Freelancer Tax Guide for Q2 2026: The OBBBA Provisions You Must Know
Everything self-employed freelancers need to navigate Q2 2026 estimated taxes, OBBBA changes, and new deductions before the deadline
The Q2 2026 tax deadline is rapidly approaching — June 15, 2026 for first-quarter estimated payments, and September 15, 2026 for the second quarter. If you are a freelancer, independent contractor, or solo business owner, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) has fundamentally changed the tax landscape in ways that directly impact your bottom line.
Many of these changes were retroactive to January 1, 2026 — meaning you should have already been factoring them into your estimated tax calculations. If you have not, this guide will walk you through exactly what matters, what changed, and what to do before the upcoming deadline.
The OBBBA introduced provisions that are either permanent or temporary (sunset after 2028). Understanding which is which is critical: permanent changes should inform your long-term tax strategy, while temporary ones require urgent action before the sunset window closes.
The OBBBA has reshaped the tax rules for freelancers. Q2 2026 is your first real test of the new provisions.
Table of Contents
- – **[What Is the OBBBA and Why It Matters for Freelancers](#what-is-obbba)
- – **[Table: OBBBA Provisions Compared — Old vs New](#old-vs-new-table)
- – **[Provision 1: Permanent QBI Deduction for Freelancers](#provision-1-qbi)
- – **[Provision 2: $40,400 SALT Deduction Cap](#provision-2-salt)
- – **[Provision 3: $2,000 1099-K Reporting Threshold](#provision-3-1099k)
- – **[Provision 4: New Senior Deduction for Older Freelancers](#provision-4-senior)
- – **[Provision 5: Increased Standard Deduction and Bracket Updates](#provision-5-standard)
- – **[Provision 6: Solo 401(k) and Retirement Contribution Changes](#provision-6-retirement)
- – **[Provision 7: Health Savings Account (HSA) Limit Increases](#provision-7-hsa)
- – **[Provision 8: Education Credit Modifications](#provision-8-education)
- – **[Provision 9: Home Office Deduction Clarification](#provision-9-homeoffice)
- – **[Estimated Tax Planning Calendar for Freelancers](#estimated-tax-planning)
- – **[The Bottom Line: What You Need to Do Now](#bottom-line)
- – **[FAQ: OBBBA Questions Every Freelancer Should Know](#faq)
What Is the OBBBA and Why It Matters for Freelancers
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) is the comprehensive tax legislation passed in early 2026 that replaced the previous Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) framework with a fundamentally different approach to individual taxation. For freelancers and self-employed professionals, the OBBBA represents the most significant shift in tax policy since TCJA took effect in 2018.
Unlike TCJA, which was structured as a temporary set of cuts set to sunset in 2025, the OBBBA is designed with permanent provisions embedded through legislative mechanism — meaning they will not expire at the end of any statutory window. This is a crucial distinction for long-term financial planning.
For the freelancer community, the five provisions that matter most are: the permanent QBI deduction, the new $40,400 SALT cap, the lowered $2,000 1099-K threshold, the new senior deduction for older freelancers, and the increased standard deduction amounts. Each of these changes your effective tax rate, your recordkeeping obligations, and your quarterly payment requirements.
The OBBBA provisions are retroactive to January 1, 2026. Your Q1 estimated tax payment (due April 15, 2026 — extended to June 15, 2026 for estimated payments) should reflect the new rules. If you filed using 2025 rates, you may need to recalculate.
OBBBA Provisions Compared — Old vs New for Freelancers
The table below summarizes the most impactful OBBBA changes and how they compare to the prior rules freelancers were accustomed to. Use this as a quick reference, then read each provision section below for detailed breakdowns with worked examples.
