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Level 3
posted Jun 6, 2019 2:56:45 AM

Where does uber income go in self-employment tax?

I've already entered my 1099-K UBER income in the 1099-MISC area of the "Business, Income, Expenses" subsection, and wrote in the deductions for all their fees (not sure I did it correctly) in the other/general category in this same subsection.  The fourth subsection down is "Business Taxes" with a category for "Self-employment tax." When you click that you can choose the third option, "Self-employment tax." I'm assuming I must do this section since UBER is considered a small business. Is that right?

However a note appears saying, "Currently you aren't required to pay self-employment tax." Is that because I made less than $600? I only made about $488.

Thanks for your help!

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1 Best answer
Alumni
Jun 6, 2019 2:56:46 AM

Self-employment tax liability is based on your having $400 or more "net self-employment income", which is 92.35% (to account for the deduction for one-half of SE tax) of your *net* Schedule C (or C-EZ) income. If your business deductions brought your net Schedule C income below $433.13 (92.35% of which is $400), you do not owe SE tax.

Uber itself isn't a small business; YOU are the small business. Uber (as well as Lyft and nearly all other ride-sharing companies) treats most of its drivers as independent contractors, meaning you get 1099-MISC forms and file as a self-employed person on Schedule C; if you have enough income, you also pay SE tax on Schedule SE.

1 Replies
Alumni
Jun 6, 2019 2:56:46 AM

Self-employment tax liability is based on your having $400 or more "net self-employment income", which is 92.35% (to account for the deduction for one-half of SE tax) of your *net* Schedule C (or C-EZ) income. If your business deductions brought your net Schedule C income below $433.13 (92.35% of which is $400), you do not owe SE tax.

Uber itself isn't a small business; YOU are the small business. Uber (as well as Lyft and nearly all other ride-sharing companies) treats most of its drivers as independent contractors, meaning you get 1099-MISC forms and file as a self-employed person on Schedule C; if you have enough income, you also pay SE tax on Schedule SE.