Ohio (OH) Quarterly Estimated Tax Calculator
Tax year: 2026 · Last updated 2026-06-22 · Source: IRS
Reviewed by CalcSumly Engineering Team, calculator authors and data architects · 2026-06-22
Your projected Schedule C net profit for the year.
W-2 wages, a spouse's income, interest, etc.
Federal tax withheld from a job or covered by credits.
Combined quarterly payment
$4,494
$16,647 federal + $1,328 OH state = $17,976 annual
Federal payment schedule
- Q1 · April 15, 2026$4,162
- Q2 · June 15, 2026$4,162
- Q3 · September 15, 2026$4,162
- Q4 · January 15, 2027$4,162
Add $332 OH state per quarter (equal installment approximation). Verify state schedule and forms at Ohio Revised Code § 5747.02 — income tax rates as amended by HB 96.
How the Ohio quarterly estimated tax calculator works
This calculator estimates both federal and Ohio state quarterly tax obligations for a self-employed person in 2026.
Federal estimated tax
The federal calculation follows IRS Form 1040-ES: SE tax on 92.35% of net profit at 15.3%, reduced by the deductible half (reducing AGI), then federal income tax on taxable income (AGI minus standard deduction, minus optional QBI deduction). The result minus withholding is divided by 4 for equal quarterly installments due April, June, September, and January.
Ohio estimated tax
Ohio income tax is computed on adjusted gross income minus the Ohio standard deduction ($0 single / $0 MFJ).
The state quarterly payment shown is one-quarter of the annual state income tax — an equal-installment approximation. Verify your state's actual schedule and threshold at Ohio Revised Code § 5747.02 — income tax rates as amended by HB 96.
Scope and limitations
Not included: Excludes Ohio municipal income taxes (administered by RITA / CCA / municipal tax departments — rates vary by municipality up to 2.5%). School district income tax (SDIT) is also excluded. SDI is not applicable in Ohio. State-specific credits, local income taxes, and penalties for underpayment are not modeled. The state estimated tax base may differ from the federal base in ways not captured here.
Use this for planning, not filing. Federal figures from IRS Rev. Proc. 2025-32; state figures from Ohio Revised Code § 5747.02 — income tax rates as amended by HB 96 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)
- Ohio Revised Code § 5747.02 — income tax rates as amended by HB 96
- Ohio HB 96 (136th General Assembly) — income tax restructuring, enacted June 30, 2025
- Ohio Department of Taxation — Individual Income Tax
Frequently asked questions
Does Ohio require quarterly estimated tax payments?+
Yes. Ohio requires estimated income tax payments if you expect to owe at least $500 in OH income tax. Ohio uses the standard April/June/September/January schedule. Form IT 1040-ES is used. Ohio's structure (0% on $26,050, then 2.75%) means many lower-income freelancers owe little or no state estimated tax.
Do Ohio municipal income taxes require separate estimated payments?+
Yes. If you live or work in an Ohio municipality with an income tax (most major cities), you may need to make separate municipal estimated tax payments directly to the municipality or through RITA/CCA. Municipal taxes apply to freelance income and use their own forms and schedules. This calculator shows only Ohio state income tax.
Do freelancers in Ohio owe state estimated taxes in addition to federal?+
Yes. Freelancers in Ohio who expect to owe more than $500 in state income tax (threshold varies; check with the Ohio Department of Revenue) are generally required to make quarterly estimated state tax payments. These are separate from your federal 1040-ES payments.
When are federal estimated tax payments due in 2026?+
Federal estimated tax payments for 2026 are due on: April 15 (Q1), June 16 (Q2, adjusted from June 15), September 15 (Q3), and January 15, 2027 (Q4). Missing a payment or underpaying may result in a penalty under IRS Form 2210, even if you pay in full by April 15.
How is the quarterly estimated tax amount calculated?+
The calculator estimates your annual tax liability: (1) SE tax on 92.35% of net profit × 15.3%; (2) federal income tax on taxable income (AGI minus standard deduction, minus optional QBI deduction); (3) state income tax using your state's rates and deduction rules. It then subtracts withholding and divides by 4 (federal) or applies the state's installment schedule.
What happens if I underpay federal estimated taxes?+
The IRS charges a penalty for underpaying estimated taxes (Form 2210). For 2026, the penalty rate is approximately 7–8%. To avoid the penalty, pay either 90% of this year's tax or 100% of last year's tax (110% if last year's AGI exceeded $150,000). Using the safe harbor based on last year's return is often the simplest approach for freelancers with variable income.
Should I pay estimated taxes monthly rather than quarterly?+
The IRS and most states require quarterly (not monthly) estimated tax payments. However, you can pay more frequently or in advance of due dates — overpaying is not penalized. Many freelancers find it easier to set aside a fixed percentage of each invoice payment and make monthly deposits, then ensure each quarterly deadline's cumulative amount meets the required installment.
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