FMFiscalModus
United States — federal + California FTB · Tax year 2025 · Single filer

1099 Tax Estimator — California

Freelancers and contractors in California filing Schedule C with FTB state tax.

Freelancers and contractors in California filing Schedule C with FTB state tax.

Net profit (Schedule C)

$73,000.00

Self-employment tax

$10,314.57

Federal income tax

$6,539.40

State income tax

$2,444.46

Total estimated tax

$19,298.43

Quarterly payment (est.)

$4,824.61

Effective rate

26.4%

Tax year 2025 · Single filer · Standard deduction · California state tax modeled when selected.

Related calculators

US self-employment and 1099 tax guide

Who this estimator is for

Freelancers, consultants, and sole proprietors who receive 1099-NEC or self-employment income report profit on Schedule C. This tool estimates self-employment tax (Social Security and Medicare), federal income tax, and optional state tax.

Tax law changes yearly. This calculator uses published 2025 brackets and standard deduction amounts — verify with IRS publications or a CPA before filing.

Self-employment tax basics

Net profit from Schedule C is subject to self-employment tax at 15.3% on 92.35% of net earnings (up to the Social Security wage base), plus 2.9% Medicare on all net earnings. An additional 0.9% Medicare surtax may apply at higher incomes.

You can deduct the employer-equivalent portion of SE tax when calculating adjusted gross income — the estimator accounts for this interaction.

  • Quarterly estimated payments are due April 15, June 15, September 15, and January 15.
  • Business expenses reduce net profit and therefore SE and income tax.
  • State rules vary — California FTB is included on state-specific pages.

Important disclaimer

This is not tax advice. Credits, AMT, QBI deduction, spouse income, and other return items are not fully modeled. Consult a licensed CPA or enrolled agent for filing decisions.

Frequently asked questions

?Who should use a 1099 tax estimator?
Freelancers, contractors, and sole proprietors who receive 1099-NEC or self-employment income and need a federal (and optionally California) tax estimate.
?How are quarterly payments calculated?
Estimated total tax minus withholding, divided by four. Actual safe-harbor rules may differ — consult IRS Publication 505.
?What is the difference between 1099-NEC and W-2?
1099-NEC reports non-employee compensation — you are responsible for self-employment tax and quarterly estimates. W-2 employees have withholding handled by employers.
?Should I make quarterly estimated payments?
If you expect to owe $1,000+ after withholding, IRS generally requires quarterly estimated tax to avoid underpayment penalties.