One of the biggest mistakes new freelancers make is not setting aside enough money for taxes. Unlike employees who have taxes automatically withheld, freelancers receive 100% of their payments and must save for taxes themselves. This guide shows you exactly how much to save, when to save it, and how to calculate it based on your income level and location.
Table of Contents
- The Golden Rule: How Much to Save
- Why Freelancers Pay More in Taxes
- The Complete Tax Breakdown
- Calculating Your Specific Tax Rate
- State Tax Considerations
- Real Examples by Income Level
- When to Set Aside Money
- Where to Keep Your Tax Money
- Quarterly Payment Calculations
- Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Tax Savings Strategies
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Bottom Line: Your Action Plan
The Golden Rule: How Much to Save
The simple answer: Set aside 30-35% of your net freelance income for taxes.
Why this range?
- 30%: For lower-income freelancers ($30,000-$50,000) or those in low-tax states
- 35%: For higher-income freelancers ($75,000+) or those in high-tax states (California, New York, etc.)
- 33%: Good middle ground for most freelancers
The Quick Calculation
Formula: Net Income × 0.30 to 0.35 = Tax Savings
Example: $50,000 net income
- 30%: $15,000
- 33%: $16,500
- 35%: $17,500
Recommendation: Start with 33% and adjust based on your actual tax situation after your first year.
Why Not a Fixed Percentage?
Your actual tax rate depends on:
- Your total income level
- Your state tax rate
- Your business expenses
- Your filing status (single, married, etc.)
- Whether you have other income (W-2 job, investments, etc.)
The 30-35% range covers most situations, but you should calculate your specific rate after your first year of freelancing.
Why Freelancers Pay More in Taxes
Understanding why you pay more helps you plan better:
Employee Tax Burden
Example: $60,000 W-2 salary, single filer
FICA (Social Security + Medicare):
- Employee portion: 7.65% = $4,590
- Employer portion: 7.65% = $4,590 (you never see this)
- You pay: $4,590
Federal Income Tax:
- After standard deduction: ~$5,400
- Total: ~$10,000 (16.7% of gross)
Freelancer Tax Burden
Example: $60,000 net freelance income, single filer
Self-Employment Tax:
- 15.3% of $60,000 = $9,180
- You pay: $9,180 (double the FICA rate)
Federal Income Tax:
- After standard deduction: ~$7,000
- Total: ~$16,180 (27% of gross)
Plus state taxes: 3-10% additional (varies by state)
Difference: Freelancers pay roughly 60% more in taxes than employees at the same income level.
The Components
Freelancers pay:
- Self-employment tax: 15.3% (Social Security + Medicare)
- Federal income tax: 10%-37% (based on brackets)
- State income tax: 0%-13.3% (varies by state)
- Local taxes: In some areas (cities, counties)
Total: Typically 30-40% of net income for most freelancers.
The Complete Tax Breakdown
Let's break down exactly what you're paying:
1. Self-Employment Tax (15.3%)
What it is: Social Security (12.4%) + Medicare (2.9%)
Applies to: All net freelance income above $400
Caps:
- Social Security: Capped at $168,600 of income (2026)
- Medicare: No cap (applies to all income)
- Additional Medicare: 0.9% on income above $200,000 (single) or $250,000 (married)
Example: $50,000 net income
- Self-employment tax: $7,650 (15.3%)
2. Federal Income Tax (10%-37%)
What it is: Tax on your taxable income (after deductions)
Brackets (2026, single filer):
- 10% on first $11,600
- 12% on $11,601 - $47,150
- 22% on $47,151 - $100,525
- 24% on $100,526 - $191,950
- 32% on $191,951 - $243,725
- 35% on $243,726 - $609,350
- 37% on $609,351+
Example: $50,000 net income, $14,600 standard deduction
- Taxable income: $35,400
- Income tax: ~$4,000
3. State Income Tax (0%-13.3%)
What it is: Tax paid to your state government
Rates vary dramatically:
- No state income tax: Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, Wyoming
- Low rates: 3-5% (many states)
- High rates: 10-13.3% (California, New York, New Jersey, etc.)
