Why Self-Employed Pay More (And How to Fight Back)
As a W-2 employee, your employer pays half of your FICA taxes (7.65%) — you never see it. Self-employed individuals pay the full 15.3%. However, you get two automatic deductions: (1) the employer-equivalent half of SE tax is deductible from AGI, and (2) the QBI deduction removes up to 20% of net business income from federal taxable income.
The Social Security Wage Base Cap
In 2025, Social Security tax (12.4%) only applies to the first $176,100 of self-employment income. Above that threshold, only Medicare (2.9%) continues — plus the Additional Medicare Tax (0.9%) if you exceed $200K/$250K. High earners approaching or above this cap see their effective SE tax rate drop significantly.
S-Corp Election: The $50K+ Strategy
When net SE income consistently exceeds $50,000–$60,000, electing S-Corp status often saves thousands. You pay yourself a "reasonable salary" subject to payroll taxes, then take the remaining profit as distributions — which are not subject to SE tax. The tradeoff: S-Corps cost $1,500–$3,000/year in accounting and administrative fees.
Retirement Accounts: The Fastest Way to Reduce Taxes
A SEP-IRA lets you contribute up to 20% of net self-employment income (or $70,000 max in 2025). Every dollar contributed reduces your federal taxable income — and state taxable income in most states. At a 22% marginal federal rate + 5% state rate, a $10,000 SEP-IRA contribution saves $2,700 in taxes, with only $7,300 of real cost.
Quarterly Estimated Taxes: Avoid the Penalty Trap
Without employer withholding, you must pay estimated taxes quarterly. The safe harbor rule protects you: pay the lesser of (A) 90% of this year's tax or (B) 100% of last year's tax (110% if prior AGI exceeded $150K). If you pay at least this amount across the four due dates, no underpayment penalty applies regardless of how much you ultimately owe.