15% tax on $7.5k earnings. Is that right?












20















This year is my first year in the USA. My sole earnings were an honorarium from a university for $7,500 -- reported on a 1099-MISC form in box 7.



For this, I was on-site for a few days and talked about my particular technical expertise with university staff, and joined them in a publication.



However, as I have just been unpleasantly informed by turbotax, this does not make me a poor person earning under the $12k deductible. This makes me a self-employed business and thus I have to pay about 15% taxes on these earnings.



This seems completely crazy. Have I missed something?










share|improve this question




















  • 8





    As your user name says "A Foreign Scientist", check your visa against this list. There is a paragraph that develops this statement "A NONRESIDENT ALIEN is not liable for the self-employment tax." irs.gov/individuals/international-taxpayers/…

    – user662852
    Mar 21 at 16:13






  • 1





    Thanks -- I have an I-765 EAD and therefore I am a resident alien.

    – A-Foreign-Scientist-2018
    Mar 21 at 16:38






  • 15





    You will need to verify whether you are a non-resident for tax purposes - this is different from immigration definition. If you are a NR for tax, you cannot use Turbotax, as it does not offer support for this - find software that support form 1040NR (non resident).

    – Najel
    Mar 21 at 16:59






  • 1





    @Davislor - the urban legend is about income tax, not just any random duty on a gallon of gas.

    – Davor
    Mar 21 at 22:43











  • @Davor Seems my comment was removed. I’ll respect that. I note that nobody who repeats that talking-point ever puts it in context. Bailey: “That’s technically true only of one kind of tax, only because most of the money most taxpayers send to the IRS every year technically counts as another kind of tax. Also, 47% was only true at the bottom of the worst recession in seventy years.” Motte: “Half of Americans pay no taxes!”

    – Davislor
    Mar 22 at 8:05


















20















This year is my first year in the USA. My sole earnings were an honorarium from a university for $7,500 -- reported on a 1099-MISC form in box 7.



For this, I was on-site for a few days and talked about my particular technical expertise with university staff, and joined them in a publication.



However, as I have just been unpleasantly informed by turbotax, this does not make me a poor person earning under the $12k deductible. This makes me a self-employed business and thus I have to pay about 15% taxes on these earnings.



This seems completely crazy. Have I missed something?










share|improve this question




















  • 8





    As your user name says "A Foreign Scientist", check your visa against this list. There is a paragraph that develops this statement "A NONRESIDENT ALIEN is not liable for the self-employment tax." irs.gov/individuals/international-taxpayers/…

    – user662852
    Mar 21 at 16:13






  • 1





    Thanks -- I have an I-765 EAD and therefore I am a resident alien.

    – A-Foreign-Scientist-2018
    Mar 21 at 16:38






  • 15





    You will need to verify whether you are a non-resident for tax purposes - this is different from immigration definition. If you are a NR for tax, you cannot use Turbotax, as it does not offer support for this - find software that support form 1040NR (non resident).

    – Najel
    Mar 21 at 16:59






  • 1





    @Davislor - the urban legend is about income tax, not just any random duty on a gallon of gas.

    – Davor
    Mar 21 at 22:43











  • @Davor Seems my comment was removed. I’ll respect that. I note that nobody who repeats that talking-point ever puts it in context. Bailey: “That’s technically true only of one kind of tax, only because most of the money most taxpayers send to the IRS every year technically counts as another kind of tax. Also, 47% was only true at the bottom of the worst recession in seventy years.” Motte: “Half of Americans pay no taxes!”

    – Davislor
    Mar 22 at 8:05
















20












20








20


1






This year is my first year in the USA. My sole earnings were an honorarium from a university for $7,500 -- reported on a 1099-MISC form in box 7.



For this, I was on-site for a few days and talked about my particular technical expertise with university staff, and joined them in a publication.



However, as I have just been unpleasantly informed by turbotax, this does not make me a poor person earning under the $12k deductible. This makes me a self-employed business and thus I have to pay about 15% taxes on these earnings.



This seems completely crazy. Have I missed something?










share|improve this question
















This year is my first year in the USA. My sole earnings were an honorarium from a university for $7,500 -- reported on a 1099-MISC form in box 7.



For this, I was on-site for a few days and talked about my particular technical expertise with university staff, and joined them in a publication.



However, as I have just been unpleasantly informed by turbotax, this does not make me a poor person earning under the $12k deductible. This makes me a self-employed business and thus I have to pay about 15% taxes on these earnings.



