plus interest: On the $18,000
- Total due: ~$19,500-$20,000
The stress: Coming up with $20,000 in April is much harder than paying $4,500 each quarter.
The Benefits of Quarterly Payments
✅ Avoid penalties: No underpayment penalties if you pay enough ✅ Spread the cost: $4,500 × 4 = easier than $18,000 at once ✅ Better cash flow: Plan and budget throughout the year ✅ Less stress: No surprise bills in April ✅ Stay compliant: Meet IRS requirements
Who Must Pay Quarterly Taxes?
You must make quarterly estimated tax payments if:
The General Rule
You must pay if:
- You expect to owe $1,000 or more in taxes for the year
- Your withholding (if you have a W-2 job) won't cover 90% of your tax liability
- You're self-employed and expect net earnings of $400 or more
Most freelancers fall into this category.
Exceptions (You Don't Have to Pay If)
❌ You had no tax liability last year:
- If your total tax was $0 last year, you don't have to pay quarterly this year
- Applies to first-year freelancers who had no income last year
❌ You're a farmer or fisherman:
- Different rules apply (can pay once per year in some cases)
❌ Your withholding covers your tax liability:
- If you have a W-2 job and increase withholding to cover freelance taxes, you may not need quarterly payments
The $1,000 Threshold
Key point: The $1,000 threshold is for total tax liability, not just self-employment tax.
Example:
- Self-employment tax: $8,000
- Income tax: $500
- Total: $8,500 → Must pay quarterly (exceeds $1,000)
Example:
- Self-employment tax: $600
- Income tax: $200
- Total: $800 → Don't have to pay quarterly (below $1,000)
When Are Quarterly Payments Due?
The deadlines are fixed and don't change based on weekends or holidays (though they may shift to the next business day):
The Four Payment Deadlines
Payment 1: April 15
- Covers income earned: January 1 - March 31
- Due the same day as your prior year's tax return
Payment 2: June 15
- Covers income earned: April 1 - May 31
- Note: This is only 2 months, not a full quarter
Payment 3: September 15
- Covers income earned: June 1 - August 31
- Full 3-month quarter
Payment 4: January 15 (of the following year)
- Covers income earned: September 1 - December 31
- Due before you file your tax return
Important Notes
April 15 is special:
- It's both the deadline for your prior year's return AND your first quarterly payment
- If you file an extension, you still must make the Q1 payment on April 15
The periods aren't equal:
- Q1: 3 months (Jan-Mar)
- Q2: 2 months (Apr-May) - shorter!
- Q3: 3 months (Jun-Aug)
- Q4: 4 months (Sep-Dec) - longer!
Weekend/holiday rule:
- If the 15th falls on a weekend or holiday, the deadline is the next business day
- Example: If April 15 is a Sunday, deadline is April 16 (Monday)
Calendar Reminders
Set these reminders:
- ✅ April 10: "Q1 payment due in 5 days"
- ✅ June 10: "Q2 payment due in 5 days"
- ✅ September 10: "Q3 payment due in 5 days"
- ✅ January 10: "Q4 payment due in 5 days"
How Much Should You Pay Each Quarter?
This is the million-dollar question. Here are three methods:
Quick Answer: The 25% Rule
Simplest method: Pay 25% of your estimated annual tax each quarter.
Example:
- Estimated annual tax: $20,000
- Quarterly payment: $20,000 ÷ 4 = $5,000 each quarter
When to use: If your income is relatively stable throughout the year.
More Accurate: The Percentage Method
Better method: Pay 30-35% of each quarter's net income.
Example:
- Q1 income: $15,000 → Pay $4,500-$5,250 (30-35%)
- Q2 income: $20,000 → Pay $6,000-$7,000
- Q3 income: $18,000 → Pay $5,400-$6,300
- Q4 income: $22,000 → Pay $6,600-$7,700
When to use: If your income varies significantly by quarter.
Most Accurate: The Annualized Method
Best method: Calculate tax based on income earned year-to-date, adjusted for the portion of the year that has passed.
Example (simplified):
- Through Q1: $15,000 income, 25% of year passed
- Annualized: $15,000 ÷ 0.25 = $60,000
- Estimated tax on $60,000: $18,000
- Q1 payment: $18,000 × 25% = $4,500
When to use: If your income is highly variable or seasonal.
Three Methods to Calculate Payments
The IRS allows three methods. Choose the one that works best for your situation:
Method 1: Safe Harbor (Easiest)
How it works: Pay 100% of last year's total tax liability in four equal payments.
