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Hair Stylist or Barber Tax Calculator (2026)

If you rent a booth or chair, you're self-employed: the salon withholds no tax, and your rent and supplies are deductible. This free tool estimates your 2026 federal income tax and self-employment tax, sizes your four quarterly payments, and flags the deductions booth-renting stylists and barbers miss most.

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?

Federal estimate only. Add your state for a combined number.

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

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

Saved scenarios

Save your current numbers to compare scenarios side by side — sole prop vs S-Corp, a raise, a bigger retirement contribution. Stored only in this browser.

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Want a human to check it?

Your numbers have real money on the line

At your income, an S-Corp election, a retirement-plan choice, or one missed deduction can swing your bill by thousands. A flat-fee review catches it — no retainer, no sales pitch.

  • Whether an S-Corp actually nets out for you
  • Deductions you're leaving on the table
  • A retirement plan that cuts this year's tax
Get a flat-fee CPA review →

Recommended: Shashank Beri, CPA · independent, no obligation

What freelancers actually owe

How taxes work for booth-renting stylists and barbers

Booth or chair renting makes you a sole proprietor, not an employee — the salon doesn't withhold tax. Your service and product income minus expenses is net profit, owing income tax and self-employment tax that you pay quarterly.

Self-employment tax is 15.3% on 92.35% of your net profit — the Social Security and Medicare an employer would normally split with you — and the calculator stacks it on top of your income tax automatically. You also deduct half of it against income tax.

Top tax write-offs for booth-renting stylists and barbers

Stylist and barber write-offs: booth or chair rent, products and supplies (color, shampoo, styling product), shears, clippers, and tools, capes and towels, a share of your phone, licensing and continuing education, liability insurance, and booking or marketing software.

Lowering net profit is your most powerful lever: because profit is the base for both income tax and self-employment tax, every legitimate deduction saves you on both. Keep clean records and a separate business account.

Should a hair stylist or barber elect an S-Corp?

Most chair renters stay below the S-Corp break-even, but established stylists with strong books or their own small salon may clear it. The comparison above shows whether the saving beats payroll costs.

An S-Corp splits profit into a reasonable salary (still subject to FICA) and distributions (which skip the 15.3% self-employment tax). Running one costs roughly $1,200–$2,500 a year, so it pays off once the saving clears that — the comparison above shows your exact break-even.

Your 20% QBI deduction

Good news for QBI: hair stylist or barber work isn't a "specified service" business, so you keep the full 20% deduction even at higher incomes (subject only to the W-2 wage limit).

The QBI deduction lets most self-employed people deduct 20% of business profit before income tax, on top of the $16,100 (single) / $32,200 (married filing jointly) standard deduction. The calculator applies it by default.

What this estimate covers

This is a 2026 planning estimate of federal income tax and self-employment tax for a sole proprietor or single-member LLC, with the standard deduction and a simplified 20% QBI deduction. It isn't tax advice.

It doesn't include state or local income tax (add your state in the calculator), tax credits, the net investment income tax, or the full QBI limitation for higher earners. For anything with real money on the line, confirm with a CPA.

Common questions

Yes — renting a booth makes you self-employed, so you owe 15.3% on 92.35% of net profit plus federal income tax. A stylist who's a W-2 salon employee does not.

Read the guides

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