1099 vs W2 at $200,000 in Massachusetts
A freelancer earning $200,000 in Massachusetts pays $9,432 more in taxes than a W2 employee — $70,497 total vs $61,065. That’s $786/month less in your pocket.
Deductible expenses reduce your taxable income
Freelancers pay $9,432 more in taxes
That’s $786/month less in your pocket
| Category | W2 Employee | 1099 Freelancer |
|---|---|---|
| Gross Income | $200,000 | $200,000 |
| Social Security | -$10,918 | -$21,836 |
| Medicare | -$2,900 | -$5,356 |
| Federal Income Tax | -$37,247 | -$33,984 |
| Massachusetts Tax | -$10,000 | -$9,320 |
| Total Tax | -$61,065 | -$70,497 |
| Take-Home Pay | $138,935 | $129,503 |
| Effective Rate | 30.5% | 35.2% |
To match your W2 take-home of $138,935
You’d need to charge $214,000/year as a freelancer
That’s about $103/hour (40 hrs/week)
To Match Your W2 Take-Home
If you’re leaving a $200,000 W2 job to freelance in Massachusetts, here’s what you’d need to charge:
| W2 Salary | Freelance Equivalent | Hourly Rate |
|---|---|---|
| $50,000 | $54,000 | $26/hr |
| $75,000 | $81,000 | $39/hr |
| $100,000 | $108,000 | $52/hr |
| $150,000 | $162,000 | $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 Massachusetts Compares for Freelancers
| State | 1099 Tax | Take-Home | vs Massachusetts |
|---|---|---|---|
| Massachusetts | $70,497 | $129,503 | — |
| Texas | $61,177 | $138,823 | +$9,320 |
| California | $75,054 | $124,946 | -$4,558 |
| New York | $71,793 | $128,207 | -$1,296 |
| Florida | $61,177 | $138,823 | +$9,320 |