This seems completely crazy. Have I missed something?







united-states taxes self-employment






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 21 at 17:57







A-Foreign-Scientist-2018

















asked Mar 21 at 15:21









A-Foreign-Scientist-2018A-Foreign-Scientist-2018

10114




10114








  • 8





    As your user name says "A Foreign Scientist", check your visa against this list. There is a paragraph that develops this statement "A NONRESIDENT ALIEN is not liable for the self-employment tax." irs.gov/individuals/international-taxpayers/…

    – user662852
    Mar 21 at 16:13






  • 1





    Thanks -- I have an I-765 EAD and therefore I am a resident alien.

    – A-Foreign-Scientist-2018
    Mar 21 at 16:38






  • 15





    You will need to verify whether you are a non-resident for tax purposes - this is different from immigration definition. If you are a NR for tax, you cannot use Turbotax, as it does not offer support for this - find software that support form 1040NR (non resident).

    – Najel
    Mar 21 at 16:59






  • 1





    @Davislor - the urban legend is about income tax, not just any random duty on a gallon of gas.

    – Davor
    Mar 21 at 22:43











  • @Davor Seems my comment was removed. I’ll respect that. I note that nobody who repeats that talking-point ever puts it in context. Bailey: “That’s technically true only of one kind of tax, only because most of the money most taxpayers send to the IRS every year technically counts as another kind of tax. Also, 47% was only true at the bottom of the worst recession in seventy years.” Motte: “Half of Americans pay no taxes!”

    – Davislor
    Mar 22 at 8:05
















  • 8





    As your user name says "A Foreign Scientist", check your visa against this list. There is a paragraph that develops this statement "A NONRESIDENT ALIEN is not liable for the self-employment tax." irs.gov/individuals/international-taxpayers/…

    – user662852
    Mar 21 at 16:13






  • 1





    Thanks -- I have an I-765 EAD and therefore I am a resident alien.

    – A-Foreign-Scientist-2018
    Mar 21 at 16:38






  • 15





    You will need to verify whether you are a non-resident for tax purposes - this is different from immigration definition. If you are a NR for tax, you cannot use Turbotax, as it does not offer support for this - find software that support form 1040NR (non resident).

    – Najel
    Mar 21 at 16:59






  • 1





    @Davislor - the urban legend is about income tax, not just any random duty on a gallon of gas.

    – Davor
    Mar 21 at 22:43











  • @Davor Seems my comment was removed. I’ll respect that. I note that nobody who repeats that talking-point ever puts it in context. Bailey: “That’s technically true only of one kind of tax, only because most of the money most taxpayers send to the IRS every year technically counts as another kind of tax. Also, 47% was only true at the bottom of the worst recession in seventy years.” Motte: “Half of Americans pay no taxes!”

    – Davislor
    Mar 22 at 8:05










8




8





As your user name says "A Foreign Scientist", check your visa against this list. There is a paragraph that develops this statement "A NONRESIDENT ALIEN is not liable for the self-employment tax." irs.gov/individuals/international-taxpayers/…

– user662852
Mar 21 at 16:13





As your user name says "A Foreign Scientist", check your visa against this list. There is a paragraph that develops this statement "A NONRESIDENT ALIEN is not liable for the self-employment tax." irs.gov/individuals/international-taxpayers/…

– user662852
Mar 21 at 16:13




1




1





Thanks -- I have an I-765 EAD and therefore I am a resident alien.

– A-Foreign-Scientist-2018
Mar 21 at 16:38





Thanks -- I have an I-765 EAD and therefore I am a resident alien.

– A-Foreign-Scientist-2018
Mar 21 at 16:38




15




15





You will need to verify whether you are a non-resident for tax purposes - this is different from immigration definition. If you are a NR for tax, you cannot use Turbotax, as it does not offer support for this - find software that support form 1040NR (non resident).

– Najel
Mar 21 at 16:59





You will need to verify whether you are a non-resident for tax purposes - this is different from immigration definition. If you are a NR for tax, you cannot use Turbotax, as it does not offer support for this - find software that support form 1040NR (non resident).

– Najel
Mar 21 at 16:59




1




1





@Davislor - the urban legend is about income tax, not just any random duty on a gallon of gas.

– Davor
Mar 21 at 22:43





@Davislor - the urban legend is about income tax, not just any random duty on a gallon of gas.

– Davor
Mar 21 at 22:43













@Davor Seems my comment was removed. I’ll respect that. I note that nobody who repeats that talking-point ever puts it in context. Bailey: “That’s technically true only of one kind of tax, only because most of the money most taxpayers send to the IRS every year technically counts as another kind of tax. Also, 47% was only true at the bottom of the worst recession in seventy years.” Motte: “Half of Americans pay no taxes!”

