Side income from freelancing, gig work, or part-time business can significantly change your tax situation. Understanding how side income is taxed helps you plan, avoid surprises, and maximize your after-tax earnings.
How Side Income Is Taxed
Two Types of Tax
Side Income Is Subject To:
- Self-Employment Tax: 15.3% (Social Security + Medicare)
- Income Tax: Based on your tax bracket
Total Tax: Usually 25-35% of side income (depending on bracket)
How It's Reported
If You Receive 1099-NEC:
- Client reports payment to IRS
- You receive 1099-NEC
- Report on Schedule C (if business)
- Or Form 1040 (if other income)
If You Receive Cash:
- Still taxable
- Still must report
- Report on Schedule C or Form 1040
- No 1099 doesn't mean not taxable
Business vs. Hobby
If It's a Business:
- Can deduct business expenses
- Subject to self-employment tax
- Report on Schedule C
If It's a Hobby:
- Can't deduct expenses (generally)
- Still subject to income tax
- Report on Form 1040
IRS Definition of Business:
- Profit motive
- Regular and continuous
- Not just occasional
Self-Employment Tax
What It Is
Self-Employment Tax = Social Security + Medicare tax for self-employed
Rate: 15.3% of net earnings
- Social Security: 12.4% (on first $168,600 in 2026)
- Medicare: 2.9% (on all earnings)
- Additional Medicare: 0.9% (on earnings above $200,000 single / $250,000 married)
How It Works
For Employees:
- Employer pays 7.65% (half)
- Employee pays 7.65% (half)
- Total: 15.3%
For Self-Employed:
- You pay both halves: 15.3%
- But get deduction for employer half
- Effective rate: ~14.13% after deduction
The Cost
Example: $20,000 side income
Self-Employment Tax:
- $20,000 × 15.3% = $3,060
- Minus deduction for employer half: ~$280
- Net SE tax: ~$2,780
Plus Income Tax:
- $20,000 × 22% (if in that bracket) = $4,400
- Total tax: ~$7,180 (35.9%)
After-Tax: $12,820 (64.1%)
Why It's Higher
Self-Employed Pay More Because:
- Pay both halves of FICA (employer + employee)
- No employer to share the cost
- Result: Higher tax burden
Income Tax on Side Income
Taxed at Your Bracket
Side Income Is Taxed:
- At your marginal tax rate
- Added to your other income
- May push you into higher bracket
- Why: All income is combined
Example
Situation:
- Main job: $75,000 (22% bracket)
- Side income: $10,000
Tax on Side Income:
- $10,000 × 22% = $2,200
- Plus self-employment tax: ~$1,530
- Total: ~$3,730 (37.3%)
After-Tax: $6,270 (62.7%)
Combined Tax Burden
Total Tax on Side Income:
- Self-employment tax: ~15.3%
- Income tax: Your bracket (10-37%)
- Total: Usually 25-35%
Higher Than: Regular employment (due to SE tax)
Estimated Tax Payments
When Required
You Must Pay Estimated Taxes If:
- Expect to owe $1,000+ after withholding
- And withholding won't cover 90% of tax
- Why: Avoid underpayment penalties
How to Calculate
Estimate Your Tax:
- Estimate total income (main job + side income)
- Calculate total tax
- Subtract withholding from main job
- Remaining = Estimated tax to pay
Example:
- Main job tax: $9,000
- Side income tax: $3,000
- Total tax: $12,000
- Withholding: $9,000
- Estimated tax needed: $3,000
Payment Schedule
Quarterly Payments Due:
- April 15 (Q1: Jan-Mar)
- June 15 (Q2: Apr-May)
- September 15 (Q3: Jun-Aug)
- January 15 (Q4: Sep-Dec)
How to Pay:
- IRS Direct Pay (online)
- EFTPS (Electronic Federal Tax Payment System)
- Check (mailed with voucher)
- Credit card (through processors)
Safe Harbor Rules
Avoid Penalties If You Pay:
- 90% of current year tax, OR
- 100% of prior year tax (110% if AGI >$150,000)
Easiest: Pay 100% of prior year tax (if similar income)
Try the tool
Deductions for Side Income
Business Expenses
If Side Income Is Business:
- Can deduct business expenses
- Reduces taxable income
- Why: Only pay tax on profit
Common Deductions
1. Home Office:
- Simplified: $5/sq ft (up to 300 sq ft = $1,500)
- Actual expense: Percentage of home expenses
- Saves: $1,500 × 22% = $330+ in tax
2. Supplies and Equipment:
- Office supplies
- Equipment (computers, etc.)