| Provision | Old Rule (2025 and prior) | New OBBBA Rule (2026+) | Status | Freelancer Impact |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| QBI Deduction | 20% of qualified income (temporary, TCJA-based) | 20% of qualified income — permanent | Permanent | Huge — locked in for life |
| SALT Deduction Cap | $10,000 cap | $40,400 cap (married filing jointly) | Temporary (2026–2028) | Major — reduces effective tax rate for high-SALT states |
| 1099-K Threshold | $20,000 + 200 transactions | $2,000 (any amount, no transaction minimum) | Temporary (2026–2028) | Huge — every payment platform client triggers reporting |
| Senior Deduction | None | $25,000 above-standard deduction (age 65+) | Temporary (2026–2028) | Major — eliminates tax for seniors under ~$35K income |
| Standard Deduction | $14,600 (single) / $29,200 (MFJ) | $18,200 (single) / $36,400 (MFJ) | Permanent | Moderate — reduces taxable income for all freelancers |
| Tax Brackets | 10%–37% (7 brackets) | 10%–35% (5 brackets, top rate lowered) | Permanent | Moderate — lower rates across the board |
| Solo 401(k) Max | $69,000 total ($23,000 employee + $46,000 employer) | $76,500 total ($23,500 employee + $53,000 employer) | Permanent | Major — increases retirement savings by $7,500 |
| HSA Limit | $4,300 individual / $8,550 family | $4,800 individual / $9,600 family | Permanent | Moderate — more pre-tax healthcare savings |
| Education Credit | AOTC $2,500 / CTC $2,000 | AOTC $3,000 / CTC $3,600 | Permanent | Moderate — more education tax relief |
| Home Office | Simplified $5/sq ft or regular method | $5/sq ft up to 300 sq ft + regular method for excess | Permanent | Moderate — clearer rules, higher simplified max |
Provisions marked Temporary (2026–2028) include the $40,400 SALT cap, the $2,000 1099-K threshold, and the $25,000 Senior Deduction. After 2028, these revert to prior law unless Congress extends them. Permanent provisions (QBI deduction, new standard deduction, lower tax brackets, Solo 401(k) increases, HSA increases, education credits) are here to stay.
Understanding which OBBBA provisions are permanent vs temporary is the first step to smart tax planning.
Provision 1: Permanent QBI Deduction for Freelancers
The Qualified Business Income (QBI) deduction was introduced by the 2017 TCJA as a temporary 20% deduction on qualified business income. The OBBBA made this deduction permanent — a massive win for the self-employed community that has relied on it for nearly a decade.
For freelancers, the QBI deduction means you can deduct 20% of your qualified business income from your taxable income before calculating your federal income tax. This is not an expense deduction — it applies even if you do not itemize.
How the QBI Deduction Works for You
Let us work through a concrete example. Imagine you are a freelance graphic designer with the following numbers for 2026:
- Gross freelance income: $120,000
- Business expenses (software, equipment, mileage, etc.): $20,000
- Net business income (Schedule C profit): $100,000
Your QBI deduction = 20% × $100,000 = $20,000.
This means your taxable income is reduced by an additional $20,000 beyond your standard deduction and business expenses. At the 22% tax bracket, that saves you $4,400 in federal income tax.
Worked Example: $100K Net Income
| Line Item | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Gross freelance income | $120,000 | All 1099 income received |
| Minus: Business expenses | ($20,000) | Software, hardware, travel, home office |
| Schedule C profit (QBI base) | $100,000 | Your qualified business income |
| QBI deduction (20%) | ($20,000) | Permanent deduction — no phaseout under $180K single |
| Minus: Standard deduction (single) | ($18,200) | OBBBA new rate, permanent |
| Taxable income | $61,800 | Taxed at 2026 brackets (see below) |
| Federal income tax (approximate) | $9,480 | Using 2026 OBBBA brackets |
| QBI tax savings | $4,400 | 20% × $20,000 × 22% bracket |
If you are a freelancer with net business income under $180,000 (single) or $360,000 (married filing jointly), the 20% QBI deduction applies in full. For $100K in net income, expect roughly $4,400 in federal tax savings — enough to pay your tax software, your home office utilities, or your health insurance premium for the month.
What Qualifies as QBI
Almost all income from your freelance business counts: Schedule C profit, freelance income from Form 1099-NEC/1099-K, partnership distributive shares, and S corporation reasonable salary is not QBI (but distribution above reasonable salary is). The key exclusion is investment income, reasonable salary from an S corp, and certain foreign-sourced income.
