EstimatedTax Tax year 2026
Free · Private · No sign-up

California Self-Employment Tax Calculator

California taxes self-employment income on top of federal, so your true rate is higher than in a no-tax state. This tool estimates your federal income tax, self-employment tax, and California state income tax for 2026 — plus your quarterly payments.

Nothing leaves your browser Real 2026 IRS figures No account needed
Set aside for 2026 taxes
$16,647
$1,387/mo
Self-employment $11,304 Income tax $5,344
Next payment due
April 15, 2026$4,162
1Enter your income

Your business profit and how you file. No sign-up, no documents.

2See what you owe

Federal + self-employment tax, your effective rate, and four payment amounts.

3Pay on time

Add the four due dates to your calendar and pay directly at IRS.gov.

Your 2026 estimate

Answer a few questions — your numbers update live and never leave this page.

Step 1 of 3
About you
How do you file?

We'll add an estimated California state income tax to your total below.

You'll owe about
$16,647
in 2026 federal tax — set aside $1,387/month and you're covered.
Eff. rate
20.8%
Marginal
12%
Self-employment tax $11,304
Federal income tax$5,344
California income tax (est.)$2,889
Federal + California$19,536

State tax is a simplified estimate (brackets + state standard deduction, no state credits or QBI), paid separately to the state.

Your 4 payments

$16,647 for the year
  1. Q1 · Jan – Mar
    $4,162
    Due April 15, 2026
  2. Q2 · Apr – May
    $4,162
    Due June 15, 2026
  3. Q3 · Jun – Aug
    $4,162
    Due September 15, 2026
  4. Q4 · Sep – Dec
    $4,161
    Due January 15, 2027
Pay at IRS.gov ↗
Likely worth it

You could save real money with an S-Corp

After ~$1,200–$2,500 in payroll and filing costs, that's about $1,556–$2,856 net — likely worth electing, as long as the salary stays reasonable.

Est. yearly saving
~$4,056/yr
Pro · coming soon

Keep your plan on track all year

Save & compare scenariosQuarterly email + SMS remindersAll 50 states' taxOne-tap PDF report
$6/mo · cancel anytime
Want a human to check it?

Your situation has real money on the line

At your income an S-Corp election, retirement strategy, or a missed deduction can move thousands. We'll match you with a vetted CPA for a flat-fee review — no sales pitch.

What freelancers actually owe

Does California tax self-employment income?

Yes. California taxes self-employment income at 1%–12.3% (13.3% over $1M), on top of your federal tax. California taxes your business profit as ordinary income, stacked on top of the federal self-employment tax and federal income tax.

The estimate above combines all three: federal income tax, federal self-employment tax, and California state income tax — so you can see your full California picture in one number.

What you owe as a California freelancer

First, federal: self-employment tax of 15.3% on 92.35% of net profit, plus federal income tax after the standard deduction and 20% QBI deduction.

Then California state income tax starting at 1.0%. Note that California doesn't offer the 20% QBI deduction, so your state taxable income is higher than your federal taxable income — this tool accounts for that.

Your 2026 quarterly due dates

Federal estimated taxes are due four times a year (shown above). California estimated payments go to the FTB on an unusual schedule — 30% Q1, 40% Q2, 0% Q3, 30% Q4 — separate from the federal dates above.

Would an S-Corp help in California?

An S-Corp cuts the 15.3% self-employment tax on the profit you take as distributions instead of salary — a federal saving that applies in California too. Use the comparison above to weigh it against the $1,200–$2,500 yearly cost of payroll and a separate return.

What this estimate covers

This is a 2026 planning estimate for federal income tax, self-employment tax, and California state income tax (brackets + state standard deduction). It does not model state tax credits, or every state-specific adjustment, and it isn't tax advice. Confirm anything material with a CPA. California's 2026 brackets follow the latest published schedule pending the FTB's final inflation adjustment.

Common questions

Yes. California taxes self-employment income at 1%–12.3% (13.3% over $1M), on top of your federal tax. It's on top of federal self-employment tax (15.3%) and federal income tax.

Read the guides

See all guides →