Independent Tax Estimation Tool for U.S. Gig Workers — Free, No Registration
Tax Year 2026 Q1 DUE: APR 15
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"Saved me $3,200 on DoorDash taxes" — Alex M., CA🔒 100% Private — No data stored✓ IRS 2026 — Updated April 2026📊 All 51 states covered

OnlyFans Tax Calculator 2026 — All 51 States

Free OnlyFans self-employment tax calculator for 2026. Estimate your SE tax (15.3%), federal income tax, and state tax for all 51 jurisdictions. Get your quarterly estimated payment schedule with Google Calendar export. No signup required — results are instant. Powered by the GigWiseTax main calculator — SE tax + federal + all 51 states.

IRS Schedule SE All 51 States No Signup 2026 Tax Rules Instant Results
OnlyFans Tax Calculator 2026IRS Schedule SE
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✅ KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • On $40,000 net income, OnlyFans creators owe approximately $8,852 total tax in 2026
  • Quarterly estimated payment: $2,213 due April 15, June 16, Sep 15, Jan 15
  • OnlyFans takes a 20% platform fee — deductible as a business expense on Schedule C
  • Camera, lighting, home studio, and content creation tools are fully deductible
  • Set aside 25–30% of every payout — OnlyFans does not withhold federal or state taxes
2026 Tax Summary — OnlyFans

OnlyFans workers pay 15.3% self-employment tax on net earnings, plus federal income tax. On $40,000 net income: approximately $5,652 SE tax + $3,200 federal income tax = $8,852 total tax. Quarterly estimated payment: $2,213. Set aside 25% of every payment. Equipment, internet, and home studio expenses are deductible.

OnlyFans Tax Guide 2026

How OnlyFans Taxes Work in 2026

As a OnlyFans worker, you are classified as an independent contractor (1099) — not an employee. This means OnlyFans does not withhold any federal, state, or Social Security/Medicare taxes from your payments. You are responsible for calculating and paying your own taxes directly to the IRS four times per year.

Key Rule: Set Aside 25–30% of Every Payment

Most OnlyFans workers should set aside 25–30% of net income for taxes. If you expect to owe $1,000 or more in taxes, you must make quarterly estimated payments or face IRS underpayment penalties.

What Taxes Do OnlyFans Workers Pay?

Self-Employment Tax
15.3%
12.4% Social Security + 2.9% Medicare
Federal Income Tax
10–37%
Based on total taxable income
State Income Tax
0–13.3%
Depends on your state (0 in TX, FL, NV)
SE Tax Deduction
50% off
Deduct half of SE tax from taxable income

2026 Quarterly Tax Deadlines for OnlyFans Workers

QuarterIncome PeriodDue DateDays Left
NOWQ1 2026January 1 – March 31April 15, 202645 days
Q2 2026April 1 – May 31June 16, 2026107 days
Q3 2026June 1 – August 31September 15, 2026198 days
Q4 2026September 1 – December 31January 15, 2027320 days

Top Tax Deductions for OnlyFans Workers in 2026

Camera, lighting & recording equipment
Home office — dedicated space ($5/sq ft)
Costumes, props & wardrobe (business use)
Phone & internet — business use percentage
Hair, makeup & grooming (business use)
Editing software (Adobe, Final Cut Pro)
Self-employed health insurance premiums
Half of self-employment tax (SE tax deduction)
Photography & video props
Cloud storage & platform fees
Accounting & tax software
Business courses & coaching
Full Deductions Checklist
See complete IRS Schedule C write-offs on 1099Deductions.com
DoorDash, Uber, Airbnb, Etsy, OnlyFans — 17 job types. 100% free.
OnlyFans Creator Tip: Home Office Deduction

If you use a dedicated space at home exclusively for your OnlyFans business, you can deduct home office expenses. The simplified method allows $5 per square foot (up to 300 sq ft = $1,500 deduction). Equipment, camera gear, and software are fully deductible in the year of purchase under Section 179.

Frequently Asked Questions — OnlyFans Taxes 2026

Q: Does OnlyFans withhold taxes from my payments?
No. OnlyFans classifies all workers as independent contractors (1099). They do not withhold federal income tax, state income tax, Social Security, or Medicare taxes. You must calculate and pay these yourself using IRS Form 1040-ES.
Q: How much should I set aside for OnlyFans taxes?
Set aside 25–30% of your net OnlyFans income for taxes. This covers the 15.3% self-employment tax plus federal income tax. In high-tax states like California or New York, set aside 30–35%.
Q: What 1099 form does OnlyFans send?
OnlyFans issues a 1099-NEC (or 1099-K for some platforms) if you earn $600 or more in a calendar year. You must report ALL income even if you don't receive a 1099 form.
Q: What is the self-employment tax rate for OnlyFans in 2026?
The self-employment tax rate is 15.3% on net earnings (92.35% of gross income). This consists of 12.4% Social Security tax and 2.9% Medicare tax. The Social Security portion only applies to the first $176,100 of net earnings in 2026. You can deduct 50% of SE tax from your taxable income.
Q: Do I need to pay OnlyFans taxes if I earn under $600?
Yes. The $600 threshold only determines whether OnlyFans must send you a 1099 form. You are required to report and pay taxes on ALL self-employment income, even $1, if your total self-employment profit exceeds $400 for the year.
Disclaimer: This calculator provides estimates for planning purposes only. Tax laws are subject to change. Consult a licensed CPA or tax professional, or visit IRS.gov for official guidance. GigWiseTax.com is not affiliated with OnlyFans, the IRS, or any government agency.
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Top States
OnlyFans in California9.3%
OnlyFans in New York6.85%
OnlyFans in TexasNo Tax
OnlyFans in FloridaNo Tax
OnlyFans in Illinois4.95%
OnlyFans in WashingtonNo Tax
OnlyFans in NevadaNo Tax
OnlyFans in Georgia5.5%
Drive for multiple apps?
Working Uber + DoorDash, Instacart + Amazon Flex, or other combinations? Learn how to combine your gig income for taxes.
→ Multi-App Gig Tax Guide 2026
About This Tool
GigWiseTax.com is an independent, free estimation tool. Not affiliated with OnlyFans, the IRS, or any government agency. No personal data is stored.
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Written & reviewed by
Ethan Blake
Tax Compliance Specialist · Since 2017

Helped 5,000+ freelancers navigate IRS rules. Specializes in gig economy and 1099 taxation.

IRS.gov SourceAll articles by Ethan Blake →

Disclosure: This site may contain affiliate links. If you click and purchase, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. We only recommend tools we trust. This is not tax advice — consult a licensed CPA for your situation.