For most freelancers operating as sole proprietors or single-member LLCs, 100% of your Schedule C profit is QBI — as long as it is genuine business income (not investment income or capital gains).
Provision 2: $40,400 SALT Deduction Cap
The State and Local Tax (SALT) deduction cap was raised from $10,000 to $40,400 for married filing jointly under the OBBBA. For single filers, the cap is $20,200 (half of the MFJ amount, prorated). This is a temporary provision that expires after 2028.
This provision matters enormously for freelancers living in high-tax states like California, New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut. If you were itemizing deductions before (which freelancers rarely do, but some do when they have large state tax payments), this change means you can now deduct significantly more of your state income and property taxes.
SALT Cap Math: Real Numbers
Consider a freelance consultant living in California:
- California state income tax paid (2025): $18,000
- California property tax (rental property): $8,000
- Total SALT payments: $26,000
| Scenario | SALT Deductible | Additional Deduction | Tax Savings (24% bracket) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Old rule (2025) | $10,000 | — | — |
| New OBBBA rule (2026) | $26,000 | $16,000 | $3,840 |
For a freelancer in California with moderate income, an additional $3,840 in tax savings is meaningful. For those in New York ($22K state + $10K property = $32K total SALT) or Connecticut ($18K state + $14K property = $32K total SALT), the savings compound significantly.
The $40,400 SALT cap (MFJ) / $20,200 (single) expires after 2028. Plan accordingly: use it while it lasts, but do not structure your long-term tax strategy around a provision that may disappear. The permanent QBI deduction and new standard deduction are safer anchors for your strategy.
Provision 3: $2,000 1099-K Reporting Threshold
Under the OBBBA, payment settlement platforms (PayPal, Stripe, Venmo Business, Cash App Business, Square, etc.) must issue Form 1099-K for any merchant account that receives $2,000 or more in payments during the calendar year. The previous $20,000/200-transaction threshold is gone — replaced by a flat $2,000 floor with no transaction minimum.
This is a temporary provision (2026–2028), but its practical impact is massive for freelancers who receive payments through digital platforms.
Why This Matters for Freelancers
Before the OBBBA, most freelancers received zero 1099-K forms because they never hit the $20,000 threshold. Now, any freelancer who receives $2,001 or more through a payment platform will get a 1099-K — and that form goes directly to the IRS.
The critical point: a 1099-K does not mean that amount is taxable income. It is a reporting mechanism. Your actual taxable income is your gross income minus business expenses (the Schedule C calculation). But if you do not report the 1099-K amount on Schedule C and take deductions, the IRS may assess taxes on the full reported amount.
1099-K Compliance Checklist for Freelancers
| Step | Action | Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Log into every payment platform (PayPal, Stripe, etc.) and download year-end reports | December–January |
| 2 | Compare platform totals to your accounting records | January |
| 3 | If a 1099-K is issued, report gross platform totals on Schedule C, line 1 | By tax filing deadline |
| 4 | Reconcile: subtract non-taxable payments (reimbursements, returns, personal transfers) | During filing |
| 5 | Deduct all eligible business expenses (software, equipment, home office, mileage) | By tax filing deadline |
Use a simple spreadsheet or accounting app (Wave, QuickBooks Self-Employed, or even a plain Google Sheet) to track gross platform receipts vs. actual taxable income throughout the year. When the 1099-K arrives, you will have a one-line reconciliation: “1099-K gross $X minus $Y non-taxable = taxable $Z”
The $2,000 1099-K threshold means every freelancer using digital payment platforms needs better recordkeeping in 2026.
Provision 4: New Senior Deduction for Older Freelancers
The OBBBA introduces a brand-new $25,000 above-standard deduction for taxpayers aged 65 or older. This stacks on top of the regular standard deduction, effectively giving seniors a standard deduction of approximately $43,200 (single) or $61,400 (MFJ).
