Quarterly Estimated Tax Calculator (2026)

Estimate your Form 1040-ES quarterly tax payments for freelance and self-employment income. Covers both SE tax and federal income tax.

Uses 2026 IRS thresholds · CPA-reviewed methodology · No sign-up, no data stored.

Project your 2026 tax and split it into 4 payments

Gross 1099/freelance income minus business expenses.
Your own W-2 wages. Affects SS wage base calculation.
Interest, dividends, spouse wages on joint return, etc.
Any federal tax already withheld (from W-2 or earlier estimated payments).
Each quarterly payment
$0
Projected total federal tax$0
  Self-employment tax$0
  Federal income tax$0
Minus withholding$0
Effective rate (on total income)0%

Your 2026 payment schedule

Q1 — April 15, 2026$0
Q2 — June 16, 2026$0
Q3 — September 15, 2026$0
Q4 — January 15, 2027$0

Estimate only. For planning, not filing. Consult a CPA for your specific situation.

How quarterly estimated taxes work

When you have a W-2 job, your employer withholds federal income tax and FICA from every paycheck and sends it to the IRS on your behalf. When you're self-employed, nobody does that for you. The IRS wants its money on a roughly quarterly schedule anyway, so it built a system called "estimated taxes" that freelancers, contractors, landlords, and anyone with meaningful untaxed income has to use. You project how much you'll owe for the year, divide by four, and send a check (or ACH payment) four times a year using Form 1040-ES.

The four 2026 quarterly deadlines are not evenly spaced, which confuses people every year. They are: April 15, 2026 (covers income earned Jan 1 to Mar 31), June 16, 2026 (covers April 1 to May 31), September 15, 2026 (covers June 1 to Aug 31), and January 15, 2027 (covers Sept 1 to Dec 31). Notice Q2 is only two months long and Q4 is four months long — that's how the IRS drew the lines, don't overthink it.

What counts toward "estimated tax"

Your quarterly estimated tax payment needs to cover three things: federal income tax on your business income, self-employment tax (Social Security + Medicare on your net earnings), and any additional Medicare surtax if you cross the threshold. It does not cover state income tax — that's a separate schedule handled by your state's tax department, and most states with income tax have their own 1040-ES equivalent you need to file too.

This calculator handles the federal piece. If you live in California, New York, Massachusetts, or another high-tax state, you'll want to tack on another 5 to 10 percent of your taxable income as a state estimated payment and send it separately to your state.

The safe harbor rule that keeps you out of penalties

The IRS charges an underpayment penalty if you pay too little in estimated taxes. But there's a "safe harbor" that protects you even if your actual tax bill ends up much bigger than you projected. The safe harbor says you can avoid the penalty by paying the smaller of: (1) 90 percent of your current year's total tax, or (2) 100 percent of last year's total tax — bumped to 110 percent if your prior year AGI was over $150,000.

For most freelancers, path #2 is the easier guarantee. Look at your prior year's Form 1040 line 24 (total tax). Divide it by four. Pay that amount each quarter. You are bulletproof against penalties regardless of how much you end up earning. If your income grows, you might owe more at year end, but you won't get hit with an IRS underpayment penalty.

A worked example

Say you're a single freelancer expecting $70,000 of net self-employment income in 2026, no W-2 wages, no other income. Plug those numbers in above and you'll see: projected total federal tax around $16,600, split into four payments of roughly $4,150 each due April 15, June 16, September 15, and January 15. That's what you send the IRS via Form 1040-ES (electronically at EFTPS.gov or IRS Direct Pay, or by mailing a paper voucher).

Common mistakes that trip up freelancers

Mistake one: forgetting that SE tax alone is 15.3 percent on top of your income tax. People remember their bracket and forget the self-employment portion. Mistake two: treating the estimated payment as optional. The IRS considers underpayment penalties a cost of doing business and will assess them. Mistake three: paying based on gross revenue instead of net (post-expense) income. You only owe tax on profit, not on top-line sales. Mistake four: forgetting state. If you live somewhere with income tax, you owe estimated payments there too, on roughly the same schedule.

How to actually send the payment

Two recommended methods: (1) Use IRS Direct Pay at directpay.irs.gov — free, ACH from your bank, no account needed, takes about three minutes. (2) Use EFTPS.gov — slightly more setup, but lets you schedule all four payments at the start of the year so you can't forget. Both are free and give you a confirmation number.

Avoid credit card payments unless you really need to — the IRS charges a ~1.85% processing fee which typically exceeds any rewards you'd earn. Avoid mailing checks unless you like certified mail receipts and tracking. The electronic methods are faster and generate automatic records.

Frequently asked questions

When are 2026 quarterly estimated taxes due?

April 15, 2026, June 16, 2026, September 15, 2026, and January 15, 2027. Q2 gets bumped to June 16 because June 15 falls on a Sunday in 2026.

Do I have to pay exactly four equal amounts?

No. Four equal payments is the simplest approach and it's what this calculator gives you. But if your income is uneven — you're seasonal, or landed a big contract late in the year — you can use the "annualized income installment method" (Form 2210, Schedule AI) to pay more in high-income quarters and less in low-income quarters. It's more work and most freelancers just use four equal payments.

What if I overpay? Do I get the money back?

Yes. Overpayment of quarterly estimated tax works exactly like overpayment of W-2 withholding — it becomes a refund when you file your annual return, or you can apply it to next year's first quarterly payment.

Do I still owe estimated tax if my spouse has W-2 withholding covering the household?

Often not, as long as their withholding is enough to hit the safe harbor (100 percent or 110 percent of last year's total tax) on your joint return. You can also have your spouse intentionally over-withhold from their paycheck using Form W-4, which is a slick trick for couples where one works W-2 and the other is self-employed.

Is the $1,000 threshold on gross tax or net tax owed?

Net. You only need to pay estimated taxes if you expect to owe $1,000 or more AFTER subtracting your withholding and refundable credits. If your withholding will cover most of your tax liability and the remainder is under $1,000, you can just settle up at filing time.