Understanding Self-Employment Tax
As an online seller, self-employment tax is one of your largest annual expenses—often 15% or more of your net income. Unlike W-2 employees who split Social Security and Medicare taxes with their employers, self-employed sellers pay both portions (100% of the tax). Understanding how SE tax works, when it's due, and how to calculate it properly is critical for financial planning and avoiding surprises at tax time.
SE Tax Rates & Limits (2025)
| Tax Component | Rate | Income Limit (2025) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Social Security | 12.4% | Up to $176,100 | Taxes only first $176,100 of net earnings |
| Medicare | 2.9% | All earnings | Applies to all self-employment income |
| Additional Medicare | 0.9% | Over $200,000 (single) | Extra tax on high earners |
| Combined Rate | 15.3% | Most sellers | Standard rate for SE tax |
Calculate Your Self-Employment Tax
Self-Employment Tax Calculator
Quarterly Estimated Tax Payments
As a self-employed seller, you must pay estimated taxes quarterly to avoid penalties. The IRS expects you to pay throughout the year, not in one lump sum when you file your return.
2025 Quarterly Payment Deadlines
| Quarter | Covers Period | Due Date | Payment Method |
|---|---|---|---|
| Q1 | January 1 - March 31 | April 15, 2025 | IRS Direct Pay, EFTPS, or voucher |
| Q2 | April 1 - May 31 | June 16, 2025 | IRS Direct Pay, EFTPS, or voucher |
| Q3 | June 1 - August 31 | September 15, 2025 | IRS Direct Pay, EFTPS, or voucher |
| Q4 | September 1 - December 31 | January 15, 2026 | IRS Direct Pay, EFTPS, or voucher |
How to Pay Estimated Taxes
- IRS Direct Pay: Free online payment system at irs.gov. No registration required. Simple and instant.
- EFTPS (Electronic Federal Tax Payment System): Requires registration (3-5 business days). Allows advance scheduling of payments.
- Payment Voucher (Form 1040-ES): Old-school method. Send voucher with payment by mail.
- Credit/Debit Card: Through IRS-approved third-party processors. Charges 1.98-2.35% convenience fee.
Filing Schedule SE
Schedule SE (Self-Employment Tax) is a form filed with your 1040 to calculate your total SE tax obligation. It's separate from your income tax return but filed at the same time.
What Goes on Schedule SE?
- Net Profit from Schedule C: Your business net income (revenue minus expenses)
- Net Earnings Calculation: Adjusted using a specific formula (multiply by 92.35%)
- Social Security Tax Calculation: 12.4% on earnings up to $176,100
- Medicare Tax Calculation: 2.9% on all earnings
- Total SE Tax: Sum of Social Security and Medicare taxes
- Deductible Portion: You can deduct 50% of SE tax on your income tax return
Pro Tip: If your net profit is under $400, you don't file Schedule SE (though you may need to for other reasons). Most online sellers with $400+ net earnings must file.
SE Tax vs Income Tax
Don't confuse self-employment tax with income tax. They're separate:
- SE Tax: 15.3% on net profit. Goes to Social Security and Medicare. Required for all self-employed with $400+ net earnings.
- Income Tax: Progressive rates (10%, 12%, 22%, etc.) on taxable income. Reduced by deductions and credits.
- Combined Example: $100,000 net profit might mean $15,300 SE tax + $15,000 income tax = $30,300 total federal taxes
Penalties for Underpayment
Miss your quarterly payments and the IRS charges penalties. As of 2025:
- Underpayment Penalty Rate: 8% annually (compounds quarterly)
- How It's Calculated: Based on how much you should have paid vs. what you paid
- Safe Harbor Rules: Pay 100% of 2024 tax or 90% of 2025 tax to avoid penalties
- Example: If you owed $15,300 in SE tax and paid $0, underpayment penalty could be $200-$400+
SE Tax Reduction Strategies
Several strategies can reduce your SE tax burden:
1. S-Corporation Election
Potentially saves 15-25% of taxes by splitting income into W-2 salary and distributions. Discussed in detail in our S-Corp guide.
2. Deduct SE Tax
You can deduct 50% of your SE tax on your income tax return. This isn't a strategy to reduce SE tax itself, but it reduces your overall tax bill.
3. Maximize Business Deductions
Every dollar deducted from business expenses reduces net profit, which reduces SE tax. Deductions are more valuable for SE tax than income tax.
4. Track All Income & Expenses
Accurate record-keeping ensures you're not overpaying on unreported income and claiming all legitimate expenses.
SE Tax Recordkeeping
Keep these documents for at least 7 years:
- Schedule SE forms filed
- Estimated tax payment vouchers (Form 1040-ES)
- IRS Direct Pay confirmations
- Bank statements showing payments made
- Schedule C (business profit/loss)
- All business income and expense records