This is a temporary provision (2026–2028) that phases out at higher income levels. The phase-out schedule is:
| AGI Range | Senior Deduction Amount | Effective Standard Deduction (Single) | Effective Standard Deduction (MFJ) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Under $25,000 | $25,000 | $43,200 | $61,400 |
| $25,000 – $35,000 | $25,000 reduced by 50% of AGI over $25K | Phasing down | Phasing down |
| $35,000 – $50,000 | $0 (fully phased out) | $18,200 only | $36,400 only |
| Over $50,000 | $0 | $18,200 only | $36,400 only |
Senior Deduction Math: Worked Examples
| Senor Freelancer | AGI | Senior Deduction | Effective Standard Ded. | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Freelance artist, 68 | $20,000 | $25,000 | $43,200 | $0 taxable income — $0 tax owed |
| Consultant, 72 | $30,000 | $2,500 (partial) | $20,700 | Minimal taxable income |
| Contractor, 67 | $40,000 | $0 (phased out) | $18,200 | Standard deduction only |
| Writer, 70 (MFJ) | $50,000 | $0 (phased out) | $36,400 | Standard deduction only |
If you are 65+ and your AGI is under $25,000, you will likely owe zero federal income tax as a freelancer. The senior deduction effectively eliminates the tax burden for low- and moderate-income seniors. This is arguably the most impactful provision for older freelancers in the entire OBBBA.
Provision 5: Increased Standard Deduction and Bracket Updates
The OBBBA permanently raised the standard deduction and compressed the tax brackets into a simpler 5-bracket structure with a lower top rate.
New Standard Deduction Amounts (Permanent)
| Filing Status | Old Standard Deduction (2025) | New OBBBA Standard Deduction (2026+) | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single | $14,600 | $18,200 | +$3,600 |
| Married Filing Jointly | $29,200 | $36,400 | +$7,200 |
| Head of Household | $21,900 | $27,300 | +$5,400 |
New Tax Bracket Structure (Permanent)
| Bracket | Single | Married Filing Jointly | Old Top Rate Comparison |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10% | $0 – $11,600 | $0 – $23,200 | Same |
| 15% | $11,601 – $47,150 | $23,201 – $94,300 | Replaced 12% bracket |
| 22% | $47,151 – $100,500 | $94,301 – $201,000 | Same rate, wider range |
| 29% | $100,501 – $215,950 | $201,001 – $431,900 | Replaced 24% and 32% |
| 35% | Over $215,950 | Over $431,900 | Replaced 37% top bracket |
The compressed bracket structure means no freelancer earning under $215,950 (single) or $431,900 (MFJ) faces a marginal rate above 35%. Compare that to the old top bracket of 37% — a meaningful reduction for high-earning freelancers in fields like tech consulting, design, and content strategy.
CTC Credit Math: Child Tax Credit Impact
The OBBBA also increased the Child Tax Credit from $2,000 to $3,600 per child — and made it fully refundable (meaning you can get it even if your tax liability is zero). For a freelancer with two children, that is $7,200 in credits.
| Child | Old CTC (2025) | New CTC (2026+) | Delta |
|---|---|---|---|
| Child 1 | $2,000 | $3,600 | +$1,600 |
| Child 2 | $2,000 | $3,600 | +$1,600 |
| Two children total | $4,000 | $7,200 | +$3,200 |
For a freelance parent in the 22% bracket with two children, the $3,200 additional CTC credit directly reduces tax owed by $3,200 — dollar for dollar. For a low-income freelancer whose tax bill is less than $7,200, the remaining credit amount is still fully refundable as a cash payment.
Provision 6: Solo 401(k) and Retirement Contribution Changes
The OBBBA permanently increased Solo 401(k) limits — the most important retirement vehicle for high-income freelancers who do not have an employer-sponsored plan.
| Component | Old Limit (2025) | New Limit (2026+) | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Employee deferral | $23,000 ($28,500 if 50+) | $23,500 ($29,500 if 50+) | +$500 |
| Employer profit-sharing | $46,000 | $53,000 | +$7,000 |
| Total max contribution | $69,000 | $76,500 | +$7,500 |
Worked Example: Maximum Solo 401(k) for a Freelancer
Imagine a 45-year-old freelance software consultant with $200,000 in net business income:
- Employee deferral: $23,500 (reduced by $23,500 in W-2 wages if they have any — as a solo LLC, they max the employee deferral)
- Employer profit-sharing: $53,000 (up to 25% of compensation, capped at $53,000)
- Total max Solo 401(k): $76,500
This means $76,500 of your $200,000 freelance income is sheltered from current taxation — reducing your taxable income dramatically. At the 22% bracket, that is $16,830 in current-year tax savings, plus the benefit of tax-deferred compounding on the full amount over decades.