Formula: Last Year's Total Tax ÷ 4 = Each Quarterly Payment
Example:
- 2025 total tax: $12,000
- 2026 quarterly payments: $3,000 each
- Pay: $3,000 on April 15, June 15, September 15, January 15
Pros:
- ✅ Simplest method
- ✅ Avoids penalties (even if you actually owe more)
- ✅ No complex calculations
Cons:
- ❌ May overpay if income decreases
- ❌ May underpay if income increases significantly
- ❌ Not available for first-year freelancers (no prior year)
Best for: Freelancers with stable income year-to-year.
Method 2: 90% of Current Year (Most Common)
How it works: Estimate current year's tax, pay 90% of it across four payments.
Formula: (Estimated Current Year Tax × 90%) ÷ 4 = Each Quarterly Payment
Example:
- Estimated 2026 tax: $20,000
- 90%: $18,000
- Quarterly: $18,000 ÷ 4 = $4,500 each
Pros:
- ✅ More accurate if income is stable
- ✅ Avoids overpayment
- ✅ Works for first-year freelancers
Cons:
- ❌ Requires estimating annual income
- ❌ May need to adjust if income changes
- ❌ Must recalculate if income varies significantly
Best for: Freelancers who can reasonably estimate annual income.
Method 3: Annualized Income (Most Accurate)
How it works: Calculate tax based on income earned through each quarter, annualized to estimate full-year tax.
Formula: (Income Through Quarter ÷ Months Passed) × 12 = Annualized Income → Calculate Tax → Pay Appropriate Portion
Example (Q1):
- Income through March: $15,000
- Months passed: 3
- Annualized: ($15,000 ÷ 3) × 12 = $60,000
- Estimated tax on $60,000: $18,000
- Q1 payment: $18,000 × (3/12) = $4,500
Example (Q2):
- Income through May: $35,000
- Months passed: 5
- Annualized: ($35,000 ÷ 5) × 12 = $84,000
- Estimated tax on $84,000: $22,000
- Q2 payment: $22,000 × (5/12) - $4,500 (already paid) = $4,667
Pros:
- ✅ Most accurate for variable income
- ✅ Adjusts to income changes
- ✅ Prevents overpayment in slow quarters
Cons:
- ❌ Most complex
- ❌ Requires detailed tracking
- ❌ Must file Form 2210 (Annualized Income Installment Method)
Best for: Freelancers with highly variable or seasonal income.
Which Method Should You Use?
First-year freelancers: Use Method 2 (90% of current year estimate)
Stable income: Use Method 1 (safe harbor) or Method 2 (90% of current year)
Variable income: Use Method 3 (annualized income)
Recommendation: Start with Method 2. If you find your income is very variable, switch to Method 3 in year 2.
Try the tool
How to Make Quarterly Payments
You have several options for making payments:
Option 1: Online (Recommended)
IRS Direct Pay (Free):
- Go to irs.gov/payments
- Select "Direct Pay"
- Enter payment amount and bank account
- Schedule payment (can schedule in advance)
- Cost: Free
- Processing: Immediate
EFTPS (Electronic Federal Tax Payment System):
- Requires enrollment (one-time setup)
- Can schedule payments in advance
- Good for recurring payments
- Cost: Free
- Processing: Immediate
Credit/Debit Card:
- Through third-party processors
- Cost: 1.87%-2% fee
- Processing: Immediate
- Not recommended (fees add up)
Option 2: By Mail
Form 1040-ES:
- Download vouchers from IRS website
- Fill out payment amount
- Mail with check or money order
- Cost: Free (just postage)
- Processing: 5-7 business days
When to use: If you prefer paper or don't have online access.
Option 3: Through Tax Software
TurboTax, H&R Block, etc.:
- Calculate payment amount
- Submit payment through software
- Cost: Usually free for calculation, may charge for payment processing
- Processing: Immediate
When to use: If you're already using tax software and want everything in one place.
Recommended Approach
For most freelancers: Use IRS Direct Pay online. It's free, immediate, and you can schedule payments in advance.
Setup:
- Go to irs.gov/payments
- Bookmark the page
- Set calendar reminders for payment dates
- Schedule payments a few days before deadline (to account for processing)
State Quarterly Payments
Important: You may also need to make quarterly payments to your state (if your state has income tax).
How to pay: Check your state's revenue/tax department website. Most states have online payment systems similar to the IRS.
Example states requiring quarterly payments:
- California: ftb.ca.gov
- New York: tax.ny.gov
- Most states with income tax require quarterly payments if you owe $500+ per year
What Happens If You Miss a Payment?
Don't panic, but don't ignore it either:
The Penalties
Underpayment penalty:
- 0.5% per month on the underpayment
- Maximum: 25% of the underpayment
- Calculated from the due date until paid
Interest:
- On the unpaid amount
- Rate changes quarterly (currently ~8% annually)
- Compounded daily
Real Example
Scenario: Should pay $5,000 per quarter but miss Q1 and Q2, then pay $10,000 in Q3.
