I made $3230.40 on a 1099-NEC as an independent contractor working as an emergency physician and paid $915 in estimated taxes. I entered this into TurboTax Deluxe and under the "Self-Employment Tax" section, it calculates my self-employment taxes as only $87. It doesn't allow me to adjust it. This seems low because I thought self-employment tax rate is around 15.3% so it should be closer to $490. Thanks in advance for your help!
-Steve
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Do you have a lot of W2 income? There is a max.
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.
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.
Do you have a lot of W2 income? There is a max.
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.
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.
Yep. You pay SE tax on 92.35% of your Net Profit
3230.40 x .9235 = 2983.27
then 2983.27 x .029 (Medicare) = 86.51 SE tax.
Thank you very much for your reply. Yes I have $147,000 in Social Security Wages from my W2 with $9114 withheld for Social Security Tax. That is why it looks like TurboTax is not taking out more for the Social Security Tax portion of my Self-Employment Income from my 1099-NEC income?
Thanks again!
-Steve
Yes. You maxed out on the social security part. The $87 is for Medicare.
Great thanks so much for your help!
The really sad thing here is that Turbo Tax does not show the calculations in a way that would make it clear. The 92.35% factor can't be seen that I have found, nor can the 15.3% tax rate.
@Swegnson Those amounts and calculations are all on Schedule SE which is part of your tax return if you have net income from Self-Employment.
IRS Schedule SE - https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/f1040sse.pdf
@DoninGA Well yes and no. In Form 1040 when I go to line 23 and click on "goto supporting form" it takes me to Schedule 2. There if I again click on "goto supporting form" it takes me to the Form 1040 Worksheet. Once again I click on "goto supporting form" it takes me to the Schedule SE Adjustments Worksheet where the tax figure does not even appear. So now I am at a dead end. None of the "goto supporting form" links actually takes me to Schedule SE.
I grant you that if I do find my way to Schedule SE - where TT should have taken me on the first click - I do see the calculations, but by this time I am so angry at TT misdirection that I quit and take a break. It doesn't need to be this hard.
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