When figuring self-employment tax you owe, you get to reduce self-employment income by half of the self-employment tax before applying the tax rate. Say, for example, that your net self-employment income is $50,000. That's the amount you report as taxable for income tax purposes on Form 1040.
But when figuring your self-employment tax on Schedule SE, Computation of Social Security Self-Employment Tax, the taxable amount is $46,175. Not paying the 15.3 percent tax on the $3,825 difference in this example saves you $585.
You can claim 50% of what you pay in self-employment tax as an income tax deduction. For example, a $1,000 self-employment tax payment reduces taxable income by $500. In the 25 percent tax bracket, that saves you $125 in income taxes. This deduction is an adjustment to income claimed on Form 1040, and is available whether or not you itemize deductions.
Then you would report one-half of your self-employment tax, $2,473, ($4,945 X .50) on Form 1040 as an adjustment to income, which reduces your Adjusted Gross Income and the amount of income tax you owe.
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There’s nothing you have to do. All that is automatically calculated in Turbo Tax.
You pay Self Employment tax (Scheduled SE) on a Net Profit of $400 or more on Schedule C in addition to regular income tax on it. You pay 15.3% SE tax on 92.35% of your Net Profit (If it is greater than $400). The 15.3% self employed SE Tax is to pay both the employer part and employee part of Social Security and Medicare. So you get social security credit for it when you retire.
The SE tax will be automatically included in your tax due or reduce your refund. It is on the 1040 Schedule 2 line 4 which goes to 1040 line 23. The SE tax is in addition to your regular income tax on the net profit. You do get to take off the 50% ER portion of the SE tax as an adjustment on 1040 Schedule 1 line 15 which flows to 1040 line 10.
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 $9,932.40 for social security. The max income for social security for 2023 is $160,200 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.
There’s nothing you have to do. All that is automatically calculated in Turbo Tax.
You pay Self Employment tax (Scheduled SE) on a Net Profit of $400 or more on Schedule C in addition to regular income tax on it. You pay 15.3% SE tax on 92.35% of your Net Profit (If it is greater than $400). The 15.3% self employed SE Tax is to pay both the employer part and employee part of Social Security and Medicare. So you get social security credit for it when you retire.
The SE tax will be automatically included in your tax due or reduce your refund. It is on the 1040 Schedule 2 line 4 which goes to 1040 line 23. The SE tax is in addition to your regular income tax on the net profit. You do get to take off the 50% ER portion of the SE tax as an adjustment on 1040 Schedule 1 line 15 which flows to 1040 line 10.
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 $9,932.40 for social security. The max income for social security for 2023 is $160,200 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.
TurboTax makes the self employment tax adjustment automatically. You don’t have to change anything. Look at line 15 of Schedule 1.
Oh For 2024 the max for Social Security is $10,453.20 on $168,600 of wages (168,600 x 6.2%).
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