New Jersey (NJ) 1099 vs W2 Calculator
Tax year: 2026 · Last updated 2026-06-22 · Source: IRS
Reviewed by CalcSumly Engineering Team, calculator authors and data architects · 2026-06-22
Enter the same dollar amount for both sides — W2 salary or 1099 net profit.
W2 Employee
$74,935
take-home · 25.1% effective rate
1099 Contractor
$73,840
take-home · 26.2% effective rate
Take-home difference (W2 earns more)
$1,095
To match the W2 take-home in New Jersey, the 1099 rate must be $101,721 — 1.7% more
At the same gross pay in New Jersey, the 1099 take-home is $73,840 vs $74,935 as a W-2 — a gap of $1,095.
How the New Jersey 1099 vs W2 calculator works
This calculator compares the after-tax take-home pay for the same gross dollar amount under two scenarios in New Jersey for 2026:
- W-2 employee: pays 6.2% Social Security + 1.45% Medicare (employee FICA) plus federal income tax. State income tax applies to wages minus the New Jersey standard deduction.
- 1099 contractor: pays 15.3% SE tax on 92.35% of net profit. The deductible half of SE tax (SS + Medicare halved) reduces federal AGI, which in turn reduces New Jersey taxable income.
The break-even premium
The calculator uses a binary search to find the 1099 gross income that produces the same take-home as the W2 amount you entered — after all federal and New Jersey state taxes. The result is the minimum 1099 gross rate that achieves break-even with the W2 take-home.
Scope and limitations
What is excluded: New Jersey does not conform to the federal HSA exclusion: if you contribute to an HSA, this calculator understates your NJ income tax by approximately your HSA contribution amount. NJ SDI (State Disability Insurance) and FLI (Family Leave Insurance) payroll deductions are also excluded from this estimate. New Jersey has no general local income tax at the city/county level. This calculator does not model employer 401(k) matching, health insurance, or other W2 benefits — factors that make the equivalent W2 offer worth more than its gross salary alone.
Use this for planning, not filing. Rates verified against IRS Rev. Proc. 2025-32 and NJ Division of Taxation — NJ Income Tax Rates (nj.gov) for 2026.
Sources
- IRS — Self-Employment Tax (Schedule SE)
- SSA — 2026 Social Security wage base ($184,500)
- IRS — Topic 751 Additional Medicare Tax
- IRS — Rev. Proc. 2025-32 (2026 inflation adjustments)
- IRS — Form 1040-ES (Estimated Tax for Individuals)
- IRS Notice 2025-67 — 2026 Retirement Plan Limits (§415, §402(g), §401(a)(17))
- IRS — SEP Contribution Limits 2026 ($72,000)
- IRS Notice 2026-10 — 2026 Standard Mileage Rates (72.5 cents/mile)
- IRS Rev. Proc. 2013-13 — Home Office Simplified Method ($5/sqft, 300 sqft max)
- IRS Publication 946 (2026) — Section 179 Deduction ($2,560,000 limit; $32,000 SUV cap)
- NJ Division of Taxation — NJ Income Tax Rates (nj.gov)
- NJ Division of Taxation — NJ-W-4 Employee Withholding Certificate
- Tax Foundation — New Jersey Income Tax Rates 2026
Frequently asked questions
How does New Jersey's lack of standard deduction affect the 1099 vs W2 comparison?+
New Jersey is one of the few states with no standard deduction. This means NJ taxes nearly your full gross income on both the W2 and 1099 sides (the 1099 side only reduces NJ taxable income by the deductible half of SE tax). At $100,000 gross, a NJ freelancer pays NJ income tax on roughly $95,000 of income (after SE deductible half), versus a W2 employee who also pays on the full $100,000. The NJ gap between 1099 and W2 is small, but the overall NJ tax burden is high (rates up to 10.75%).
What is New Jersey's top income tax rate for 1099 contractors?+
New Jersey's top marginal income tax rate is 10.75% for income above $1,000,000. For most freelancers, the effective NJ rate is 5.525% (the bracket from $75,001 to $500,000 for single filers). NJ taxes apply equally to both 1099 and W2 income through the same graduated brackets. At $100k net profit, the NJ state tax adds roughly $4,500–$5,500 on top of federal taxes.
Why do I take home less as a 1099 contractor than a W2 employee at the same pay?+
As a W2 employee your employer pays half of Social Security and Medicare taxes on your behalf — about 7.65% of your wages. As a 1099 contractor you pay both halves yourself (15.3% on 92.35% of net profit). That payroll tax gap is the primary reason the same gross pay produces a smaller check as a contractor. Adding state income tax to both sides shows the true combined difference in your state.
Does New Jersey tax 1099 and W2 income the same way?+
New Jersey taxes ordinary income including both W2 wages and 1099 net profit using the same brackets. However, the 1099 side benefits from the deductible half of SE tax, which reduces federal AGI and therefore New Jersey taxable income in most cases. This slightly narrows — but does not close — the overall 1099 vs W2 gap.
How much more do I need to charge as a 1099 to match a W2 salary in this state?+
In New Jersey, the break-even premium reflects both the federal payroll tax gap and the state income tax. Because state income tax applies to both sides, the break-even premium is driven primarily by the SE tax vs FICA difference, but the state tax affects both denominators. The calculator computes the precise break-even for the income level you enter.
Does the QBI deduction help 1099 contractors in this state?+
The 20% Qualified Business Income (QBI) deduction is a federal deduction only — it reduces federal income tax on the 1099 side but does not affect New Jersey state income tax. In states with their own income tax, this means the QBI benefit narrows the federal income tax gap but leaves the state income tax gap unchanged. Most freelancers under the income threshold ($201,775 single / $403,550 MFJ for 2026) qualify for QBI.
What taxes does a W2 employer pay that aren't shown here?+
This calculator shows the employee's share of taxes. Your W2 employer also pays an equal 7.65% in employer FICA (matching your Social Security and Medicare), plus state unemployment insurance (FUTA/SUTA), and potentially other payroll taxes. These employer costs are a real benefit to you as an employee — they're why companies often offer 1099 rates 20–30% higher than equivalent W2 salaries.
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