– Davislor
Mar 22 at 8:05







@Davor Seems my comment was removed. I’ll respect that. I note that nobody who repeats that talking-point ever puts it in context. Bailey: “That’s technically true only of one kind of tax, only because most of the money most taxpayers send to the IRS every year technically counts as another kind of tax. Also, 47% was only true at the bottom of the worst recession in seventy years.” Motte: “Half of Americans pay no taxes!”

– Davislor
Mar 22 at 8:05












2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















32














The 15% you're seeing is self-employment tax. The standard deduction still applies, and you are not paying any federal income tax. Self-employment tax pays for social security and medicare, normally employees and employers split those, the self-employed pay the full 15.3% themselves.



Self-employment tax is based on the business net profit, so any business expenses associated with this income can be used to offset income and reduce the tax liability. If you had to fly in and stay at a hotel, for example, those costs should be factored in.



In some cases, honoraria is mis-classified as Nonemployee Compensation (Box 7) instead of Other Income (Box 3). Which box is appropriate depends on the nature of your engagement, Other Income would typically not be subjected to self employment tax.



Edit: I was remembering common mis-classification issues at universities with fellowship income, not honoraria. Honoraria is sometimes mis-classified, but in your case I would guess Box 7 is proper, but could still be worth looking into further.






share|improve this answer





















  • 14





    Yes. If you were a poor person earning that amount in W2 wages, you'd have had the ~15% taken out before you even got your paycheck.

    – jamesqf
    Mar 21 at 17:11






  • 2





    @jamesqf And that tax, at least for medicare, stops at around 80k. i.e. People with higher incomes actually pay a smaller rate than those earning a lower income. Welcome to America!

    – paulj
    Mar 21 at 17:36






  • 9





    @paulj: Your memory is a bit lacking. The social security tax (larger portion of FICA stops), but not at 80k, more like 128k or 130k, The medicare portion doesn't stop, and in fact goes up (see "Additional Medicate Tax"; that threshold for that to kick in is typically 200k).

    – Ben Voigt
    Mar 21 at 17:46






  • 5





    @GalacticCowboy: Yes, that half won't appear on a W2 or paycheck in any shape or form, it's already been taken out (as jamesqf said). The other half does appear as social security and medicare withholding. It's all a government scam to make you think social security and medicare are only costing you half as much as actually is being taken.

    – Ben Voigt
    Mar 21 at 19:52






  • 5





    @paulj Social security is a net progressive tax because the benefits received climb slower than the tax paid. That is, you buy insurance for yourself, and you pay a progressive tax to subsidize insurance for people with lower incomes. The benefits hit a cap, which is why the tax also is capped.

    – user71659
    Mar 21 at 20:35



















12














Self-employment tax is basically you covering the medicare and social security "tax" that would have been covered by your employer if you were on their payroll. The standard deduction is for income tax that you should not be subject to. It does not apply to self-employment tax.



Note that if you were an employee, you still would have paid half of that amount (7.65%) in the form of withholdings from your paycheck.






share|improve this answer





















  • 6





    If you were an employee, I'm pretty sure you would have paid exactly the same, no matter how it's phrased. We have the same system here, "half paid by employer, half by employee", and that always works out to the employee paying all of it. By nature, it's not a tax on the business, but a tax that takes some of what the company spends on the employee away from the employee.

    – Nobody
    Mar 21 at 20:14






  • 6





    No, you misunderstand. Saying that the employer pays a part is just a book keeping trick. For both the employer and the employee, it's like the employee pays both parts. The employer only cares about total cost for the employee. The employee only cares about what they actually get to spend. The difference is the tax, no matter how you "divide" it between them both.

    – Nobody
    Mar 21 at 21:30






  • 3





    @Nobody Not true. If an employer pays an employee $100 gross, their total cost is $107.60 - the salary plus their portion of FICA/MC. If they pay a contractor $100, their total cost is $100. The government gets $15 either way.

    – D Stanley
    Mar 21 at 21:36








  • 5





    @DStanley See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tax_incidence "The key concept is that the tax incidence or tax burden does not depend on where the revenue is collected, but on the price elasticity of demand and price elasticity of supply. <br>[...] some economists think that the worker bears almost the entire burden of the tax because the employer passes the tax on in the form of lower wages. The tax incidence is thus said to fall on the employee."

