AbraCalc

Self-Employment Tax on $200,000 Net Profit

At $200,000 net profit, self-employment tax is capped by the Social Security wage base, so only the 2.9% Medicare rate applies above that threshold.

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How to use this tool

  1. Enter your net self-employment profit (receipts minus deductible expenses).
  2. Confirm or update the net-earnings factor, Social Security and Medicare rates, and wage base.
  3. Read your total SE tax, its Social Security and Medicare parts, and the deductible half.

High earners can see how the Social Security wage base cap affects their total SE tax on $200,000 of self-employment income.

Frequently asked questions

Why is only 92.35% of my profit taxed?
The net-earnings factor (92.35% in the US) removes the employer-equivalent half of the tax before applying the rate, mirroring how employees are not taxed on their employer's share. It equals 100% minus half of the 15.3% combined rate.
Does Social Security tax stop above a certain income?
Yes. The Social Security portion only applies up to the annual wage base ($168,600 in the US for 2024). Medicare has no cap and applies to all taxable net earnings.
Can I deduct any of the self-employment tax?
Generally you can deduct one half of your SE tax when calculating income tax. This calculator shows that deductible half, but it is not income-tax advice.