Example: $50,000 net income
- California: ~$1,200 (2.4%)
- Texas: $0 (no state income tax)
- New York: ~$2,000 (4%)
4. Local Taxes (Varies)
What it is: City or county income taxes (in some areas)
Examples:
- New York City: Up to 3.876% additional
- Philadelphia: 3.87% additional
- Most areas: $0
Total Tax Rate Calculation
Low-tax state example (Texas, $50,000 net):
- Self-employment tax: $7,650 (15.3%)
- Federal income tax: $4,000 (8%)
- State tax: $0 (0%)
- Total: $11,650 (23.3%)
High-tax state example (California, $50,000 net):
- Self-employment tax: $7,650 (15.3%)
- Federal income tax: $4,000 (8%)
- State tax: $1,200 (2.4%)
- Total: $12,850 (25.7%)
Higher income example (California, $100,000 net):
- Self-employment tax: $14,130 (14.1% - lower % because Social Security caps)
- Federal income tax: $15,000 (15%)
- State tax: $6,000 (6%)
- Total: $35,130 (35.1%)
Calculating Your Specific Tax Rate
Here's how to calculate your exact rate:
Step 1: Calculate Net Income
Formula: Gross Income - Business Expenses = Net Income
Example:
- Gross: $75,000
- Expenses: $12,000
- Net: $63,000
Step 2: Calculate Self-Employment Tax
Formula: Net Income × 92.35% × 15.3% = Self-Employment Tax
Why 92.35%? The IRS allows you to deduct the "employer portion" before calculating tax (small benefit).
Example:
- Net: $63,000
- Tax base: $63,000 × 92.35% = $58,180.50
- SE tax: $58,180.50 × 15.3% = $8,901.61
Step 3: Calculate Federal Income Tax
Formula: (Net Income - Standard Deduction) × Tax Bracket = Income Tax
Example:
- Net: $63,000
- Standard deduction (single): -$14,600
- Taxable income: $48,400
- Income tax (using brackets): ~$5,500
Step 4: Calculate State Income Tax
Formula: (Net Income - State Deduction) × State Rate = State Tax
Example (California):
- Net: $63,000
- CA standard deduction (single): -$5,202
- CA taxable: $57,798
- CA tax (progressive): ~$2,500
Step 5: Add Them Together
Total Tax:
- Self-employment: $8,901.61
- Federal income: $5,500
- State income: $2,500
- Total: $16,901.61
Tax Rate: $16,901.61 ÷ $63,000 = 26.8%
Your Savings Target
Based on this calculation, you should save 26.8% of each payment. Round up to 30% to be safe (covers variations and unexpected expenses).
State Tax Considerations
State taxes can significantly impact your total tax burden:
States With No Income Tax
9 states: Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, Wyoming
Impact: Save 3-10% compared to high-tax states
Example: $60,000 net income
- Texas: $0 state tax
- California: ~$2,400 state tax
- Difference: $2,400 (4% of income)
High-Tax States
Top 5 highest state income tax rates:
- California: 13.3% (top rate)
- Hawaii: 11%
- New York: 10.9%
- New Jersey: 10.75%
- Oregon: 9.9%
Impact: Add 5-10% to your total tax rate
Example: $100,000 net income
- Texas: 0% state = 30% total tax rate
- California: 6% state = 36% total tax rate
- Difference: 6 percentage points
State-Specific Considerations
Some states have:
- Flat tax rates (same % regardless of income)
- Progressive rates (higher % for higher income)
- Local taxes (cities/counties add more)
- Different deductions (some allow federal tax deduction)
Action: Research your state's tax rates and factor them into your savings percentage.