    – Acccumulation
    Mar 21 at 21:51






  • 3





    @DStanley And that's one of the reasons why a contractor charges more than you'd typically pay an employee doing the same work.

    – Dmitry Grigoryev
    Mar 22 at 12:35










protected by JoeTaxpayer Mar 21 at 20:16



Thank you for your interest in this question.
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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









32














The 15% you're seeing is self-employment tax. The standard deduction still applies, and you are not paying any federal income tax. Self-employment tax pays for social security and medicare, normally employees and employers split those, the self-employed pay the full 15.3% themselves.



Self-employment tax is based on the business net profit, so any business expenses associated with this income can be used to offset income and reduce the tax liability. If you had to fly in and stay at a hotel, for example, those costs should be factored in.



In some cases, honoraria is mis-classified as Nonemployee Compensation (Box 7) instead of Other Income (Box 3). Which box is appropriate depends on the nature of your engagement, Other Income would typically not be subjected to self employment tax.



Edit: I was remembering common mis-classification issues at universities with fellowship income, not honoraria. Honoraria is sometimes mis-classified, but in your case I would guess Box 7 is proper, but could still be worth looking into further.






share|improve this answer





















  • 14





    Yes. If you were a poor person earning that amount in W2 wages, you'd have had the ~15% taken out before you even got your paycheck.

    – jamesqf
    Mar 21 at 17:11






  • 2





    @jamesqf And that tax, at least for medicare, stops at around 80k. i.e. People with higher incomes actually pay a smaller rate than those earning a lower income. Welcome to America!

    – paulj
    Mar 21 at 17:36






  • 9





    @paulj: Your memory is a bit lacking. The social security tax (larger portion of FICA stops), but not at 80k, more like 128k or 130k, The medicare portion doesn't stop, and in fact goes up (see "Additional Medicate Tax"; that threshold for that to kick in is typically 200k).

    – Ben Voigt
    Mar 21 at 17:46






  • 5





    @GalacticCowboy: Yes, that half won't appear on a W2 or paycheck in any shape or form, it's already been taken out (as jamesqf said). The other half does appear as social security and medicare withholding. It's all a government scam to make you think social security and medicare are only costing you half as much as actually is being taken.

    – Ben Voigt
    Mar 21 at 19:52






  • 5





    @paulj Social security is a net progressive tax because the benefits received climb slower than the tax paid. That is, you buy insurance for yourself, and you pay a progressive tax to subsidize insurance for people with lower incomes. The benefits hit a cap, which is why the tax also is capped.

    – user71659
    Mar 21 at 20:35
















32














The 15% you're seeing is self-employment tax. The standard deduction still applies, and you are not paying any federal income tax. Self-employment tax pays for social security and medicare, normally employees and employers split those, the self-employed pay the full 15.3% themselves.



Self-employment tax is based on the business net profit, so any business expenses associated with this income can be used to offset income and reduce the tax liability. If you had to fly in and stay at a hotel, for example, those costs should be factored in.



In some cases, honoraria is mis-classified as Nonemployee Compensation (Box 7) instead of Other Income (Box 3). Which box is appropriate depends on the nature of your engagement, Other Income would typically not be subjected to self employment tax.



Edit: I was remembering common mis-classification issues at universities with fellowship income, not honoraria. Honoraria is sometimes mis-classified, but in your case I would guess Box 7 is proper, but could still be worth looking into further.






share|improve this answer





















  • 14





    Yes. If you were a poor person earning that amount in W2 wages, you'd have had the ~15% taken out before you even got your paycheck.

    – jamesqf
    Mar 21 at 17:11






  • 2





    @jamesqf And that tax, at least for medicare, stops at around 80k. i.e. People with higher incomes actually pay a smaller rate than those earning a lower income. Welcome to America!

    – paulj
    Mar 21 at 17:36






  • 9





    @paulj: Your memory is a bit lacking. The social security tax (larger portion of FICA stops), but not at 80k, more like 128k or 130k, The medicare portion doesn't stop, and in fact goes up (see "Additional Medicate Tax"; that threshold for that to kick in is typically 200k).

    – Ben Voigt
    Mar 21 at 17:46






  • 5





    @GalacticCowboy: Yes, that half won't appear on a W2 or paycheck in any shape or form, it's already been taken out (as jamesqf said). The other half does appear as social security and medicare withholding. It's all a government scam to make you think social security and medicare are only costing you half as much as actually is being taken.

