1099 vs W-2 Taxes 2026: Which Costs You More?
A 1099 independent contractor pays 15.3% self-employment tax — the full FICA amount. A W-2 employee pays only 7.65% because the employer covers the other half. On $50,000 net income, that difference is $3,825 per year. However, 1099 workers get powerful deductions — mileage, home office, health insurance — that W-2 employees cannot claim.
Key Takeaways
- 1099 workers pay 15.3% SE tax vs 7.65% for W-2 — a gap of 7.65% on all earned income
- On $50,000, the extra SE tax burden is $3,825 before any deductions
- 1099 workers can deduct 50% of SE tax, reducing their taxable income by up to $3,533 at $50K
- Mileage deduction at 72.5 cents/mile (2026) can offset thousands in SE tax
- Solo 401(k) contributions up to $23,500 slash taxable income significantly
How Much More Tax Does a 1099 Worker Pay?
The core difference is who pays the employer share of FICA. W-2 employers pay 7.65% on top of your salary — you never see it. As a 1099 contractor, you are both employee and employer. You pay both halves yourself: 12.4% Social Security + 2.9% Medicare = 15.3% total.
The IRS does give 1099 workers one offset: you can deduct 50% of SE tax from gross income. So the actual extra cost is closer to 5.6% after the deduction — but still real money.
What Is Self-Employment Tax?
Self-employment tax covers Social Security and Medicare for people who work for themselves. It applies to net profit above $400. The IRS calculates it on 92.35% of your net earnings (not 100%) to simulate the employer deduction a W-2 worker would receive.
The IRS states: "If you are self-employed, you are responsible for paying the full 15.3% self-employment tax. However, you can deduct one-half of the self-employment tax as an adjustment to income."
- Social Security: 12.4% on income up to $184,500 (2026 wage base)
- Medicare: 2.9% on all net earnings, no cap
- Additional Medicare: 0.9% on earnings above $200,000 single / $250,000 MFJ
- SE tax deduction: 50% of total SE tax reduces your adjusted gross income
Side-by-Side Tax Comparison 2026
Both workers earn $50,000 gross. Single filer, standard deduction $16,100. No other adjustments.
| Item | 1099 Worker | W-2 Employee |
|---|---|---|
| Gross income | $50,000 | $50,000 |
| Self-employment tax (15.3%) | $7,065 | — |
| Employee FICA (7.65%) | — | $3,825 |
| Employer FICA (you pay as 1099) | $3,825 hidden | Employer pays |
| SE tax deduction (50%) | −$3,533 | — |
| Standard deduction 2026 | −$16,100 | −$16,100 |
| Taxable income | $30,367 | $33,900 |
| Federal income tax (est.) | $3,378 | $3,859 |
| Total tax burden | $10,443 | $7,684 |
Difference: $2,759 more for 1099 worker at $50K after the SE tax deduction. Before deduction the gap is $3,825.
Deductions That Close the Gap
1099 workers have access to deductions unavailable to W-2 employees. Used correctly, these can eliminate most or all of the SE tax penalty.
- Mileage deduction — 72.5 cents per mile in 2026. Drive 10,000 miles for work and deduct $7,250 from gross income.
- Home office — $5 per square foot, up to $1,500 (simplified method). Or deduct actual expenses proportionally.
- Health insurance — 100% of premiums deductible on Schedule 1 if you are not eligible for employer coverage.
- Solo 401(k) — Contribute up to $23,500 as employee + 25% of net earnings as employer. Massive taxable income reduction.
- Business expenses — Phone, internet, equipment, software — deductible if used for business.
- W-2 employees cannot deduct unreimbursed work expenses under current law (suspended through 2025, extended 2026)
- W-2 workers cannot contribute to a Solo 401(k) — only employer-sponsored plans
- W-2 workers cannot deduct home office unless an employer mandates remote work with no office available
Real Numbers: $35K, $50K, $75K, $100K
SE tax owed at each income level. Single filer, no deductions beyond SE deduction and standard deduction.
| Net Income | SE Tax (1099) | FICA (W-2) | Extra Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| $35,000 | $4,945 | $2,678 | +$2,267 |
| $50,000 | $7,065 | $3,825 | +$3,240 |
| $75,000 | $10,597 | $5,738 | +$4,860 |
| $100,000 | $14,130 | $7,650 | +$6,480 |
| $184,500 (SS cap) | $26,100 | $14,114 | +$11,986 |
Extra cost = additional SE tax before the 50% SE deduction. After deduction, effective extra cost is roughly 5.6% of net income.
Quarterly Estimated Taxes for 1099 Workers
W-2 employees have taxes withheld automatically each paycheck. 1099 workers must send payments to the IRS four times a year. Missing a deadline triggers an underpayment penalty — currently around 7% annualized.
- Q1 (Jan–Mar): due April 15, 2026
- Q2 (Apr–May): due June 16, 2026
- Q3 (Jun–Aug): due September 15, 2026
- Q4 (Sep–Dec): due January 15, 2027
A safe rule: set aside 25–30% of every payment you receive. Pay quarterly using IRS Direct Pay or Form 1040-ES. See our full guide on quarterly taxes for gig workers for step-by-step instructions.
How many business miles does a DoorDash driver need to drive to fully offset the 1099 SE tax penalty vs W-2?
- At $50K income, SE tax penalty after deduction: ~$2,759
- Mileage deduction rate 2026: 72.5 cents/mile
- Tax value per mile (22% bracket): ~15.9 cents
- Break-even: ~17,350 miles — roughly 47 miles per day
Frequently Asked Questions
Do 1099 workers pay more taxes than W-2 employees?
Yes. 1099 workers pay the full 15.3% self-employment tax. W-2 employees pay only 7.65% because their employer covers the other half. On $50,000 income, that is $3,825 more for a 1099 worker before any deductions.
What is the self-employment tax rate in 2026?
15.3% — 12.4% for Social Security (on income up to $184,500) and 2.9% for Medicare. You can deduct 50% of SE tax on your federal return, reducing taxable income.
Can a 1099 worker deduct the extra self-employment tax?
Yes. The IRS allows a deduction of 50% of SE tax on Schedule 1. On $50,000, your SE tax is ~$7,065 and you deduct $3,533 before calculating income tax.
What deductions can reduce a 1099 worker's tax bill?
Business mileage (72.5 cents/mile), home office, 100% health insurance premiums, Solo 401(k) contributions up to $23,500, and business equipment under Section 179.
Does a W-2 employee pay any self-employment tax?
No. W-2 employees do not pay SE tax. Their employer withholds 7.65% employee FICA and pays a matching 7.65% separately. The employee never pays the employer half.
At what income does the 1099 tax burden become significant?
SE tax applies from the first $400 of net profit. At $20,000, you owe ~$2,826 SE tax. At $50,000, ~$7,065. At $100,000, ~$14,130.
How do quarterly taxes work for 1099 workers?
1099 workers must pay estimated taxes by April 15, June 16, September 15, and January 15. Pay at least 90% of current-year tax or 100% of last year's tax to avoid penalties.
Related Articles
Helped 5,000+ freelancers navigate IRS rules. Specializes in gig economy and 1099 taxation.