How self-employment tax works
SE tax covers both the employee AND employer share of Social Security (12.4%) and Medicare (2.9%) - totaling 15.3%. However, it's calculated on only 92.35% of your net income (not 100%), and you can deduct 50% of SE tax from your gross income before calculating income tax.
How this calculator works
- Convert net business income into net earnings from self-employment using the Schedule SE 92.35% base.
- Apply the Social Security portion up to the annual wage base and the Medicare portion to all covered earnings.
- Show the half-SE-tax deduction separately so users can carry it into broader federal income-tax planning.
Example scenario
If a sole proprietor expects $60,000 of net Schedule C income, this tool multiplies that amount by 92.35%, applies the Social Security and Medicare rates, and then shows the deductible half of the regular self-employment tax so the user can bring it into a refund or quarterly-payment estimate.
Direct sources for this page
Self-employment tax base and Schedule SE calculation rules.
Annual Social Security wage-base limit.
Estimated-tax and withholding planning for self-employed filers.
Related calculators
These are the closest follow-up tools for this topic, so a user can move from one planning question to the next without hunting through the full directory.
Explore all 16 calculators
QuickTaxTools includes 16 connected calculators covering filing, payroll, credits, deductions, capital gains, and digital assets. Everything below is linked and organized so it is easier to move between tools.