The first year of self-employment produces a predictable problem for a lot of people: they file their return in April, discover they owe a much larger amount than expected, and then get a penalty notice from the IRS on top of the tax bill. The penalty is for underpayment of estimated taxes. It could have been avoided entirely, and it compounds every year the same pattern repeats.
Understanding how estimated taxes work is one of the more immediately valuable pieces of financial literacy for anyone who is self-employed, runs a business, or earns significant income outside of a W-2 job.
Who Must Pay Estimated Taxes
You are generally required to pay estimated taxes if you expect to owe at least $1,000 in federal income taxes after accounting for withholding and refundable credits. This threshold applies to self-employed individuals, independent contractors, freelancers, business owners, investors with capital gains, and anyone else who receives income without automatic withholding.
W-2 employees have taxes withheld from each paycheck throughout the year. Self-employed individuals do not have that withholding, so they must replicate it manually through quarterly payments. The self-employment tax (Social Security and Medicare, totaling 15.3% of net self-employment income) is in addition to regular income tax, and most first-year self-employed individuals underestimate their total tax liability significantly because they fail to account for it.
The Four Payment Deadlines
The IRS divides the year into four estimated tax periods, but the periods are not equal in length, which causes confusion. Here are the deadlines for the 2026 tax year:
- Q1 (January 1 through March 31): Payment due April 15
- Q2 (April 1 through May 31): Payment due June 16
- Q3 (June 1 through August 31): Payment due September 15
- Q4 (September 1 through December 31): Payment due January 15 of the following year
Notice that Q2 covers only two months (April and May), not three. This is one of the most common surprises for people new to estimated taxes. If April 15 falls on a weekend or holiday, the deadline shifts to the next business day. Check the IRS publication for the current year's exact dates, particularly for Q2, where the June date occasionally shifts to accommodate holidays.
Payments are made through IRS Direct Pay, the Electronic Federal Tax Payment System (EFTPS), or by mailing a check with Form 1040-ES.
Two Methods for Calculating Your Payments
The IRS offers two approaches for calculating estimated tax payments, and choosing the right one for your situation can save you money and reduce anxiety.
The safe harbor method is the simpler of the two. Pay 100% of your prior year's total tax liability in equal quarterly installments, and the IRS will not charge you an underpayment penalty regardless of what you owe at year-end. If your prior year adjusted gross income (AGI) was over $150,000, the threshold rises to 110% of prior year tax. The safe harbor method is ideal if your current year income is likely to be similar to or less than last year, or if your income is unpredictable and you want certainty about penalties.
The annualized income installment method allows you to base each quarterly payment on the actual income you earned in that period, annualized to estimate the full year. This is more complex and requires additional calculations using IRS Form 2210 Schedule AI, but it produces smaller payments in quarters where your income is lower, and larger payments in quarters where income is higher. It is the better choice for businesses or freelancers with heavily back-loaded income, seasonal businesses where most revenue comes in Q3 and Q4, or anyone starting a business mid-year who had no income in Q1.
The Underpayment Penalty
If you do not pay enough through estimated taxes (or withholding), the IRS charges an underpayment penalty. The penalty rate is calculated at the federal funds rate plus 3 percentage points, applied quarterly on the amount you were short. As of recent years, this has been in the range of 7% to 8% annualized. It is not catastrophic, but it is entirely avoidable with proper planning, which makes it one of the more frustrating tax bills to receive.
The penalty is calculated separately for each quarter. Even if you catch up and overpay in Q4, you still owe a penalty for the earlier quarters where you were short. This is why paying evenly throughout the year, rather than in a lump sum at year-end, matters for penalty avoidance even if you end up having paid the correct annual total.
How Income Volatility Complicates the Estimate
Income volatility is the most common reason estimated tax planning becomes difficult in practice. A freelancer whose income varies month to month, a consultant who closes large deals irregularly, a seasonal business that earns 70% of annual revenue in two quarters, or an investor who realizes a capital gain partway through the year all face the same challenge: estimating annual income with enough precision to make accurate quarterly payments.
For variable income, the annualized income installment method is generally better than the safe harbor because it matches payments to actual income. The tradeoff is administrative burden: you need to track actual income by quarter and complete the Form 2210 calculations. For many self-employed individuals, the administrative cost is worth it to avoid overpaying in quarters where income is low.
For unpredictable income, the safe harbor method eliminates penalty risk but may result in large refunds at year-end. Refunds are not ideal because you have effectively given the IRS an interest-free loan. But for founders in their first year of revenue who cannot reliably estimate their income, safe harbor is the pragmatic choice.
State Estimated Taxes
Most states with income taxes have their own estimated tax requirements, separate from the federal system. The thresholds, deadlines, and calculation methods vary by state. California requires estimated tax payments in April, June, September, and January -- but California's Q1 deadline is April 15, and the Q2 deadline is June 15, one day earlier than the federal deadline in some years. California also has an unusually large Q1 payment requirement (30% of annual estimated tax) versus Q2 (40%), Q3 (0%), and Q4 (30%).
New York follows the federal quarterly deadlines more closely but has its own underpayment penalty structure. Texas has no state income tax, so no state estimated tax is required there. If you operate in or are domiciled in multiple states, your state estimated tax obligations can multiply quickly. A tax advisor with multi-state experience is worth consulting if your situation spans multiple jurisdictions.
The Practical Approach to Setting Aside Money
The most straightforward way to manage estimated taxes without constant calculation anxiety is to set aside a fixed percentage of every payment you receive into a dedicated savings account. For most self-employed individuals and small business owners, setting aside 25% to 30% of every payment received covers federal income tax and self-employment tax at most income levels. If your state has an income tax, add another 5% to 10% depending on your state's rate.
The key is doing this automatically for every payment, not at the end of the quarter when you are trying to calculate what you owe. Money that has been in a savings account for three months is easier to part with than money that is sitting in your operating account and has mentally already been allocated to something else.
When a Tax Advisor Earns Their Fee on Estimated Tax Planning
For most straightforward self-employment situations, the safe harbor method is easy enough to calculate on your own. A tax advisor earns their fee on estimated taxes in specific circumstances: you have a high-income year significantly above prior years (the safe harbor is based on prior year tax, so if your income doubles, you may be dramatically underpaying even while safe from penalties), you have a significant capital gains event such as selling equity or a business, or your income is complex enough across multiple states and entity types that the calculation requires real expertise to get right.
For more comprehensive tax planning strategies, see the complete guide to tax planning for business owners. To browse tax advisors, visit our tax advisory category.
