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Estimate freelancer taxes in Indiana: self-employment tax, federal income tax, state income tax, quarterly estimates, and take-home income after taxes.
As of 2026 · Indiana state data: Indiana Department of Revenue
Net Earnings (after $12,000 expenses)
$63,000
SE Tax
$8,901.62
Total Tax
$15,445.22
Take-Home
$47,554.78
For a freelancer in Indiana with $75,000 gross income and $12,000 expenses, estimated total tax is $15,445.22 with an effective rate near 24.52%. Estimated take-home is $47,554.78.
Source: FinCalc server-rendered example using the same formulas as the interactive calculator.
Net earnings
$65,000
Self-employment tax
$9,184.21
Federal income tax
$5,068.95
State income tax
$1,752.53
Total tax owed
$16,005.69
Take-home after tax
$48,994.31
Effective tax rate: 24.62% of net earnings.
SE tax base (92.35%)
$60,027.5
Social Security (12.4%)
$7,443.41
Medicare (2.9%)
$1,740.8
Additional Medicare (0.9%)
$0
SE tax deduction (50%)
$4,592.1
Adjusted income
$60,407.9
Taxable federal income
$44,307.9
| Due date | Estimated payment |
|---|---|
| April 15 | $4,001.42 |
| June 15 | $4,001.42 |
| September 15 | $4,001.42 |
| January 15 | $4,001.42 |
FinCalc AI
Indiana uses a flat-rate state income tax of 2.95% applied uniformly to all wage income above any state-specific deduction or exemption. Unlike progressive states, a single rate makes withholding straightforward: every additional dollar earned is taxed at the same marginal rate. Indiana's state standard deduction is $1,000 for single filers and $2,000 for married filing jointly in 2026. Indiana counties levy local income tax in the 0.5%–3.0% range; Marion (Indianapolis) is about 2.02%.
Self-employed and 1099 filers in Indiana owe the 15.3% federal self-employment tax (12.4% Social Security up to the wage base, 2.9% Medicare with no cap) on net earnings, plus federal income tax and Indiana state tax up to 2.95%. On $100,000 of gross 1099 income with $15,000 of deductible business expenses, the estimated total tax burden in Indiana is about $22,859.96, leaving roughly $62,140.04 take-home (effective rate 26.89%). Indiana freelancers also generally need to make quarterly estimated payments to the IRS and Indiana Department of Revenue to avoid underpayment penalties.
Data current as of 2026; verify with Indiana Department of Revenue (https://www.in.gov/dor/resources/tax-rates-and-reports/rates-fees-and-penalties/) before relying on these figures for filing.
On $50,000 of gross 1099 income (single filer, $7,500 in deductible business expenses, 2026), a Indiana freelancer owes about $6,005.06 in self-employment tax, $2,559.7 in federal income tax, and $1,135.68 in Indiana state tax — total roughly $9,700.43 (effective rate 22.82%). Estimated take-home is $32,799.57.
On $75,000 of gross 1099 income (single filer, $11,250 in deductible business expenses, 2026), a Indiana freelancer owes about $9,007.59 in self-employment tax, $4,929.54 in federal income tax, and $1,718.26 in Indiana state tax — total roughly $15,655.4 (effective rate 24.56%). Estimated take-home is $48,094.6.
On $100,000 of gross 1099 income (single filer, $15,000 in deductible business expenses, 2026), a Indiana freelancer owes about $12,010.12 in self-employment tax, $8,548.99 in federal income tax, and $2,300.85 in Indiana state tax — total roughly $22,859.96 (effective rate 26.89%). Estimated take-home is $62,140.04.
Self-employment tax in Indiana (and everywhere in the US) is 15.3% on the first portion of net earnings: 12.4% Social Security (capped at the annual wage base) plus 2.9% Medicare (no cap, plus 0.9% additional Medicare above $200,000 single). It is calculated on net earnings × 92.35% to mirror the FICA tax employees would pay. Indiana does not levy a separate self-employment tax, but state income tax up to 2.95% still applies to net business income.
Yes. If you expect to owe at least $1,000 in federal tax after withholding, the IRS requires quarterly estimated payments (April, June, September, January). Indiana also requires quarterly state estimated payments to avoid underpayment penalties; due dates generally mirror the federal schedule.
Indiana is workable for freelancers, though state income tax up to 2.95% reduces take-home compared with no-income-tax states. Other factors matter: cost of living, sales tax on services (varies by state), health insurance market, and local business license costs. Indiana's $280,000 median home price is also part of the calculus.
Common federal deductions for Indiana self-employed filers include: home-office (simplified $5/sqft or actual expense method), health-insurance premium deduction (above-the-line), self-employment tax deduction (half of SE tax), retirement contributions (SEP-IRA, Solo 401(k)), business mileage (70¢/mile for 2026), startup costs (up to $5,000 first year), and the Qualified Business Income (QBI) deduction (up to 20% of qualified income, subject to thresholds). Indiana generally conforms to most federal business deductions for state purposes, with state-specific add-backs.
On $100,000 gross 1099 income with $15,000 expenses, estimated total tax is $22,859.96 in Indiana vs $24,324.57 in Illinois. Indiana comes out lower by about $1,464.61 per year for this scenario.
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