Real Examples by Income Level
Let's calculate exact amounts for different income levels:
Example 1: Part-Time Freelancer ($20,000 net)
Assumptions: Single, Texas (no state tax)
Taxes:
- Self-employment: $3,060 (15.3%)
- Federal income: $600 (3%)
- State: $0
- Total: $3,660 (18.3%)
Savings target: 20% (round up from 18.3%)
Set aside: $4,000 from $20,000 income
Example 2: Moderate Income ($50,000 net)
Assumptions: Single, California
Taxes:
- Self-employment: $7,650 (15.3%)
- Federal income: $4,000 (8%)
- State: $1,200 (2.4%)
- Total: $12,850 (25.7%)
Savings target: 30% (round up from 25.7%)
Set aside: $15,000 from $50,000 income
Example 3: Higher Income ($80,000 net)
Assumptions: Single, New York
Taxes:
- Self-employment: $11,424 (14.3% - lower % because approaching Social Security cap)
- Federal income: $10,000 (12.5%)
- State: $4,000 (5%)
- Total: $25,424 (31.8%)
Savings target: 35% (round up from 31.8%)
Set aside: $28,000 from $80,000 income
Example 4: High Income ($150,000 net)
Assumptions: Single, California
Taxes:
- Self-employment: $20,906 (13.9% - Social Security capped at $168,600)
- Federal income: $28,000 (18.7%)
- State: $12,000 (8%)
- Total: $60,906 (40.6%)
Savings target: 40% (matches actual rate)
Set aside: $60,000 from $150,000 income
Key Insight
As income increases:
- Self-employment tax % decreases (Social Security caps)
- Income tax % increases (higher brackets)
- State tax % may increase (progressive rates)
- Total rate typically increases (30% → 35% → 40%)
Try the tool
When to Set Aside Money
The timing matters as much as the amount:
The Golden Rule: Set Aside Immediately
Every time you receive a payment:
- Calculate 30-35% of the payment
- Transfer it to a separate savings account immediately
- Don't touch it until tax time
Why immediately?
- Prevents spending it
- Builds the habit
- Ensures money is available when needed
- Reduces stress
The Process
Step 1: Client pays you $5,000 Step 2: Calculate savings: $5,000 × 33% = $1,650 Step 3: Transfer $1,650 to tax savings account Step 4: You can spend: $5,000 - $1,650 = $3,350
Repeat for every payment.
Monthly Review
At the end of each month:
- Review total income for the month
- Verify you've set aside 30-35%
- Adjust if needed (if income was higher/lower than expected)
- Calculate quarterly payment amount
Quarterly Payments
You'll use the saved money for:
- Quarterly estimated tax payments (April, June, September, January)
- Final tax payment in April (if you underpaid)
Timeline:
- Q1 (Jan-Mar): Save 33% of each payment
- April 15: Make Q1 payment from savings
- Q2 (Apr-May): Save 33% of each payment
- June 15: Make Q2 payment from savings
- Continue for Q3 and Q4
Where to Keep Your Tax Money
Don't mix tax savings with your regular money:
Option 1: Separate Savings Account (Recommended)
Why:
- Keeps money separate (can't accidentally spend it)
- Earns interest (even if small)
- Easy to track
- Psychological barrier (harder to spend)
Where:
- High-yield savings account (earn 4-5% APY)
- Separate from your business checking
- Name it "Tax Savings" so it's clear
Example: $20,000 saved at 4% APY = $800 interest per year (taxable, but still helpful)
Option 2: Money Market Account
Why:
- Slightly higher interest than savings
- Still liquid (can access when needed)
- FDIC insured
Best for: Larger amounts ($50,000+)
Option 3: Separate Business Account
Why:
- If you already have a business checking account
- Can create a sub-account or separate account
- Keeps everything business-related together
What NOT to Do
❌ Don't keep it in your regular checking (too easy to spend) ❌ Don't invest it in stocks (too risky, need it for taxes) ❌ Don't put it in a CD (not liquid enough for quarterly payments) ❌ Don't mix it with emergency fund (different purposes)
The Setup
Recommended structure:
- Business checking: For income and business expenses
- Tax savings: For tax money (30-35% of income)
- Personal checking: For personal expenses (after taxes set aside)
- Emergency fund: Separate, for emergencies
Quarterly Payment Calculations
Here's how to calculate your quarterly payments:
Method 1: Safe Harbor (Easiest)
How it works: Pay 100% of last year's total tax in four equal payments.
