Self-Employed vs Employee Net Pay: The True Cost of Going Independent
Millions of Americans make the leap from employee to independent contractor or freelancer each year, often enticed by higher hourly rates. A $120,000 freelance income sounds better than an $85,000 salary — but after accounting for self-employment tax, health insurance, retirement contributions, and business expenses, the picture is more complicated than it appears at first glance.
The Core Difference: Who Pays FICA
As a W-2 employee, you pay 7.65% in FICA taxes (Social Security + Medicare) and your employer pays a matching 7.65% — effectively shielding you from the full 15.3% burden. As a self-employed individual, you pay both halves: the full 15.3% on net self-employment income up to the Social Security wage base, then 2.9% (just Medicare) above that threshold.
On $100,000 of freelance net income, this is an additional $7,650 in taxes compared to W-2 employment. Calculate your own scenario with our take-home pay calculator.
Side-by-Side: $100,000 Employee vs $100,000 Freelancer
| Item | W-2 Employee ($100K) | Self-Employed ($100K gross) |
|---|---|---|
| Gross Income | $100,000 | $100,000 |
| Business Expenses (est. 10%) | N/A (employer covers) | -$10,000 |
| Net Self-Employment Income | N/A | $90,000 |
| SE Tax Deduction (half) | N/A | -$6,358 |
| Taxable Income | $85,400 | $69,042 |
| Federal Income Tax | -$14,260 | -$11,120 |
| Self-Employment Tax | N/A | -$12,716 |
| Employee FICA (7.65%) | -$7,650 | N/A |
| Health Insurance (self-pay) | $0 (employer-provided) | -$7,200 |
| Net Take-Home | ~$78,090 | ~$58,764 |
To break even with a $100,000 W-2 salary, a freelancer needs to earn approximately $135,000–$140,000 in gross revenue — not $100,000.
Hidden Costs of Self-Employment
Health Insurance
Employer-sponsored health insurance is worth $7,000–$20,000 per year in premiums your employer covers. As a freelancer, you pay the full premium. The self-employed health insurance deduction allows you to deduct 100% of premiums from income tax (not self-employment tax), which softens but does not eliminate the cost.
Retirement Savings
W-2 employees often receive employer 401(k) matching (typically 3–6% of salary). Self-employed individuals get no match, but do have access to more powerful retirement vehicles: the Solo 401(k) allows contributions up to $69,000 in 2025, and the SEP-IRA allows 25% of net self-employment income up to $69,000.
Quarterly Estimated Taxes
W-2 employees have taxes withheld automatically. The self-employed must make quarterly estimated payments by April 15, June 15, September 15, and January 15. Missing these deadlines triggers underpayment penalties, currently calculated at the federal funds rate plus 3 percentage points.
Business Expenses
The flip side: self-employed individuals can deduct legitimate business expenses that reduce both income tax and self-employment tax. Common deductions include home office (up to $1,500 simplified method), equipment, software subscriptions, professional development, and the business-use portion of a vehicle.
The Break-Even Freelance Rate
To calculate the freelance rate you'd need to match your current W-2 take-home pay:
- Calculate your current annual net take-home pay (use our calculator)
- Add the value of employer benefits: health insurance premiums, 401(k) match, dental/vision, etc.
- Add an estimate for business expenses you'd incur as a freelancer (typically 10–20% of revenue)
- Gross up for the additional self-employment tax burden (~7.65% additional)
- Gross up for income tax on the higher gross income
The S-Corp Strategy for High-Earning Freelancers
Once self-employment income exceeds roughly $60,000–$80,000, electing S-Corporation status can significantly reduce self-employment tax. An S-Corp owner pays themselves a "reasonable salary" (on which FICA applies) and takes remaining profits as distributions (exempt from self-employment tax). At $150,000 of net income, this strategy can save $8,000–$15,000 annually — though it adds accounting complexity and costs.
The Bottom Line
Self-employment can be financially rewarding, but the true cost comparison is rarely straightforward. Run both scenarios through our take-home pay tool before making the leap, and factor in benefits, business expenses, and the higher tax burden of working independently. For many people, the break-even freelance rate is 30–50% higher than their current salary.