South Dakota Self-Employment Tax Calculator
South Dakota has no state income tax. That makes your tax picture simpler than most — you still owe federal income tax and self-employment tax, and this tool sizes both plus your four 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.
Great news — this state has no personal income tax, so your only bill is the federal total.
No state income tax — the federal total above is your whole bill. No separate state return or state estimated payments.
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.
Keep your plan on track all year
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 South Dakota tax self-employment income?
No. South Dakota has no state income tax. South Dakota is one of nine states that don't tax self-employment or wage income, so there's no state return or state estimated payments to worry about for your business income.
What you do still owe is entirely federal: income tax and self-employment tax. The estimate above is your full 2026 picture for South Dakota.
What you still owe as a South Dakota freelancer
Self-employment tax is 15.3% on 92.35% of your net profit — Social Security (12.4%, up to the $184,500 wage base) and Medicare (2.9%). It's federal and applies no matter which state you're in.
On top of that you owe federal income tax after the $16,100 (single) or $32,200 (married filing jointly) standard deduction and the 20% QBI deduction. Because South Dakota adds nothing, your effective rate is lower here than in a state like California or New York at the same income.
Your 2026 federal quarterly due dates
Estimated taxes are due four times a year. In South Dakota these are your only estimated payments — all federal, all to the IRS.
Would an S-Corp help in South Dakota?
Possibly — an S-Corp can cut the 15.3% self-employment tax on the share of profit you take as distributions instead of salary. With no state income tax in South Dakota, the math is purely federal. Use the comparison above to see whether the saving beats the $1,200–$2,500 yearly cost of running payroll and a separate return.
What this estimate covers
This is a 2026 planning estimate for federal income tax and self-employment tax, with the standard deduction and a simplified QBI deduction. South Dakota adds no state income tax on this income. It isn't tax advice and doesn't cover federal credits, the net investment income tax, or the full QBI limitation for high earners — confirm anything material with a CPA.
Common questions
No. South Dakota has no state income tax. You won't file a state income-tax return or make state estimated payments on your self-employment income.
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 →Estimated taxesWhen are quarterly estimated taxes due in 2026?
April 15, June 15, September 15, 2026, and January 15, 2027 — the full schedule and how to never miss one.
Read →S-CorpIs an S-Corp worth it in 2026?
It saves self-employment tax — but costs money and effort to run. Where the break-even actually is.
Read →