Penalty calculation (simplified):
-
Q1 underpayment: $5,000
-
Months late: 3 (April → July)
-
Penalty: $5,000 × 0.5% × 3 = $75
-
Q2 underpayment: $5,000
-
Months late: 1 (June → July)
-
Penalty: $5,000 × 0.5% × 1 = $25
Total penalty: ~$100 (plus interest)
Not the end of the world, but avoidable.
What to Do If You Miss a Payment
Step 1: Make the payment as soon as possible
- Reduces penalty (stops accruing)
- Shows good faith to IRS
Step 2: Make remaining quarterly payments on time
- Don't let one missed payment become a pattern
Step 3: File your return on time (April 15)
- Pay any remaining balance
- The IRS will calculate penalties and interest
Step 4: Consider requesting penalty waiver
- If you have a good reason (first-year freelancer, unexpected circumstances)
- File Form 2210 with explanation
- IRS may waive penalties (not guaranteed)
Avoiding Penalties
Ways to avoid penalties:
- ✅ Pay 100% of last year's tax (safe harbor)
- ✅ Pay 90% of current year's tax
- ✅ Pay on time (by the deadline)
- ✅ Pay enough each quarter (not just a token amount)
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Learn from others' mistakes:
Mistake #1: Not Paying at All
The problem: You wait until April, then owe $20,000 plus penalties.
The solution: Make quarterly payments. Even if you can't pay the full amount, pay what you can (reduces penalties).
Mistake #2: Paying Too Little
The problem: You pay $1,000 per quarter but actually owe $5,000 per quarter, leading to penalties.
The solution: Calculate your payments accurately. Use 30-35% of quarterly income or one of the three methods above.
Mistake #3: Forgetting State Payments
The problem: You pay federal quarterly but forget state, leading to state penalties.
The solution: Check if your state requires quarterly payments. Most states with income tax do (if you owe $500+ per year).
Mistake #4: Not Adjusting for Income Changes
The problem: Your income increases mid-year, but you keep paying the same amount, leading to underpayment.
The solution: Recalculate payments if income changes significantly. Increase payments in later quarters if needed.
Mistake #5: Mixing Up Due Dates
The problem: You think payments are due at the end of each quarter, but they're due on the 15th of specific months.
The solution: Mark the exact dates: April 15, June 15, September 15, January 15.
Mistake #6: Not Keeping Records
The problem: You can't prove what you paid or when, making it hard to reconcile at tax time.
The solution: Keep records of all payments (confirmation numbers, dates, amounts). Create a simple spreadsheet.
Real Examples and Scenarios
Let's work through real scenarios:
Example 1: First-Year Freelancer
Scenario:
- Started freelancing in January 2026
- No prior year tax (first year)
- Estimated annual income: $50,000
- Estimated expenses: $8,000
- Net income: $42,000
Calculation (Method 2: 90% of current year):
- Estimated tax: ~$12,000 (30% of $42,000, rough estimate)
- 90%: $10,800
- Quarterly: $10,800 ÷ 4 = $2,700 each
Payments:
- April 15: $2,700
- June 15: $2,700
- September 15: $2,700
- January 15: $2,700
Total paid: $10,800 Actual tax (when filing): ~$12,000 Owe in April: ~$1,200 (plus any state tax)
Example 2: Second-Year Freelancer (Safe Harbor)
Scenario:
- 2025 total tax: $15,000
- 2026 estimated income: Similar to 2025
Calculation (Method 1: Safe harbor):
- 2025 tax: $15,000
- Quarterly: $15,000 ÷ 4 = $3,750 each
Payments:
- April 15: $3,750
- June 15: $3,750
- September 15: $3,750
- January 15: $3,750
Total paid: $15,000 If 2026 tax is $18,000: Owe $3,000 in April (but no penalties because you met safe harbor) If 2026 tax is $12,000: Get $3,000 refund
Example 3: Variable Income (Annualized Method)
Scenario:
- Q1 (Jan-Mar): $10,000 income
- Q2 (Apr-May): $25,000 income (big project)
- Q3 (Jun-Aug): $15,000 income
- Q4 (Sep-Dec): $20,000 income
- Total: $70,000
Q1 Payment (Method 3: Annualized):
- Income through March: $10,000
- Annualized: ($10,000 ÷ 3) × 12 = $40,000
- Estimated tax on $40,000: $10,000
- Q1 payment: $10,000 × (3/12) = $2,500
Q2 Payment:
- Income through May: $35,000
- Annualized: ($35,000 ÷ 5) × 12 = $84,000
- Estimated tax on $84,000: $22,000
- Q2 payment: $22,000 × (5/12) - $2,500 (Q1) = $6,667
Q3 Payment:
- Income through August: $50,000
- Annualized: ($50,000 ÷ 8) × 12 = $75,000
- Estimated tax on $75,000: $20,000
- Q3 payment: $20,000 × (8/12) - $2,500 (Q1) - $6,667 (Q2) = $4,833
Q4 Payment:
- Income through December: $70,000
- Estimated tax on $70,000: $18,000
- Q4 payment: $18,000 - $2,500 - $6,667 - $4,833 = $4,000
Total paid: $18,000 (matches actual tax)
Quarterly Taxes vs. Annual Filing
Understanding the difference:
