1099 Tax Calculator 2026 — Ohio Self-Employment Tax
Ohio freelancers pay federal SE tax plus Ohio's modest flat 2.75% state income tax above $26,050, making Ohio's state-level burden relatively low for self-employed workers. This calculator shows your full 1099 tax picture in Ohio, including municipal income taxes that some Ohio cities impose on self-employment income.
Want your full paycheck breakdown including FICA? Ohio Salary Calculator →
1 · Income
2 · Deductions
3 · State
Total Tax Burden
$18,584
Effective rate: 24.8%
After-Tax Income
$56,416
Marginal rate: 22%
Quarterly Payment
$4,646
Set aside ~25% of each payment
Tax Breakdown
Self-Employment Tax
Federal Income Tax
1099 vs W-2 Employee Comparison
If you earned $75,000 as a salaried W-2 employee instead:
| 1099 (You) | W-2 Employee | |
|---|---|---|
| Gross Income | $75,000 | $75,000 |
| Self-Employment Tax (15.3%) | $10,597 | — |
| Employee FICA (7.65%) | — | $5,738 |
| Federal Income Tax | $6,706 | $7,872 |
| Ohio State Tax | $1,280 | $1,280 |
| Total Tax Burden | $18,584 | $14,890 |
| After-Tax Income | $56,416 | $60,110 |
As a 1099 contractor, you pay $3,694 more per year than a W-2 employee at the same gross income.
Factor this into your rate when negotiating contracts — you're paying the employer's share of FICA that a salaried employer would cover.
Federal Income Tax Bracket Breakdown
After SE tax deduction — taxable income: $53,601
$11,925 taxable in this bracket
$36,550 taxable in this bracket
$5,126 taxable in this bracket
Quarterly Estimated Tax Payments
$4,646
Due April 15, 2026
$4,646
Due June 16, 2026
$4,646
Due September 15, 2026
$4,646
Due January 15, 2027
Self-employed workers must pay estimated taxes quarterly to avoid IRS penalties. These are estimates — consult a tax professional for your exact payments. See full income picture →
Frequently Asked Questions
Does my state change my self-employment tax?
Federal self-employment tax (15.3%) is the same in every state — it's a federal obligation regardless of where you live. What changes by state is your state income tax, which is calculated separately on top of your federal SE tax and federal income tax. Moving from a high-tax state to a no-tax state can save a self-employed person thousands of dollars per year on state income tax alone, while federal SE tax remains constant.
Do I need to pay quarterly estimated taxes?
Yes — self-employed workers who expect to owe $1,000 or more in federal taxes for the year must make quarterly estimated tax payments to avoid IRS penalties. The 2026 due dates are April 15, June 16, September 15, and January 15, 2027. Many states have similar quarterly requirements. The quarterly payment shown in this calculator divides your total estimated annual tax burden by four as a starting point.
How does the W-2 comparison work?
The W-2 comparison shows what your total tax burden would be if you earned the same gross income as a salaried employee instead of a contractor. The key difference: as a W-2 employee, your employer pays half of FICA (7.65%), so you only pay 7.65% yourself. As a 1099 contractor, you pay both halves — 15.3% total. The comparison table isolates exactly how much that employer FICA shift adds to your annual tax bill.