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1099 vs W2 at $110,000 in Kentucky

A freelancer earning $110,000 in Kentucky pays $5,107 more in taxes than a W2 employee — $33,736 total vs $28,629. That’s $426/month less in your pocket.

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Deductible expenses reduce your taxable income

Freelancers pay $5,107 more in taxes

That’s $426/month less in your pocket

CategoryW2 Employee1099 Freelancer
Gross Income$110,000$110,000
Social Security-$6,820-$12,597
Medicare-$1,595-$2,946
Federal Income Tax-$15,814-$14,104
Kentucky Tax-$4,400-$4,089
Total Tax-$28,629-$33,736
Take-Home Pay$81,371$76,264
Effective Rate26.0%30.7%

To match your W2 take-home of $81,371

You’d need to charge $119,000/year as a freelancer

That’s about $57/hour (40 hrs/week)

To Match Your W2 Take-Home

If you’re leaving a $110,000 W2 job to freelance in Kentucky, here’s what you’d need to charge:

W2 SalaryFreelance EquivalentHourly Rate
$50,000$54,500$26/hr
$75,000$81,000$39/hr
$100,000$108,000$52/hr
$150,000$161,500$78/hr

How to Reduce Your 1099 Tax Bill

1. Deduct Business Expenses

Every legitimate expense (home office, internet, software, equipment, mileage) reduces your taxable income. $10,000 in deductions saves roughly $2,500–$3,500 in taxes.

2. Open a Solo 401(k) or SEP-IRA

You can contribute up to $23,500 (employee portion) plus 25% of net earnings to a Solo 401(k), directly reducing your taxable income.

3. Consider S-Corp Election

If you consistently earn over $50–60K freelancing, an S-Corp can save thousands by splitting income between “salary” (subject to SE tax) and “distributions” (not subject to SE tax). Consult a CPA.

4. Pay Quarterly Estimated Taxes

Due dates: April 15, June 15, September 15, January 15. Set aside 25–30% of every payment to avoid underpayment penalties.

How Kentucky Compares for Freelancers

State1099 TaxTake-Homevs Kentucky
Kentucky$33,736$76,264
Texas$29,647$80,353+$4,089
California$35,696$74,304-$1,960
New York$35,212$74,788-$1,476
Florida$29,647$80,353+$4,089

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