South Carolina Self-Employment Tax Calculator
South Carolina 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 South Carolina state income tax for 2026 — plus your quarterly payments.
Your business profit and how you file. No sign-up, no documents.
Federal + self-employment tax, your effective rate, and four payment amounts.
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.
We'll add an estimated South Carolina state income tax to your total below.
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- Q1 · Jan – Mar$4,162Due April 15, 2026
- Q2 · Apr – May$4,162Due June 15, 2026
- Q3 · Jun – Aug$4,162Due September 15, 2026
- Q4 · Sep – Dec$4,161Due January 15, 2027
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.
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.
Never miss a tax deadline again
Your situation has real money on the line
At your income an S-Corp election, retirement strategy, or a missed deduction can move thousands. Have a CPA review it for a flat fee — no sales pitch.
Talk to a CPA →Recommended: Shashank Beri, CPA
What freelancers actually owe
Does South Carolina tax self-employment income?
Yes. South Carolina taxes self-employment income at 1.99%–5.21%, on top of your federal tax. South Carolina 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 South Carolina state income tax — so you can see your full South Carolina picture in one number.
What you owe as a South Carolina 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 South Carolina state income tax starting at 1.99%. Note that South Carolina 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). South Carolina overhauled its income tax for 2026 (H.4216): 1.99% on the first $30,000 of taxable income and 5.21% above, starting from your federal taxable income. This estimate reflects the new two-rate structure.
Would an S-Corp help in South Carolina?
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 South Carolina 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 South Carolina 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.
Common questions
Yes. South Carolina taxes self-employment income at 1.99%–5.21%, on top of your federal tax. It's on top of federal self-employment tax (15.3%) and federal income tax.
Read the guides
How much should I set aside for taxes as a freelancer?
The rule of thumb is 25–35% of net profit — here's how to find your exact number for 2026.
Read →Freelancer taxes1099 vs W-2 taxes: why freelancers pay more
Same pay, bigger tax bill. Why 1099 income costs more than a W-2 — and the deductions that close the gap.
Read →DeductionsSelf-employed tax deductions that actually cut your bill
Home office, health insurance, retirement, QBI, half your SE tax — the write-offs that actually lower your bill.
Read →