1099 vs W-2 Calculator 2026 β What 1099 Rate Equals Your W-2 Salary?
Compare W-2 employee vs 1099 contractor total compensation. Find the minimum 1099 rate needed to match your W-2 take-home after taxes, SE tax, and lost benefits. Includes equivalency table.
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W-2 salary OR 1099 gross revenue (same number for comparison) %
0% for TX, FL, NV; up to 13.3% for CA W-2 Benefits Package
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Annual value of employer-paid premiums %
% of salary matched by employer (e.g., 4% = $4,000 on $100K) Paid vacation and sick days per year
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Equipment, software, home office, etc. (1099 path only) Scenarios:
$0
Minimum 1099 Rate to Match W-2
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W-2 Total Compensation Value
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W-2 Take-Home Pay
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1099 Take-Home (same gross)
W-2 vs 1099 Side-by-Side Comparison
| Item | W-2 Employee | 1099 Contractor |
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How to Use This W-2 vs 1099 Calculator
Enter the annual compensation amount you're comparing (the same dollar figure for both paths), your filing status, state tax rate, and W-2 benefits. The calculator computes take-home pay for both scenarios and shows the minimum 1099 rate required to match your total W-2 compensation.
The Comparison Formula
W-2 Total Value = Salary + Health Insurance + 401k Match + PTO Value
W-2 Take-Home = Salary β Employee FICA (7.65%) β Federal Tax β State Tax
1099 Net Income = Gross β Expenses | SE Tax = Net Γ 0.9235 Γ 15.3%
1099 Take-Home = Gross β Expenses β SE Tax β Federal Tax β State Tax
Min 1099 Rate = W-2 Total Compensation Γ· (1 β effective combined rate)
W-2 Take-Home = Salary β Employee FICA (7.65%) β Federal Tax β State Tax
1099 Net Income = Gross β Expenses | SE Tax = Net Γ 0.9235 Γ 15.3%
1099 Take-Home = Gross β Expenses β SE Tax β Federal Tax β State Tax
Min 1099 Rate = W-2 Total Compensation Γ· (1 β effective combined rate)
Example
Alex: W-2 $100K with 4% 401k match, $8K health insurance, 15 PTO days, 22% federal rate:
W-2 Total Compensation: $100K + $4K match + $8K health + $7,212 PTO value = $119,212
W-2 Take-Home: $100K β $7,650 FICA β $14,768 fed β $5,000 state = $72,582
1099 Take-Home (same $100K): $100K β $5K exp β $14,130 SE β $11,850 fed β $4,750 state = $64,270
Minimum 1099 rate: ~$131,000 to match W-2 total value
W-2 Total Compensation: $100K + $4K match + $8K health + $7,212 PTO value = $119,212
W-2 Take-Home: $100K β $7,650 FICA β $14,768 fed β $5,000 state = $72,582
1099 Take-Home (same $100K): $100K β $5K exp β $14,130 SE β $11,850 fed β $4,750 state = $64,270
Minimum 1099 rate: ~$131,000 to match W-2 total value
Extended
Rate Equivalency Table
Equivalent 1099 hourly and annual rates for W-2 salaries from $40K to $200K
Rate Equivalency Table
Equivalent 1099 annual rates for W-2 salaries from $40K to $200K. Assumes standard benefits ($7K health, 3% match, 10 PTO days) and your selected filing status and state rate.
| W-2 Salary | W-2 Take-Home | Min 1099 Annual | Min 1099 Hourly | Premium Over W-2 |
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When 1099 Makes Financial Sense
- High billing rate available β If clients will pay 30β50% more than equivalent W-2, 1099 can be very lucrative
- Low benefit need β Young, healthy contractors who don't value employer health insurance save on "unneeded" benefits
- High business expenses β More deductions = lower effective tax rate vs. W-2 employee who cannot deduct unreimbursed expenses
- S-Corp opportunity β Above ~$80K net profit, electing S-Corp status reduces SE tax significantly
- Multiple clients β Diversified income reduces dependency on a single employer; W-2 equivalent with multiple 1099 clients can exceed a single W-2 salary
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does a 1099 contractor need to earn more than a W-2 employee at the same salary?
A 1099 contractor pays the full 15.3% self-employment tax (both employer and employee portions of Social Security and Medicare), whereas a W-2 employee only pays 7.65% β the employer pays the other half. Contractors also receive no employer-provided benefits (health insurance, 401k match, PTO, etc.). To truly match W-2 total compensation, a 1099 contractor typically needs to earn 20β40% more depending on their benefit package.
What business expenses can 1099 contractors deduct?
Legitimate business expenses that reduce net SE income include: home office (simplified method $5/sq ft up to 300 sq ft), business mileage ($0.725/mile in 2026), equipment and tools, professional software and subscriptions, professional development and education, business insurance, professional services (accounting, legal), marketing and advertising, business travel and meals (50% of meals), and health insurance premiums (100% deductible above the line).
How does the half SE tax deduction work?
Self-employed individuals can deduct half of their self-employment tax from their adjusted gross income (AGI). This deduction accounts for the fact that employers can deduct their share of FICA taxes as a business expense, so the IRS gives the self-employed a similar benefit. The deduction reduces your taxable income but not your SE tax itself. On a $100K net profit, SE tax is ~$14,130 and the deduction is ~$7,065.
At what income level should I consider converting from W-2 to 1099?
The financial break-even point depends heavily on your benefits package. If your employer provides $25,000+ in benefits (health insurance, 401k match, PTO value), you typically need 25β35% more as a 1099 contractor to break even. Many financial planners suggest the total compensation differential (contractor rate vs equivalent W-2 salary) of 25β40% is the reasonable range. Use this calculator to find your specific break-even 1099 rate.
Does taking an S-Corp election reduce self-employment tax on 1099 income?
Yes β at high enough income levels, electing S-Corp status can significantly reduce SE tax. With an S-Corp, you pay yourself a "reasonable salary" (subject to payroll taxes) and take the rest as distributions (not subject to SE/payroll taxes). The savings can be substantial at $80,000+ net profit, though S-Corps have additional administrative costs ($500β$2,000/year) that must be factored in.