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Self Employment Tax

I am a health care worker. From my W2, I have income exceeding $147,000. My taxable self employment income is $44,343. So, I have paid maximum amount of Social Security and Medicare against my employment income. However, on SE, on line 11, software computes 2,9% of $44,343. Just want to re confirm whether this is right. Pl help. Appreciate to have replies. Thanks in advance.

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Accepted Solutions
VolvoGirl
Level 15
Intuit Approved! This answer has been verified for accuracy by an Intuit expert employee

Self Employment Tax

That's right.   The SE tax includes what you already paid in from your W2s so your schedule SE tax will only be the difference up to the max amount of $9,114.00 for social security. The max income for social security for 2022 is $147,000 between W2 wages and the schedule C Net Profit.  If you also have W2 income, you have to break out the Social Security and Medicare taxes. Only the Social Security part maxes out.

 

For 2022 the max for Social Security is $9,114.00 on $147,000 of wages (147,000 x 6.2%).

 

Medicare is 2.9% (both er & ee parts) of all wages & 92.35% Schedule C Net Profit - no max.

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1 Reply
VolvoGirl
Level 15
Intuit Approved! This answer has been verified for accuracy by an Intuit expert employee

Self Employment Tax

That's right.   The SE tax includes what you already paid in from your W2s so your schedule SE tax will only be the difference up to the max amount of $9,114.00 for social security. The max income for social security for 2022 is $147,000 between W2 wages and the schedule C Net Profit.  If you also have W2 income, you have to break out the Social Security and Medicare taxes. Only the Social Security part maxes out.

 

For 2022 the max for Social Security is $9,114.00 on $147,000 of wages (147,000 x 6.2%).

 

Medicare is 2.9% (both er & ee parts) of all wages & 92.35% Schedule C Net Profit - no max.

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