Example:
- 2025 total tax: $12,000
- 2026 quarterly payments: $3,000 each
- Pay: April 15, June 15, September 15, January 15
Pros: Simple, avoids penalties (even if you actually owe more) Cons: May overpay if income decreases
Method 2: Current Year Estimate
How it works: Estimate current year's tax, pay 90% of it across four payments.
Example:
- Estimated 2026 tax: $15,000
- 90%: $13,500
- Quarterly: $3,375 each
Pros: More accurate if income is stable Cons: Must recalculate if income changes significantly
Method 3: Actual Income (Most Accurate)
How it works: Calculate tax based on income earned through each quarter.
Example:
- Q1 income: $15,000 → Pay $4,950 (33%)
- Q2 income: $20,000 → Pay $6,600 (33%)
- Q3 income: $18,000 → Pay $5,940 (33%)
- Q4 income: $22,000 → Pay $7,260 (33%)
Pros: Most accurate, adjusts to income changes Cons: More complex, requires tracking income quarterly
Which Method to Use
Year 1 (no prior year):
- Use Method 2 or 3 (estimate based on current income)
- Start with 33% of each quarter's income
Year 2+ (have prior year data):
- Use Method 1 (safe harbor) if income is similar
- Use Method 2 or 3 if income changed significantly
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Learn from others' mistakes:
Mistake #1: Not Setting Aside Enough
The problem: You save 20% but actually owe 30%, leaving you short $5,000 in April.
The solution: Start with 33% (covers most situations). Adjust after your first year based on actual tax rate.
Mistake #2: Spending the Tax Money
The problem: You set it aside but then "borrow" from it for expenses, leaving nothing for taxes.
The solution: Treat it like it doesn't exist. Don't touch it except for tax payments. If you need money, find another source.
Mistake #3: Not Accounting for State Taxes
The problem: You calculate 30% based on federal taxes only, forgetting state taxes (3-10% additional).
The solution: Factor in your state's tax rate. If you're in a high-tax state (CA, NY), use 35% instead of 30%.
Mistake #4: Calculating on Gross Instead of Net
The problem: You save 30% of gross income ($60,000), but after $10,000 in expenses, you only have $50,000 net income. You over-saved.
The solution: Calculate savings on net income (after business expenses), not gross income.
Mistake #5: Not Making Quarterly Payments
The problem: You save the money but don't make quarterly payments, then face penalties plus a huge bill in April.
The solution: Make quarterly payments from your savings. Don't wait until April.
Mistake #6: Forgetting About the Self-Employment Tax
The problem: You budget for income tax (15-20%) but forget the 15.3% self-employment tax, leaving you short.
The solution: Remember that freelancers pay BOTH income tax AND self-employment tax. Total is 30-40%, not 15-20%.
Tax Savings Strategies
While you can't avoid taxes, you can legally reduce them:
Strategy 1: Maximize Business Deductions
How it works: Every $1,000 in legitimate business expenses saves you ~$300-$400 in taxes (depending on your bracket).
Example:
- $10,000 in expenses
- Saves: $3,000-$4,000 in taxes
- Net benefit: You spent $10,000 but saved $3,000-$4,000 in taxes, so real cost is $6,000-$7,000
Key: Only deduct legitimate business expenses. Don't inflate expenses (audit risk).
Strategy 2: Retirement Contributions
How it works: SEP-IRA or Solo 401(k) contributions reduce your taxable income.
Example:
- Net income: $60,000
- $15,000 SEP-IRA contribution
- New taxable income: $45,000
- Saves: ~$4,500-$6,000 in taxes (depending on bracket)
Bonus: Money grows tax-deferred until retirement.
Strategy 3: Time Income and Expenses
How it works: If possible, defer income to next year or accelerate expenses to this year.
