First-Year Freelancer Tax Guide

Updated April 2026 · 11 min read

Welcome to self-employment. The tax landscape just changed dramatically. This guide covers everything a first-year freelancer needs to do — from the day you take your first paying client through your first April filing — to avoid surprise bills, audit triggers, and the common mistakes that cost thousands.

Step 1: Decide your business structure (week 1)

You have three realistic options as a new freelancer:

For most year-1 freelancers, sole proprietor or single-member LLC is the right answer. Full comparison here.

Step 2: Get an EIN (week 1, optional)

An Employer Identification Number is a federal business ID. Free from irs.gov. Apply online, get it instantly.

Why bother? Two reasons:

  1. You can give your EIN to clients on W-9s instead of your SSN — privacy benefit.
  2. Required if you ever hire contractors, open a business bank account at most banks, or open a Solo 401(k).

Step 3: Open a separate business bank account (week 2)

Critical. Mixing personal and business spending makes Schedule C a nightmare and creates audit risk. Open a separate checking account — many online banks (Mercury, Found, Bluevine, Lili) offer free business checking with no minimums for sole props.

Route ALL business income to this account. Pay ALL business expenses from this account. Pay yourself by transferring to your personal account.

Step 4: Set up basic bookkeeping (week 3)

You don't need expensive software for year 1. Options:

Step 5: Start tracking deductions from day 1

Common first-year freelancer deductions:

Full deductions checklist.

Step 6: Calculate your tax burden (month 1)

The big surprise for new freelancers: tax is roughly 25-40% of net SE income, depending on income level and state. Components:

Use our calculator to get a number specific to your situation.

Step 7: Set up an automatic tax savings system (month 1)

The single highest-leverage move:

  1. Open a separate "tax" savings account at a different bank if possible.
  2. Auto-transfer your tax % off every deposit (most business checking apps support this).
  3. On April 15, June 16, September 15, January 15, pay quarterly from that account.

If you set the % correctly, the account ends each year at $0 after Q4. How much to save.

Step 8: Understand quarterly estimates (year 1 timing)

Here's where year-1 freelancers often get confused. The IRS expects quarterly payments throughout the year. But how do you know how much to pay before you've earned the money?

Two paths:

For most year-1 freelancers transitioning from a W-2 mid-year: your W-2 withholding may already cover the safe harbor. Check before sending unnecessary estimates.

Step 9: Save aggressively for retirement (month 6)

Once you have steady income, open a SEP-IRA or Solo 401(k). Limits are MUCH higher than personal IRA: up to $70,000/year (or $77,500 if 50+). Reduces taxable income dollar-for-dollar.

SEP-IRA vs Solo 401(k) comparison.

Step 10: File at tax time (year-end + April)

Year-end checklist (December):

Filing (January-April):

The 5 biggest year-1 mistakes

  1. Forgetting SE tax. Saving 22% for "income tax" only — not the additional 15% SE tax. Bill in April: surprise $10k owed.
  2. Mixing personal and business spending. Reconstructing receipts from personal accounts at year-end is hell. Just open a separate business account day 1.
  3. Not tracking mileage. $0.70/mi adds up. Reconstructing months later via Google Maps is sketchy. Install a mileage app today.
  4. Skipping the home office deduction. Many year-1 freelancers think it's "audit bait." It's not — claim it correctly with a dedicated space.
  5. Trying to do taxes 100% solo. Buy a $30 tax software or pay a CPA $400. The deductions they catch will pay for themselves.

Bottom line

Year 1 is when habits get set. Open a business bank account, install a mileage app, pick a tax % and auto-transfer it, save aggressively for retirement once income is steady. Year 2 onward becomes routine — but year 1 sets the foundation.

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How much to save for taxes
The actual percentage by income and state.
Quarterly tax penalty
What the IRS charges if you skip a quarter.
Calculator
Run your own numbers.