    – Ben Voigt
    Mar 21 at 19:52






  • 5





    @paulj Social security is a net progressive tax because the benefits received climb slower than the tax paid. That is, you buy insurance for yourself, and you pay a progressive tax to subsidize insurance for people with lower incomes. The benefits hit a cap, which is why the tax also is capped.

    – user71659
    Mar 21 at 20:35














32












32








32







The 15% you're seeing is self-employment tax. The standard deduction still applies, and you are not paying any federal income tax. Self-employment tax pays for social security and medicare, normally employees and employers split those, the self-employed pay the full 15.3% themselves.



Self-employment tax is based on the business net profit, so any business expenses associated with this income can be used to offset income and reduce the tax liability. If you had to fly in and stay at a hotel, for example, those costs should be factored in.



In some cases, honoraria is mis-classified as Nonemployee Compensation (Box 7) instead of Other Income (Box 3). Which box is appropriate depends on the nature of your engagement, Other Income would typically not be subjected to self employment tax.



Edit: I was remembering common mis-classification issues at universities with fellowship income, not honoraria. Honoraria is sometimes mis-classified, but in your case I would guess Box 7 is proper, but could still be worth looking into further.






share|improve this answer















The 15% you're seeing is self-employment tax. The standard deduction still applies, and you are not paying any federal income tax. Self-employment tax pays for social security and medicare, normally employees and employers split those, the self-employed pay the full 15.3% themselves.



Self-employment tax is based on the business net profit, so any business expenses associated with this income can be used to offset income and reduce the tax liability. If you had to fly in and stay at a hotel, for example, those costs should be factored in.



In some cases, honoraria is mis-classified as Nonemployee Compensation (Box 7) instead of Other Income (Box 3). Which box is appropriate depends on the nature of your engagement, Other Income would typically not be subjected to self employment tax.



Edit: I was remembering common mis-classification issues at universities with fellowship income, not honoraria. Honoraria is sometimes mis-classified, but in your case I would guess Box 7 is proper, but could still be worth looking into further.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Mar 21 at 15:52

























answered Mar 21 at 15:34









Hart COHart CO

34.1k67995




34.1k67995








  • 14





    Yes. If you were a poor person earning that amount in W2 wages, you'd have had the ~15% taken out before you even got your paycheck.

    – jamesqf
    Mar 21 at 17:11






  • 2





    @jamesqf And that tax, at least for medicare, stops at around 80k. i.e. People with higher incomes actually pay a smaller rate than those earning a lower income. Welcome to America!

    – paulj
    Mar 21 at 17:36






  • 9





    @paulj: Your memory is a bit lacking. The social security tax (larger portion of FICA stops), but not at 80k, more like 128k or 130k, The medicare portion doesn't stop, and in fact goes up (see "Additional Medicate Tax"; that threshold for that to kick in is typically 200k).

    – Ben Voigt
    Mar 21 at 17:46






  • 5





    @GalacticCowboy: Yes, that half won't appear on a W2 or paycheck in any shape or form, it's already been taken out (as jamesqf said). The other half does appear as social security and medicare withholding. It's all a government scam to make you think social security and medicare are only costing you half as much as actually is being taken.

    – Ben Voigt
    Mar 21 at 19:52






  • 5





    @paulj Social security is a net progressive tax because the benefits received climb slower than the tax paid. That is, you buy insurance for yourself, and you pay a progressive tax to subsidize insurance for people with lower incomes. The benefits hit a cap, which is why the tax also is capped.

    – user71659
    Mar 21 at 20:35














  • 14





    Yes. If you were a poor person earning that amount in W2 wages, you'd have had the ~15% taken out before you even got your paycheck.

    – jamesqf
    Mar 21 at 17:11






  • 2





    @jamesqf And that tax, at least for medicare, stops at around 80k. i.e. People with higher incomes actually pay a smaller rate than those earning a lower income. Welcome to America!

    – paulj
    Mar 21 at 17:36






  • 9





    @paulj: Your memory is a bit lacking. The social security tax (larger portion of FICA stops), but not at 80k, more like 128k or 130k, The medicare portion doesn't stop, and in fact goes up (see "Additional Medicate Tax"; that threshold for that to kick in is typically 200k).

    – Ben Voigt
    Mar 21 at 17:46






  • 5





    @GalacticCowboy: Yes, that half won't appear on a W2 or paycheck in any shape or form, it's already been taken out (as jamesqf said). The other half does appear as social security and medicare withholding. It's all a government scam to make you think social security and medicare are only costing you half as much as actually is being taken.

