Self-Employment Tax on $30,000 Net Profit
With $30,000 in self-employment net profit, you owe approximately $4,239 in self-employment tax (15.3%).
How to use this tool
- Enter your net self-employment profit (receipts minus deductible expenses).
- Confirm or update the net-earnings factor, Social Security and Medicare rates, and wage base.
- Read your total SE tax, its Social Security and Medicare parts, and the deductible half.
Freelancers and sole proprietors earning $30,000 can use this calculator to find their exact self-employment tax liability.
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.