- Software
- Saves: Expense × your bracket
3. Vehicle Expenses:
- Business mileage (65.5 cents/mile in 2026)
- Or actual expenses
- Saves: Can be significant
4. Professional Services:
- Accounting fees
- Legal fees (if business-related)
- Saves: Expense × your bracket
5. Advertising and Marketing:
- Website costs
- Advertising
- Marketing materials
- Saves: Expense × your bracket
6. Education and Training:
- Business-related education
- Training courses
- Saves: Expense × your bracket
How Deductions Help
Example: $20,000 side income, $5,000 expenses
Without Deductions:
- Taxable: $20,000
- Tax: ~$7,180
- After-tax: $12,820
With Deductions:
- Taxable: $15,000 ($20,000 - $5,000)
- Tax: ~$5,385
- After-tax: $14,615
- Savings: $1,795
How Side Income Affects Your Main Job
Withholding May Be Wrong
Problem:
- Main job withholds based on just that income
- Side income increases total income
- Withholding doesn't account for side income
- Result: Under-withheld, owe money
Example:
- Main job: $75,000, $9,000 withheld
- Side income: $15,000, $0 withheld
- Total income: $90,000
- Total tax: ~$13,000
- Withholding: $9,000
- Owe: $4,000
How to Fix
Option 1: Increase Withholding:
- Adjust W-4 from main job
- Increase withholding to cover side income
- Benefit: Automatic, no estimated payments
Option 2: Estimated Payments:
- Make quarterly estimated payments
- Cover side income tax
- Benefit: More control
Option 3: Both:
- Split the difference
- Some withholding, some estimated
- Benefit: Flexibility
Tax Bracket Impact
May Push You Higher:
- Side income adds to main job income
- May push into higher bracket
- Impact: Higher marginal rate on side income
Example:
- Main job: $47,000 (top of 12% bracket)
- Side income: $5,000
- Side income taxed at 22% (not 12%)
Real Examples
Example 1: Freelance Writer
Situation:
- Main job: $60,000 salary
- Side gig: $12,000 freelance writing
- Expenses: $2,000 (home office, supplies)
Tax Calculation:
- Side income: $12,000
- Expenses: -$2,000
- Net: $10,000
- SE tax: ~$1,413
- Income tax: $10,000 × 22% = $2,200
- Total tax: $3,613
After-Tax: $8,387 (from $12,000 gross)
Effective Rate: 30.1% on side income
Example 2: Uber Driver
Situation:
- Main job: $50,000 salary
- Side gig: $15,000 Uber driving
- Expenses: $5,000 (gas, maintenance, depreciation)
Tax Calculation:
- Side income: $15,000
- Expenses: -$5,000
- Net: $10,000
- SE tax: ~$1,413
- Income tax: $10,000 × 22% = $2,200
- Total tax: $3,613
After-Tax: $11,387 (from $15,000 gross)
Effective Rate: 24.1% on side income (after expenses)
Example 3: Consultant
Situation:
- Main job: $80,000 salary
- Side gig: $25,000 consulting
- Expenses: $3,000 (home office, travel)
Tax Calculation:
- Side income: $25,000
- Expenses: -$3,000
- Net: $22,000
- SE tax: ~$3,109
- Income tax: $22,000 × 24% = $5,280
- Total tax: $8,389
After-Tax: $16,611 (from $25,000 gross)
Effective Rate: 33.6% on side income
Tax Planning Strategies
Strategy 1: Maximize Deductions
Deduct All Eligible Expenses:
- Home office
- Supplies and equipment
- Vehicle expenses
- Professional services
- Other business expenses
- Benefit: Reduces taxable income
Strategy 2: Contribute to Retirement
SEP-IRA or Solo 401(k):
- Can contribute up to 25% of net (SEP) or $24,000 (Solo 401k)
- Reduces taxable income
- Benefit: Tax savings + retirement savings
Example: $20,000 net, contribute $5,000 to SEP-IRA
- Reduces taxable income to $15,000
- Saves ~$1,100 in tax (at 22% bracket)
- Plus retirement savings
Strategy 3: Time Income and Expenses
If Possible:
- Defer income to next year (if lower bracket)
- Accelerate expenses to current year
- Benefit: Tax savings
Strategy 4: Pay Estimated Taxes
Avoid Penalties:
- Make quarterly payments
- Stay current
- Benefit: No penalties, better planning
Strategy 5: Track Everything
Keep Good Records:
- All income
- All expenses
- Receipts
- Benefit: Maximize deductions, support return
Bottom Line
Side income significantly changes your taxes:
- Subject to self-employment tax: 15.3% (higher than employment)
- Plus income tax: At your bracket (10-37%)
- Total tax: Usually 25-35% of side income
- Can deduct expenses: Reduces taxable income
- Must pay estimated taxes: If owe $1,000+ after withholding
Key Takeaways:
- Side income is taxed higher: Due to self-employment tax
- Total tax usually 25-35%: SE tax + income tax
- Can deduct business expenses: Reduces taxable income
- Must pay estimated taxes: If owe $1,000+ after withholding
- Affects main job withholding: May need to adjust
- Track everything: Income and expenses
- Plan ahead: Understand tax impact before starting
Action Steps:
- Understand that side income is taxed higher (SE tax)
- Track all income and expenses
- Maximize business deductions
- Pay estimated taxes (if required)
- Adjust main job withholding (if needed)
- Consider retirement contributions (SEP-IRA, Solo 401k)
- Get professional help if complex
Remember: Side income can be great for your finances, but it comes with higher tax obligations. Understand the tax impact, maximize your deductions, pay estimated taxes, and you'll keep more of your hard-earned side income. The key is planning ahead and staying compliant.