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Texas Self-Employed Tax Calculator

Freelancers, 1099 contractors, and sole proprietors in Texas: estimate your federal self-employment tax, income tax, and no state tax — plus quarterly estimated payments.

Reading the results: The calculator below shows W-2 employee tax amounts. As a self-employed worker, multiply the FICA total by roughly 2× to approximate your Self-Employment (SE) tax, then add federal income tax and no state tax. A dedicated SE calculator with quarterly breakdown is coming soon.

Your details

$
Advanced (pre-tax deductions)
$
$
Take-home$68,628per year
Monthly take-home$5,719
Bi-weekly$2,640
Effective tax rate19.0%
Marginal rate22.0%

Annual breakdown

  • Gross income
    $85,000
  • Federal income tax(11.6%)
    -$9,870
  • Social Security (6.2%)(6.2%)
    -$5,270
  • Medicare (1.45%)(1.5%)
    -$1,233
  • Take-home pay(80.7%)
    $68,628

Calculations use projected 2026 IRS brackets, standard deduction, and FICA rates. Read full disclaimer.

Self-employment tax in Texas: the basics

If you earn $400+ in net self-employment income in Texas, you owe Self-Employment tax (15.3%): 12.4% for Social Security (on net earnings up to $184,500 in 2026) + 2.9% for Medicare (no cap). An additional 0.9% Medicare surtax kicks in above $200,000 (single) / $250,000 (MFJ).

Unlike W-2 employees who split FICA 50/50 with their employer, you pay both halves. The good news: you deduct 50% of SE tax on your federal 1040 as an above-the-line adjustment.

Quarterly estimated tax schedule

Federal quarterly deadlines for tax year 2026:

Missing payments triggers the IRS "underpayment penalty" (~5–8% annualized interest).

Texas specific considerations

Texas has no state income tax. The state is funded largely by property tax and sales tax, both above the US average.

Texas's lack of state income tax makes it one of the more attractive states for self-employed workers. You still pay all federal taxes (income + SE), but you skip state filing entirely for wage-equivalent income.

Deductions every Texas freelancer should know

Self-employed tax FAQ for Texas

How is self-employment tax different from regular W-2 employment in Texas?
Self-employed individuals in Texas pay the full 15.3% SE tax (12.4% Social Security + 2.9% Medicare) themselves — W-2 employees only pay half (7.65%), with the employer paying the other half. You can deduct 50% of your SE tax when calculating your federal income tax. The calculator above shows W-2 estimates; multiply FICA by ~2x to approximate SE tax exposure.
Do I need to pay quarterly estimated taxes in Texas?
If you expect to owe $1,000 or more in federal tax (after withholdings), yes. Quarterly estimated tax deadlines are April 15, June 15, September 15, and January 15. Texas has no state income tax, so you only need to send federal quarterly payments.
What expenses can I deduct as a Texas freelancer?
Common deductions include: home office (simplified method = $5 per sq ft up to 300 sq ft), business mileage ($0.70 per mile in 2025), health insurance premiums, retirement contributions (SEP-IRA, Solo 401(k)), continuing education, software subscriptions, phone/internet proportional to business use. Keep receipts and records for all of them.
Should I form an LLC or S-Corp in Texas?
For freelancers earning under ~$80K, a single-member LLC (taxed as sole proprietor by default) is usually enough and simpler. Above that, an S-Corp election can save on SE tax by paying yourself a reasonable salary + distributions. Texas has standard LLC filing requirements — expect annual fees and paperwork. Consult a CPA before deciding.
How much should I set aside for taxes as a 1099 worker in Texas?
A safe rule of thumb is 25–30% of gross income set aside in a separate account. This covers federal income tax (10–24% for most freelancers), SE tax (15.3%), and no state tax. Higher earners may need to set aside 35–40%.

Texas paycheck calculator (W-2 employees)

Salaried or hourly? Use the main calculator for accurate W-2 estimates.

Main Texas calculator →