Key Takeaways

  • SE tax = Social Security (12.4%) + Medicare (2.9%) = 15.3%.
  • Calculated on 92.35% of net profit.
  • Social Security wage base for Tax Year 2024: $168,600.
  • SE tax required if net earnings ≥$400.
  • Deduct 50% of SE tax as adjustment to income.
  • Additional 0.9% Medicare tax above $200k/$250k.
Last updated: January 2026

Self-Employment Tax (Schedule SE)

Why This Matters for the Exam

SE tax is heavily tested. The exam tests the rate, the 92.35% multiplier, the wage base, and the 50% deduction.

Expect at least 3-4 questions on SE tax.

What Is Self-Employment Tax?

When self-employed, you pay both the employer and employee shares of FICA:

ComponentRateCombined
Social Security (OASDI)12.4%
Medicare (HI)2.9%
Total SE Tax15.3%

The Calculation Process

StepDescription
1Start with Schedule C net profit
2Multiply by 92.35%
3Apply rates (12.4% + 2.9%)
4Apply Social Security cap
5Deduct 50% on Schedule 1

Why 92.35%?

ReasonCalculation
EmployeesDon't pay tax on employer's 7.65%
Self-employedGet same benefit
100% - 7.65%= 92.35%

Social Security Wage Base (Tax Year 2024)

ElementAmount
Wage base$168,600
12.4% applies toFirst $168,600
Above $168,600Only 2.9% Medicare

The $400 Rule

Net EarningsSE Tax Required?
< $400No
≥ $400Yes

Additional Medicare Tax

High earners pay an additional 0.9% Medicare tax:

Filing StatusThreshold
Single/HOH$200,000
MFJ$250,000
MFS$125,000

The 50% Deduction

LocationTreatment
Schedule 1Adjustment to income
EffectReduces AGI
Not Schedule CNot a business expense

SE Tax Calculation Example (Tax Year 2024)

ItemCalculationAmount
Schedule C net profit$100,000
× 92.35%$100,000 × 0.9235$92,350
Social Security$92,350 × 12.4%$11,451
Medicare$92,350 × 2.9%$2,678
Total SE Tax$14,129
50% deduction$14,129 × 50%$7,065

High Earner Example (Tax Year 2024)

ItemCalculationAmount
Schedule C net profit$200,000
× 92.35%$184,700
Social Security (capped)$168,600 × 12.4%$20,906
Medicare (full)$184,700 × 2.9%$5,356
Total SE Tax$26,262

Real-World Scenario

Scenario: Sole proprietor has $100,000 net profit from Schedule C.

  • Step 1: $100,000 × 92.35% = $92,350 net SE earnings.
  • Step 2: Under wage base, so full 15.3% applies.
  • Step 3: $92,350 × 15.3% = $14,130 SE tax.
  • Step 4: $14,130 × 50% = $7,065 deduction on Schedule 1.

On the Exam

Expect 3-4 questions on SE tax, typically:

  1. First Step Questions: "What is the first step in calculating SE tax?"
  2. Rate Questions: "What is the total SE tax rate?"
  3. Wage Base Questions: "What happens above the wage base?"
  4. Deduction Questions: "Where is the 50% deduction reported?"

The key is to remember: 15.3% total. Calculate on 92.35% of net profit. SS capped at $168,600 (Tax Year 2024). Deduct 50% on Schedule 1.

Test Your Knowledge

Sole proprietor has $100,000 net profit. First step in SE tax calculation?

A
B
C
D
Test Your Knowledge

Self-employed with $200,000 net SE earnings. Social Security tax treatment?

A
B
C
D
Test Your Knowledge

Where is the 50% SE tax deduction reported?

A
B
C
D