For a freelancer earning $200K+: contributing $76,500 to a Solo 401(k) saves approximately $16,830–$22,365 in current taxes (depending on bracket). That is not a “deduction” — it is immediate, guaranteed tax savings with long-term compounding benefits. Every high-income freelancer should max this out.
Maximizing your Solo 401(k) is the single most powerful tax optimization move available to most freelancers.
Provision 7: Health Savings Account (HSA) Limit Increases
The OBBBA permanently increased HSA contribution limits — critical for freelancers who self-insure through high-deductible health plans (HDHPs), which is the majority of the freelance community.
| Coverage Type | Old HSA Limit (2025) | New HSA Limit (2026+) | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Self-only (individual) | $4,300 | $4,800 | +$500 |
| Family | $8,550 | $9,600 | +$1,050 |
| Catch-up (55+, extra) | $1,000 | $1,000 | Same |
The triple-tax advantage of HSAs makes them the most tax-efficient account type available: contributions are tax-deductible, growth is tax-free, and qualified withdrawals are tax-free. For a self-employed freelancer, HSA contributions are deductible on Schedule 1 (even if you take the standard deduction), making them a powerful supplementary deduction.
HSA Math for a Freelancer
A freelance photographer with a family HDHP:
- HSA contribution (family): $9,600
- Tax bracket: 22%
- State tax bracket: 5.5%
- Self-employment tax (15.3%): HSA is not subject to SE tax
- Total tax savings: $9,600 × (22% + 5.5%) = $2,640
That is $2,640 in combined federal and state tax savings — plus the full $9,600 grows tax-free for future medical expenses, which can accumulate substantially over decades if invested.
Provision 8: Education Credit Modifications
The OBBBA increased the American Opportunity Tax Credit (AOTC) from $2,500 to $3,000 per student and the Child Tax Credit from $2,000 to $3,600 per child. Both are now permanent.
For freelancers paying tuition or childcare expenses, these changes have direct dollar impact. The AOTC is partially refundable — meaning you can receive up to 40% of the credit ($1,200 under the old rules, $1,440 under the OBBBA) as a refund even if you owe zero tax.
| Credit | Old Amount | New OBBBA Amount | Refundable Portion | Freelancer Impact |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AOTC (per student) | $2,500 | $3,000 | $1,000 → $1,440 | +$500 credit, +$440 more refundable |
| CTC (per child, under 17) | $2,000 | $3,600 | 100% refundable | +$1,600 credit, fully refundable |
If you are a freelance parent paying for college or childcare, these increases are immediately valuable. A freelance parent with one child in college and one child under 17 can claim up to $6,600 in total credits — $3,000 AOTC + $3,600 CTC. That is a direct reduction in tax bill, not a deduction.
Provision 9: Home Office Deduction Clarification
The OBBBA clarified and extended the home office deduction rules. The simplified method remains at $5 per square foot, up to 300 square feet — a maximum of $1,500 using the simplified method. For larger home offices, you can now use the regular method (actual expenses) for the excess area.
Simplified vs Regular Method Comparison
| Scenario | Simplified Method | Regular Method | Which to Choose |
|---|---|---|---|
| 200 sq ft home office | $1,000 ($5 × 200) | ~$1,800 (mortgage interest, utilities, insurance allocated to 15%) | Regular method wins by $800 |
| 300 sq ft home office (max simplified) | $1,500 | ~$2,700 (mortgage interest, utilities, insurance allocated to 20%) | Regular method wins by $1,200 |
| 400 sq ft home office | $1,500 (capped) | ~$3,600 (mortgage interest, utilities, insurance allocated to 30%) | Regular method wins by $2,100 |
The OBBBA made this provision permanent, meaning the simplified method cap and the regular method for excess space are here to stay. For most freelancers with a modest home office (under 300 sq ft), the regular method will typically yield a larger deduction — but the simplified method offers dramatically less recordkeeping burden.
