Florida · Tax year 2026
Florida 1099 Tax Calculator
Florida has no state income tax, so your only taxes on 1099 income are federal. Estimate your self-employment tax, federal income tax, and quarterly payments below.
Estimated total tax
$0
effective rate 0%
Per quarter
$0
No state income tax in Florida. Your state line is $0. Only the two federal taxes above apply. State figure is an estimate — see our methodology.
Florida's tax advantage for the self-employed
Florida is a popular base for freelancers and remote contractors partly because it levies no individual income tax. Whether you're a consultant, designer, or gig worker, your 1099 earnings face only federal tax — self-employment tax (see our self-employment tax calculator) and federal income tax.
Corporate vs personal tax in Florida
Florida does impose a corporate income tax, but it targets C-corporations. If you operate as a sole proprietor, single-member LLC, or other pass-through and report income on your personal return, you generally won't owe Florida corporate tax. Confirm your structure with a professional.
Quarterly estimated taxes
Make federal quarterly payments to the IRS if you'll owe $1,000+ for the year. There's no Florida estimate to worry about. See how much to set aside for 1099 taxes.
Frequently asked questions
Does Florida tax 1099 income?
No. Florida has no state individual income tax, so your 1099 income is not taxed at the state level. You only owe federal self-employment tax and federal income tax.
How much should Florida freelancers save for taxes?
With no state income tax, many Florida freelancers set aside roughly 20–25% of net profit for federal taxes. Higher earners should lean toward the upper end.
Do self-employed Floridians pay any state tax?
Not on personal income. Florida's corporate income tax applies to C-corporations, not to sole proprietors or most pass-through freelancers reporting on Schedule C.
Other state calculators
Compare your tax in other states — your federal bill stays the same, but state tax varies widely:
- California · Graduated 1%–13.3%
- New York · Graduated 3.9%–10.9% (+NYC)
- Texas · No state income tax
- Washington · No state income tax
- Illinois · Flat 4.95%
- Pennsylvania · Flat 3.07%
- North Carolina · Flat 3.99%
- Georgia · Flat 5.19%
- Arizona · Flat 2.5% (lowest)
- Michigan · Flat 4.25%
- Colorado · Flat 4.4%
Estimates based on 2026 federal and Florida figures; state tax estimate excludes state-specific deductions and credits. Not tax advice — confirm with the IRS, your state tax agency, or a professional. See our disclaimer.