    – Ben Voigt
    Mar 21 at 19:52






  • 5





    @paulj Social security is a net progressive tax because the benefits received climb slower than the tax paid. That is, you buy insurance for yourself, and you pay a progressive tax to subsidize insurance for people with lower incomes. The benefits hit a cap, which is why the tax also is capped.

    – user71659
    Mar 21 at 20:35








14




14





Yes. If you were a poor person earning that amount in W2 wages, you'd have had the ~15% taken out before you even got your paycheck.

– jamesqf
Mar 21 at 17:11





Yes. If you were a poor person earning that amount in W2 wages, you'd have had the ~15% taken out before you even got your paycheck.

– jamesqf
Mar 21 at 17:11




2




2





@jamesqf And that tax, at least for medicare, stops at around 80k. i.e. People with higher incomes actually pay a smaller rate than those earning a lower income. Welcome to America!

– paulj
Mar 21 at 17:36





@jamesqf And that tax, at least for medicare, stops at around 80k. i.e. People with higher incomes actually pay a smaller rate than those earning a lower income. Welcome to America!

– paulj
Mar 21 at 17:36




9




9





@paulj: Your memory is a bit lacking. The social security tax (larger portion of FICA stops), but not at 80k, more like 128k or 130k, The medicare portion doesn't stop, and in fact goes up (see "Additional Medicate Tax"; that threshold for that to kick in is typically 200k).

– Ben Voigt
Mar 21 at 17:46





@paulj: Your memory is a bit lacking. The social security tax (larger portion of FICA stops), but not at 80k, more like 128k or 130k, The medicare portion doesn't stop, and in fact goes up (see "Additional Medicate Tax"; that threshold for that to kick in is typically 200k).

– Ben Voigt
Mar 21 at 17:46




5




5





@GalacticCowboy: Yes, that half won't appear on a W2 or paycheck in any shape or form, it's already been taken out (as jamesqf said). The other half does appear as social security and medicare withholding. It's all a government scam to make you think social security and medicare are only costing you half as much as actually is being taken.

– Ben Voigt
Mar 21 at 19:52





@GalacticCowboy: Yes, that half won't appear on a W2 or paycheck in any shape or form, it's already been taken out (as jamesqf said). The other half does appear as social security and medicare withholding. It's all a government scam to make you think social security and medicare are only costing you half as much as actually is being taken.

– Ben Voigt
Mar 21 at 19:52




5




5





@paulj Social security is a net progressive tax because the benefits received climb slower than the tax paid. That is, you buy insurance for yourself, and you pay a progressive tax to subsidize insurance for people with lower incomes. The benefits hit a cap, which is why the tax also is capped.

– user71659
Mar 21 at 20:35





@paulj Social security is a net progressive tax because the benefits received climb slower than the tax paid. That is, you buy insurance for yourself, and you pay a progressive tax to subsidize insurance for people with lower incomes. The benefits hit a cap, which is why the tax also is capped.

– user71659
Mar 21 at 20:35













12














Self-employment tax is basically you covering the medicare and social security "tax" that would have been covered by your employer if you were on their payroll. The standard deduction is for income tax that you should not be subject to. It does not apply to self-employment tax.



Note that if you were an employee, you still would have paid half of that amount (7.65%) in the form of withholdings from your paycheck.






share|improve this answer





















  • 6





    If you were an employee, I'm pretty sure you would have paid exactly the same, no matter how it's phrased. We have the same system here, "half paid by employer, half by employee", and that always works out to the employee paying all of it. By nature, it's not a tax on the business, but a tax that takes some of what the company spends on the employee away from the employee.

    – Nobody
    Mar 21 at 20:14






  • 6





    No, you misunderstand. Saying that the employer pays a part is just a book keeping trick. For both the employer and the employee, it's like the employee pays both parts. The employer only cares about total cost for the employee. The employee only cares about what they actually get to spend. The difference is the tax, no matter how you "divide" it between them both.

    – Nobody
    Mar 21 at 21:30






  • 3





    @Nobody Not true. If an employer pays an employee $100 gross, their total cost is $107.60 - the salary plus their portion of FICA/MC. If they pay a contractor $100, their total cost is $100. The government gets $15 either way.

    – D Stanley
    Mar 21 at 21:36








  • 5





    @DStanley See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tax_incidence "The key concept is that the tax incidence or tax burden does not depend on where the revenue is collected, but on the price elasticity of demand and price elasticity of supply. <br>[...] some economists think that the worker bears almost the entire burden of the tax because the employer passes the tax on in the form of lower wages. The tax incidence is thus said to fall on the employee."

