Pennsylvania (PA) Freelance Effective Tax Rate Calculator
Tax year: 2026 · Figures for Tax Year 2026 · Source: IRS
Built and audited by the CalcSumly Engineering Team using official IRS and State Department of Revenue data.
Your Schedule C net profit (revenue minus business expenses).
Retirement contributions (Solo 401(k)/SEP-IRA), self-employed health insurance, and other above-the-line deductions. Leave at $0 to see the baseline effective rate.
Effective tax rate · 2026
26.6%
federal + SE + Pennsylvania state · all-in blended rate
A freelancer earning $80,000 in Pennsylvania pays a combined effective tax rate of 26.6% (22% federal marginal rate).
How your freelance effective tax rate is calculated in Pennsylvania for 2026
As a self-employed person in Pennsylvania, your total tax burden has three components: self-employment tax (SE tax), federal income tax, and Pennsylvania state income tax. Your all-in effective rate is the total of these three divided by your net profit.
Pennsylvania taxes Schedule C net profit directly at a flat 3.07% rate, with no standard deduction and no federal above-the-line adjustments affecting the PA tax base. Schedule C deductions (mileage, home office, equipment) do reduce the PA base.
SE tax and federal income tax
SE tax is 15.3% on 92.35% of net profit up to $184,500 (the 2026 Social Security wage base) and 2.9% above that. One-half of SE tax is deductible above the line, reducing federal AGI. Federal income tax is calculated on federal AGI minus the standard deduction, using the 2026 ordinary income brackets.
Effective rate vs marginal rate
The effective rate is total tax divided by net profit. The marginal rate is the bracket that applies to the last taxable dollar. The combined marginal rate adds the SE tax rate on the next dollar of profit (approximately 14.1% under the Social Security wage base) to the federal income tax marginal rate.
Scope and limitations
This calculator models standard deduction filers only. It does not include QBI deduction, Additional Medicare Tax (0.9% over $200,000/$250,000), Alternative Minimum Tax, or Pennsylvania-specific surtaxes or local taxes. Consult a tax professional for a complete picture of your individual tax situation.
Sources
- IRS Schedule SE — Self-Employment Tax (Form 1040)
- IRS Notice 2025-67 — 2026 Social Security Wage Base and FICA Rates
- IRS Rev. Proc. 2025-32 — 2026 Standard Deduction and Tax Bracket Amounts
- PA Dept. of Revenue — Personal Income Tax Rates (3.07%, stable since 2004)
- PA Dept. of Revenue — Deductions and Credits (no standard deduction; limited deductions only)
- PA Dept. of Revenue — Personal Income Tax Guide
Frequently asked questions
What is the combined effective tax rate for freelancers?+
Your effective tax rate is the total tax you owe (SE tax + federal income tax + state income tax) divided by your total net self-employment income. This is a blended average across all dollars earned, not the rate on the next dollar. The combined marginal rate on the next dollar is higher than the effective rate because earlier dollars are taxed at lower bracket rates.
What is the difference between effective rate and marginal rate?+
Your marginal rate is the tax you pay on the next dollar earned. Your effective rate is the average rate across all dollars. Always plan quarterly estimated tax using the marginal rate on incremental income, but use the effective rate to understand your overall tax burden and what to set aside.
How much should I set aside for taxes as a freelancer?+
Set aside your all-in effective rate as a percentage of each payment you receive. Add a 5% buffer for unexpected income increases. Quarterly estimated tax payments are due April 15, June 16, September 15, and January 15. The IRS safe-harbor rule: pay 100% of the prior year's tax liability (110% if AGI was above $150,000) to avoid underpayment penalties.
What is the effective tax rate for freelancers in Pennsylvania?+
Pennsylvania taxes net profit from self-employment at a flat 3.07% rate, with no standard deduction. PA taxes Schedule C net profit directly. At $80,000 net profit (single), the PA component adds exactly 3.07% of the full net profit to the all-in effective rate. Combined with federal and SE tax, the all-in effective rate for a PA freelancer at $80,000 is typically between 23% and 26%.
Why does Pennsylvania tax net profit differently than other states?+
Pennsylvania has its own income tax system based on specific classes of income. Net profit from self-employment is taxed under the 'net profits from a business' class at 3.07%, directly on the Schedule C net profit figure (not starting from federal AGI). This means federal above-the-line deductions (retirement, health insurance) do not reduce the PA tax base, while Schedule C deductions (mileage, home office, equipment) do reduce the PA tax base.
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