Example:
- December: Complete $10,000 project
- Option A: Invoice in December → Income in 2026
- Option B: Invoice in January → Income in 2027
- Benefit: Defer tax payment (but you'll pay it eventually)
Limitation: Must follow accounting method. Can't just delay invoicing indefinitely.
Strategy 4: Home Office Deduction
How it works: Deduct portion of home expenses (rent, utilities, etc.) if you have a dedicated home office.
Example:
- 200 sq ft home office
- Simplified method: 200 × $5 = $1,000 deduction
- Saves: ~$220-$350 in taxes
Requirements: Space must be used exclusively and regularly for business.
Strategy 5: Health Insurance Deduction
How it works: Self-employed health insurance premiums are deductible.
Example:
- $6,000 annual health insurance
- Deductible as business expense
- Saves: ~$1,500-$2,400 in taxes (depending on bracket)
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I Save 30% or 35%?
Start with 33% (middle ground). After your first year, calculate your actual tax rate and adjust. If you're in a high-tax state (CA, NY) or have high income ($100,000+), use 35%. If you're in a no-tax state (TX, FL) or have lower income ($30,000-$50,000), 30% may be sufficient.
What If I Over-Save?
Good problem to have. You'll get a refund when you file (or can apply it to next year's estimated payments). Better to over-save than under-save.
What If I Under-Save?
You'll owe the difference in April, plus potential penalties if you didn't make sufficient quarterly payments. Try to avoid this by using a conservative savings rate (33-35%).
Do I Save on Gross or Net Income?
Net income (after business expenses). Taxes are calculated on net income, so that's what you should base your savings on.
What If My Income Varies?
Use a percentage (33%) of each payment rather than a fixed amount. This automatically adjusts to income changes.
Can I Invest the Tax Money?
Not recommended. You need it for quarterly payments and final tax bill. Investing introduces risk you can't afford. Keep it in a high-yield savings account instead.
What If I Have Both W-2 and 1099 Income?
Save 30-35% of 1099 income only. Your W-2 job already withholds taxes. You may need to increase W-2 withholding or make quarterly payments for the 1099 portion.
How Do I Know If I'm Saving Enough?
After your first year, calculate your actual tax rate:
- Total tax paid ÷ Net income = Actual tax rate
- Compare to your savings rate
- Adjust for year 2
Example:
- Paid $15,000 in taxes on $50,000 net income
- Actual rate: 30%
- You saved 33% → You're saving enough (even over-saving a bit)
Bottom Line: Your Action Plan
Setting aside the right amount for taxes is critical for freelancer success. Here's your action plan:
Immediate Actions
- Open a separate tax savings account (high-yield savings, 4-5% APY)
- Set your savings percentage (start with 33%, adjust after year 1)
- Automate the process (transfer 33% immediately when you receive payments)
- Mark quarterly payment dates (April 15, June 15, September 15, January 15)
- Calculate your first quarterly payment (based on Q1 income)
The Formula
For most freelancers:
- Savings rate: 33% of net income
- Set aside: Immediately when you receive payment
- Keep in: Separate high-yield savings account
- Use for: Quarterly estimated payments + final tax bill
Adjustments
Increase to 35% if:
- You're in a high-tax state (CA, NY, NJ, etc.)
- Your income exceeds $100,000
- You had a tax surprise last year
Decrease to 30% if:
- You're in a no-tax state (TX, FL, etc.)
- Your income is lower ($30,000-$50,000)
- Your actual rate was lower last year
Key Takeaways
✅ Save 30-35% of net income (33% is a good starting point)
✅ Set aside immediately when you receive payments
✅ Keep in separate account (don't mix with regular money)
✅ Factor in state taxes (add 3-10% if in high-tax state)
✅ Make quarterly payments (don't wait until April)
✅ Calculate on net income (after business expenses)
✅ Adjust after year 1 (based on your actual tax rate)
Final Thought
The 30-35% rule is a guideline, not a law. Your actual rate depends on your specific situation. Start conservative (33-35%), track your actual taxes in year 1, and adjust for year 2. The key is setting aside money consistently and not spending it until tax time. Do this, and you'll never be surprised by a tax bill again.