    – Acccumulation
    Mar 21 at 21:51






  • 3





    @DStanley And that's one of the reasons why a contractor charges more than you'd typically pay an employee doing the same work.

    – Dmitry Grigoryev
    Mar 22 at 12:35
















12














Self-employment tax is basically you covering the medicare and social security "tax" that would have been covered by your employer if you were on their payroll. The standard deduction is for income tax that you should not be subject to. It does not apply to self-employment tax.



Note that if you were an employee, you still would have paid half of that amount (7.65%) in the form of withholdings from your paycheck.






share|improve this answer





















  • 6





    If you were an employee, I'm pretty sure you would have paid exactly the same, no matter how it's phrased. We have the same system here, "half paid by employer, half by employee", and that always works out to the employee paying all of it. By nature, it's not a tax on the business, but a tax that takes some of what the company spends on the employee away from the employee.

    – Nobody
    Mar 21 at 20:14






  • 6





    No, you misunderstand. Saying that the employer pays a part is just a book keeping trick. For both the employer and the employee, it's like the employee pays both parts. The employer only cares about total cost for the employee. The employee only cares about what they actually get to spend. The difference is the tax, no matter how you "divide" it between them both.

    – Nobody
    Mar 21 at 21:30






  • 3





    @Nobody Not true. If an employer pays an employee $100 gross, their total cost is $107.60 - the salary plus their portion of FICA/MC. If they pay a contractor $100, their total cost is $100. The government gets $15 either way.

    – D Stanley
    Mar 21 at 21:36








  • 5





    @DStanley See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tax_incidence "The key concept is that the tax incidence or tax burden does not depend on where the revenue is collected, but on the price elasticity of demand and price elasticity of supply. <br>[...] some economists think that the worker bears almost the entire burden of the tax because the employer passes the tax on in the form of lower wages. The tax incidence is thus said to fall on the employee."

    – Acccumulation
    Mar 21 at 21:51






  • 3





    @DStanley And that's one of the reasons why a contractor charges more than you'd typically pay an employee doing the same work.

    – Dmitry Grigoryev
    Mar 22 at 12:35














12












12








12







Self-employment tax is basically you covering the medicare and social security "tax" that would have been covered by your employer if you were on their payroll. The standard deduction is for income tax that you should not be subject to. It does not apply to self-employment tax.



Note that if you were an employee, you still would have paid half of that amount (7.65%) in the form of withholdings from your paycheck.






share|improve this answer















Self-employment tax is basically you covering the medicare and social security "tax" that would have been covered by your employer if you were on their payroll. The standard deduction is for income tax that you should not be subject to. It does not apply to self-employment tax.



Note that if you were an employee, you still would have paid half of that amount (7.65%) in the form of withholdings from your paycheck.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Mar 21 at 23:06









Brythan

17.8k64059




17.8k64059










answered Mar 21 at 15:33









D StanleyD Stanley

57.8k10169176




57.8k10169176








  • 6





    If you were an employee, I'm pretty sure you would have paid exactly the same, no matter how it's phrased. We have the same system here, "half paid by employer, half by employee", and that always works out to the employee paying all of it. By nature, it's not a tax on the business, but a tax that takes some of what the company spends on the employee away from the employee.

    – Nobody
    Mar 21 at 20:14






  • 6





    No, you misunderstand. Saying that the employer pays a part is just a book keeping trick. For both the employer and the employee, it's like the employee pays both parts. The employer only cares about total cost for the employee. The employee only cares about what they actually get to spend. The difference is the tax, no matter how you "divide" it between them both.

    – Nobody
    Mar 21 at 21:30






  • 3





    @Nobody Not true. If an employer pays an employee $100 gross, their total cost is $107.60 - the salary plus their portion of FICA/MC. If they pay a contractor $100, their total cost is $100. The government gets $15 either way.

    – D Stanley
    Mar 21 at 21:36








  • 5





    @DStanley See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tax_incidence "The key concept is that the tax incidence or tax burden does not depend on where the revenue is collected, but on the price elasticity of demand and price elasticity of supply. <br>[...] some economists think that the worker bears almost the entire burden of the tax because the employer passes the tax on in the form of lower wages. The tax incidence is thus said to fall on the employee."

    – Acccumulation
    Mar 21 at 21:51






  • 3





    @DStanley And that's one of the reasons why a contractor charges more than you'd typically pay an employee doing the same work.