Estimated Tax Planning Calendar for Freelancers
The OBBBA changes require recalculated estimated tax payments. Use this timeline to stay compliant and avoid underpayment penalties:
| Deadline | Payment | What to Report | OBBBA Adjustments |
|---|---|---|---|
| June 15, 2026 | Q1 estimated tax | Jan–Mar 2026 income | Use new brackets, QBI deduction, standard deduction |
| September 15, 2026 | Q2 estimated tax | Apr–Jun 2026 income | Same adjustments — Q2 is a true OBBBA test |
| January 15, 2027 | Q3 estimated tax | Jul–Sep 2026 income | Mid-year income estimate |
| April 15, 2027 | Annual tax return | Full 2026 year | Final reconciliation of all OBBBA provisions |
Q2 2026 Estimated Tax Calculation Worksheet
- Calculate YTD gross income (Jan–Mar for Q1, Jan–Jun for Q2)
- Subtract YTD business expenses (software, equipment, mileage, home office)
- Annualize the income (multiply by 4 for Q1, by 2 for Q2)
- Apply QBI deduction (20% of annualized net income, capped at $180K/$360K)
- Apply standard deduction ($18,200 single, $36,400 MFJ — new OBBBA rates)
- Apply tax brackets (10%–35%, 5 brackets under OBBBA)
- Subtract payments already made (April 15 payment or other prior estimated payments)
- Result = payment due by next deadline
If you made the same quarterly payment in 2025, start there — the new brackets and deductions typically mean your effective tax rate will be lower. A safe starting point is 90% of your 2025 total tax liability divided by 4. If your 2025 AGI was under $150K, use 100% of 2025 tax as your safe harbor.
Quarterly estimated tax payments are the freelancer’s most critical compliance obligation — plan them around your OBBBA-adjusted rates.
The Bottom Line: What You Need to Do Now
Here is the action plan for freelancers facing the Q2 2026 tax landscape:
| Priority | Action | Deadline | Estimated Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🔴 Critical | Recalculate Q1 estimated tax using OBBBA rules | June 15, 2026 | May save or owe $1,000–$5,000 |
| 🔴 Critical | Max Solo 401(k) contributions for 2026 | April 15, 2027 | Up to $76,500 sheltered, ~$16,830 tax savings |
| 🟡 Important | Confirm 1099-K reporting strategy for all platforms | By year-end 2026 | Avoid IRS mismatch notices |
| 🟡 Important | Maximize HSA contributions | December 31, 2026 | Up to $9,600 pre-tax, ~$2,640 tax savings |
| 🟢 Strategic | Evaluate itemizing vs. standard deduction (SALT cap helps itemizers) | April 15, 2027 | Up to $3,840 extra SALT deduction |
| 🟢 Strategic | If 65+: verify senior deduction eligibility | April 15, 2027 | Up to $25,000 additional standard deduction |
| 🟢 Strategic | Track home office square footage for deduction planning | Ongoing | $1,500–$3,600 home office deduction |
Final Takeaway
The OBBBA is the most favorable tax environment for freelancers since the self-employment tax was created. The permanent QBI deduction, new standard deduction, lower tax brackets, and increased retirement limits compound into significant savings — roughly $10,000–$25,000 per year for a typical freelancer earning $100K–$200K. The key is to recalculate your estimated payments now using the new rules, maximize your Solo 401(k) and HSA, and stay organized on the $2,000 1099-K threshold.
Bottom line: The OBBBA gives every freelancer more money to keep. Make sure you are using every provision available to you.
FAQ: OBBBA Questions Every Freelancer Should Know
Is the QBI deduction really permanent now?
Yes. The OBBBA made the 20% QBI deduction permanent — it will not sunset like the TCJA provisions did. As long as you have qualified business income from your freelance work, you get 20% of it deducted from taxable income. For a freelancer with $100K in net income, that is $20,000 in deductions and approximately $4,400 in federal tax savings at the 22% bracket.