Quarterly Payments (Throughout the Year)
What they are: Advance payments of your estimated tax liability
When: Four times per year (April, June, September, January)
Purpose: Meet the "pay-as-you-go" requirement
Amount: Based on estimated annual tax
Annual Filing (April 15)
What it is: Your actual tax return showing what you really owe
When: April 15 (or October 15 with extension)
Purpose: Calculate actual tax liability, reconcile with payments made
Result:
- If you overpaid → Get refund
- If you underpaid → Pay the difference
How They Work Together
Throughout the year: Make quarterly payments (estimated)
In April: File your return (actual)
- Report actual income and expenses
- Calculate actual tax liability
- Compare to payments made
- Pay difference or get refund
Example:
- Quarterly payments made: $18,000
- Actual tax owed: $20,000
- Owe in April: $2,000 (plus any state tax)
Example:
- Quarterly payments made: $18,000
- Actual tax owed: $16,000
- Get refund: $2,000
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I Have to Pay Quarterly If I Made Less Than $400?
For self-employment tax: No. The $400 threshold means you don't owe self-employment tax if net income is below $400. However, you may still owe income tax and may need to make quarterly payments if total tax liability exceeds $1,000.
Can I Skip a Quarterly Payment?
Technically yes, but you'll face penalties and interest. Better to pay what you can, even if it's less than the full amount (reduces penalties).
What If I Can't Afford the Full Payment?
Pay what you can:
- Reduces penalties (calculated on unpaid amount)
- Shows good faith to IRS
- Make up the difference in later quarters or in April
Consider: Setting up a payment plan with the IRS if you consistently can't afford payments.
Do I Need to File Anything With Quarterly Payments?
No. Quarterly payments are just payments. You don't file a return until April. However, keep records of all payments (confirmation numbers, dates, amounts) for when you file your return.
What If My Income Changes Mid-Year?
Recalculate and adjust:
- If income increases: Increase later quarterly payments
- If income decreases: You can reduce payments, but be careful (may still owe penalties if you underpaid earlier quarters)
Best practice: Use the annualized method (Method 3) if income is highly variable.
Can I Pay More Than Required?
Yes, absolutely. Paying more reduces what you'll owe in April (or increases your refund). No penalty for overpaying.
What About State Quarterly Payments?
Check your state's requirements. Most states with income tax require quarterly payments if you'll owe $500+ per year. Each state has its own system and deadlines (usually similar to federal: April, June, September, January).
How Do I Know If I Paid Enough?
You'll know when you file in April:
- If you paid enough: Small balance due or refund
- If you underpaid significantly: Large balance due plus penalties
Rule of thumb: If you paid 100% of last year's tax (safe harbor) or 90% of current year's tax, you should be fine.
Bottom Line: Your Quarterly Tax Action Plan
Quarterly taxes are manageable if you understand the system and stay organized. Here's your action plan:
Immediate Actions
- Determine if you must pay (expect to owe $1,000+ in taxes)
- Choose a calculation method (safe harbor, 90% of current year, or annualized)
- Calculate your first payment (based on chosen method)
- Set up payment method (IRS Direct Pay recommended)
- Mark all four deadlines on your calendar (April 15, June 15, September 15, January 15)
The Process
Each quarter:
- Calculate payment amount (based on your method)
- Make payment by deadline
- Keep confirmation/receipt
- Record in your tracking system
In April:
- File your tax return
- Reconcile payments made vs. actual tax owed
- Pay difference or get refund
- Use actual numbers to plan next year's payments
Key Takeaways
✅ Quarterly payments are required if you'll owe $1,000+ in taxes
✅ Four deadlines: April 15, June 15, September 15, January 15
✅ Three methods: Safe harbor (easiest), 90% of current year (most common), annualized (most accurate for variable income)
✅ Pay online (IRS Direct Pay is free and easy)
✅ Keep records of all payments (for tax filing)
✅ Adjust if income changes significantly
✅ Don't forget state payments (if your state requires them)
Final Thought
Quarterly taxes seem complicated at first, but they're just advance payments of what you'll owe anyway. The key is understanding the system, choosing a calculation method that works for your situation, and making payments on time. Do this, and you'll avoid penalties, reduce stress, and stay compliant with the IRS.