    – Dmitry Grigoryev
    Mar 22 at 12:35














  • 6





    If you were an employee, I'm pretty sure you would have paid exactly the same, no matter how it's phrased. We have the same system here, "half paid by employer, half by employee", and that always works out to the employee paying all of it. By nature, it's not a tax on the business, but a tax that takes some of what the company spends on the employee away from the employee.

    – Nobody
    Mar 21 at 20:14






  • 6





    No, you misunderstand. Saying that the employer pays a part is just a book keeping trick. For both the employer and the employee, it's like the employee pays both parts. The employer only cares about total cost for the employee. The employee only cares about what they actually get to spend. The difference is the tax, no matter how you "divide" it between them both.

    – Nobody
    Mar 21 at 21:30






  • 3





    @Nobody Not true. If an employer pays an employee $100 gross, their total cost is $107.60 - the salary plus their portion of FICA/MC. If they pay a contractor $100, their total cost is $100. The government gets $15 either way.

    – D Stanley
    Mar 21 at 21:36








  • 5





    @DStanley See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tax_incidence "The key concept is that the tax incidence or tax burden does not depend on where the revenue is collected, but on the price elasticity of demand and price elasticity of supply. <br>[...] some economists think that the worker bears almost the entire burden of the tax because the employer passes the tax on in the form of lower wages. The tax incidence is thus said to fall on the employee."

    – Acccumulation
    Mar 21 at 21:51






  • 3





    @DStanley And that's one of the reasons why a contractor charges more than you'd typically pay an employee doing the same work.

    – Dmitry Grigoryev
    Mar 22 at 12:35








6




6





If you were an employee, I'm pretty sure you would have paid exactly the same, no matter how it's phrased. We have the same system here, "half paid by employer, half by employee", and that always works out to the employee paying all of it. By nature, it's not a tax on the business, but a tax that takes some of what the company spends on the employee away from the employee.

– Nobody
Mar 21 at 20:14





If you were an employee, I'm pretty sure you would have paid exactly the same, no matter how it's phrased. We have the same system here, "half paid by employer, half by employee", and that always works out to the employee paying all of it. By nature, it's not a tax on the business, but a tax that takes some of what the company spends on the employee away from the employee.

– Nobody
Mar 21 at 20:14




6




6





No, you misunderstand. Saying that the employer pays a part is just a book keeping trick. For both the employer and the employee, it's like the employee pays both parts. The employer only cares about total cost for the employee. The employee only cares about what they actually get to spend. The difference is the tax, no matter how you "divide" it between them both.

– Nobody
Mar 21 at 21:30





No, you misunderstand. Saying that the employer pays a part is just a book keeping trick. For both the employer and the employee, it's like the employee pays both parts. The employer only cares about total cost for the employee. The employee only cares about what they actually get to spend. The difference is the tax, no matter how you "divide" it between them both.

– Nobody
Mar 21 at 21:30




3




3





@Nobody Not true. If an employer pays an employee $100 gross, their total cost is $107.60 - the salary plus their portion of FICA/MC. If they pay a contractor $100, their total cost is $100. The government gets $15 either way.

– D Stanley
Mar 21 at 21:36







@Nobody Not true. If an employer pays an employee $100 gross, their total cost is $107.60 - the salary plus their portion of FICA/MC. If they pay a contractor $100, their total cost is $100. The government gets $15 either way.

– D Stanley
Mar 21 at 21:36






5




5





@DStanley See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tax_incidence "The key concept is that the tax incidence or tax burden does not depend on where the revenue is collected, but on the price elasticity of demand and price elasticity of supply. <br>[...] some economists think that the worker bears almost the entire burden of the tax because the employer passes the tax on in the form of lower wages. The tax incidence is thus said to fall on the employee."

– Acccumulation
Mar 21 at 21:51





@DStanley See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tax_incidence "The key concept is that the tax incidence or tax burden does not depend on where the revenue is collected, but on the price elasticity of demand and price elasticity of supply. <br>[...] some economists think that the worker bears almost the entire burden of the tax because the employer passes the tax on in the form of lower wages. The tax incidence is thus said to fall on the employee."

– Acccumulation
Mar 21 at 21:51




3




3





@DStanley And that's one of the reasons why a contractor charges more than you'd typically pay an employee doing the same work.

– Dmitry Grigoryev
Mar 22 at 12:35





@DStanley And that's one of the reasons why a contractor charges more than you'd typically pay an employee doing the same work.

– Dmitry Grigoryev
Mar 22 at 12:35





protected by JoeTaxpayer Mar 21 at 20:16



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