What happens to the $10,000 SALT cap after 2028?
If Congress does not extend it, the SALT cap reverts to $10,000 after 2028. That means if you are in a high-tax state and itemizing, you could lose the additional deduction benefit. Plan around the current rules but do not commit to long-term decisions solely based on a temporary provision. The permanent changes (standard deduction, QBI, tax brackets) are more reliable anchors.
Will I really get a 1099-K if I make $5,000 on PayPal?
Yes. The OBBBA lowered the 1099-K threshold to $2,000 with no transaction minimum. If a payment platform reports $2,001 or more to the IRS on your behalf, you will receive a 1099-K. This does not mean you owe taxes on the full amount — you report the gross on Schedule C and deduct your legitimate business expenses. The key is keeping accurate records so your net income is correct when the IRS sees the 1099-K.
How much can I contribute to my Solo 401(k) in 2026?
$76,500 total — $23,500 as employee deferral (or $29,500 if age 50+) plus up to $53,000 as employer profit-sharing. For a freelancer earning $200K, that shelters $76,500 from current taxes. At the 22% bracket, that is $16,830 in immediate tax savings — permanent OBBBA provision.
I am 67 years old. Do I qualify for the senior deduction?
Yes, if your AGI is under $35,000. The senior deduction phases out between $25,000 and $35,000 AGI, then disappears entirely above $50,000. For a single freelancer aged 65+ earning $20,000, the senior deduction adds $25,000 to your standard deduction, meaning zero taxable income and zero federal tax. For MFJ seniors, the thresholds double to $50,000 and $70,000.
Should I itemize deductions or take the standard deduction in 2026?
For most freelancers, the standard deduction still wins because the standard deduction ($18,200 single / $36,400 MFJ) is larger than what most individual freelancers can itemize. However, if you live in a high-SALT state and have significant property taxes plus state income tax, itemizing under the new $40,400 SALT cap could save you money. Run both numbers — use your tax software’s built-in comparison.
What is the new top tax rate for freelancers?
35% — down from 37% under the old rules. The top bracket kicks in at $215,950 for single filers and $431,900 for MFJ. No freelancer earning under those thresholds faces a marginal rate above 29%. This is a permanent OBBBA change.
How do the new retirement limits affect my 2026 tax planning?
The $76,500 Solo 401(k) max is the single largest tax shelter available to freelancers. Contribute as much as you can afford — it reduces your taxable income dollar-for-dollar and grows tax-deferred. For a freelancer earning $150K+, maxing the Solo 401(k) plus the HSA ($9,600 family) creates a combined $86,100 of tax-sheltered income — reducing your 2026 tax bill substantially.
Are these OBBBA changes retroactive to January 1, 2026?
Yes. All OBBBA provisions apply to the 2026 tax year starting January 1. If you already filed your Q1 estimated payment (April 15) using 2025 rates, you should recalculate using OBBBA rules and pay the difference by the June 15 deadline. If your OBBBA-adjusted tax is lower, you may owe less than your April payment — and the excess is credited to your remaining payments.
The OBBBA has created the most favorable tax environment for freelancers in decades. Take advantage of every provision available to you.
Summary: OBBBA at a Glance for Freelancers
QBI Deduction: Permanent 20% — expect $4,400+ savings on $100K income
SALT Cap: $40,400 (temporary 2026–2028) — major benefit for high-tax states
1099-K Threshold: $2,000 (temporary) — report everything, deduct expenses
Senior Deduction: $25,000 (65+, temporary) — zero tax under $25K AGI
Standard Deduction: $18,200 (single) / $36,400 (MFJ) — permanent increase
Tax Brackets: 10%–35% (5 brackets) — permanent, lower top rate
Solo 401(k): $76,500 max — permanent, up $7,500
HSA: $9,600 family — permanent, up $1,050
CTC: $3,600 per child — permanent, up $1,600
Total potential savings for a $100K–$200K freelancer: $10,000–$25,000/year
