Self-Employed Tax Calculator 2026 — Texas
Texas self-employed workers owe only federal self-employment tax with no state income tax layered on top — making Texas one of the most favorable states for sole proprietors and LLC owners. This calculator shows your exact Texas SE tax bill, quarterly payment schedule, and how each deduction reduces your federal-only tax burden.
Also see: Texas Quarterly Tax Calculator →
Business Income
Total revenue before any deductions
Equipment, software, office supplies, subscriptions, etc.
Location & Filing
After-Tax Income
$59,425
Total tax burden: $15,575 — 20.8% effective rate
Tax Breakdown
Your Deductions
Estimated tax savings from deductions: $2,188
2026 Quarterly Estimated Payments
Q1 (Jan–Mar)
$3,894
Due April 15, 2026
Q2 (Apr–May)
$3,894
Due June 16, 2026
Q3 (Jun–Aug)
$3,894
Due September 15, 2026
Q4 (Sep–Dec)
$3,894
Due January 15, 2027
Set aside $1,298/month to be ready for each payment.
$11,925 taxable in this bracket
$36,550 taxable in this bracket
$480 taxable in this bracket
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need to pay both federal and state SE taxes?
Self-employment tax (SE tax) is a federal tax — there is no state-level self-employment tax. However, most states tax your self-employment income as ordinary income under their regular income tax. Nine states have no income tax at all. The total tax burden shown in this calculator includes both federal SE tax and your state's income tax on self-employment income.
Do state deductions work the same as federal?
Many states follow federal treatment for common deductions like business expenses and SE tax deductions, but not all. Some states don't allow the home office deduction, and state retirement contribution limits or health insurance deduction rules may differ from federal. This calculator applies federal deduction rules, which are a good approximation for most states — consult a local tax professional for state-specific deduction limits.