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How to Calculate Self-Employment Tax

What is Self-Employment Tax?

Self-employment tax covers Social Security and Medicare for freelancers who pay both employee and employer portions. In the UK, Class 2 and Class 4 NI applies.

Formula

Self-employment tax = Net income × 92.35% × 15.3%; (Both employer + employee portion of Social Security + Medicare); Deduction = SE tax × 50%
NetIncome
Net business income (Currency)
SEtax
Self-employment tax (Currency)
SS
Social Security portion (12.4%) (Currency)
Medicare
Medicare portion (2.9%+) (Currency)

Step-by-Step Guide

  1. 1US: SE tax = Net profit × 15.3% (SS 12.4% + Medicare 2.9%)
  2. 2Deduct half of SE tax from taxable income
  3. 3UK Class 4 NI: 9% on profits £12,570–£50,270
  4. 4Quarterly estimated payments required in the US

Worked Examples

Input
US: $80,000 net self-employment profit
Result
SE tax ≈ $11,304; deduct $5,652 from taxable income

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is self-employment tax so high?

You pay both employee (7.65%) and employer (7.65%) portions = 15.3%. W-2 workers split with employer; you pay all. SE tax deduction offsets some (0.5 × SE tax).

Can I deduct business expenses before SE tax?

Yes. Calculate: Gross income − Business deductions = Net income. Apply SE tax to net. Deductible expenses reduce both income tax and SE tax.

What about Medicare surtax (3.8%)?

Additional 0.9% Medicare tax on earnings > $200k (single) or $250k (married). Plus 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax on unearned income. Cumulative rates hit high earners hard.

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