How to Pay Quarterly Estimated Taxes Online (Step-by-Step)
You've used the Quarterly1099 calculator, you have a number, and now you need to actually send it to the IRS. There are five ways to pay. For most freelancers in 2026, one of them is clearly the best. Here's the full picture, the step-by-step, and the gotchas that catch people the first time.
The five ways to pay, ranked
| Method | Fee | Setup time | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| IRS Direct Pay | $0 | 0 min | Most freelancers — fastest, simplest |
| EFTPS | $0 | 5-7 business days (mailed PIN) | Schedule payments in advance, businesses |
| IRS2Go app | $0 | 2 min | Phone-only payers |
| Debit / credit card | $2.20 flat (debit) or 1.75-1.85% (credit) | 2 min | Cash-flow timing or rewards points |
| Mail Form 1040-ES + check | $0 + stamp | 5+ days transit | People who refuse to give the IRS bank info |
If you have a bank account and a US address, use IRS Direct Pay. The rest of this article walks through each in detail so you know what to do when the simple path doesn't fit.
One important framing point before you pay anything: the IRS only cares that enough total tax shows up on time across the year — it does not care which method you used or whether you split a single quarter across multiple payments. If you owe $3,000 for Q2, paying $1,500 via Direct Pay on June 15 and $1,500 via card on June 16 counts as one paid quarter (the card portion is one day late and incurs a tiny penalty, but the rest counts on time). Mix and match freely.
Method 1: IRS Direct Pay (recommended)
Direct Pay is a free bank-to-IRS transfer. No login, no account creation, no fees. The IRS verifies your identity using a previous tax return.
- Go to directpay.irs.gov. (Type it; don't trust a search result — phishing is real here.)
- Click Make a Payment.
- Reason for payment: Estimated Tax.
- Apply payment to: 1040ES (Estimated Tax for Individuals).
- Tax period: the calendar year you're paying for. So a payment made in April 2026 for Q1 of 2026 tax year would be 2026.
- Verify identity using a prior-year return (filing status, name, SSN, address as filed). They'll usually ask about a return from 1-2 years back — not the most recent.
- Enter bank routing + account number (US checking or savings only — no credit unions outside the US, no PayPal, no Venmo).
- Pick a payment date. You can schedule up to 365 days out. Same-day works if it's before 8 PM Eastern on a banking day.
- Confirm and save the confirmation number. Screenshot it. Email it to yourself. Whatever — but save it.
Money usually leaves your bank within 1-2 business days. If your bank shows the debit but the IRS doesn't, the confirmation number is your proof.
Method 2: EFTPS (Electronic Federal Tax Payment System)
EFTPS is the older, more powerful cousin of Direct Pay. It requires enrollment, but once you're in, you can:
- Schedule all four quarterly payments at once at the start of the year.
- Pay business taxes (payroll, corporate) — Direct Pay can't.
- Pull a complete payment history at any time.
Enrollment process:
- Go to eftps.gov and click Enroll.
- Choose Individual or Business. Enter SSN/EIN, name, address, bank info.
- The IRS mails you a 4-digit PIN. Takes 5-7 business days. (You cannot pay through EFTPS until that PIN arrives.)
- First login: PIN + last 8 digits of your enrollment number, then create an internet password.
That mail delay is why most one-time freelancers use Direct Pay instead. If you know now that you'll be paying quarterly for years, enroll in EFTPS once and never deal with re-entering bank info again.
To make a payment after enrollment: log in → Payments → choose 1040 (estimated tax for individuals) → enter year/quarter, amount, debit date → confirm. Schedule up to 365 days out for individuals; 120 days for businesses.
Method 3: IRS2Go (mobile app)
IRS2Go is the IRS's official iOS/Android app. The "Make a Payment" button just hands you off to either Direct Pay or one of the card processors — same flow, same fees, just on your phone. No advantage over using Direct Pay in a mobile browser, but it does have a refund tracker and a withholding estimator if you need those.
Method 4: Debit or credit card
The IRS doesn't process card payments directly. They authorize three third-party processors. Fees as of 2026:
- payUSAtax — debit $2.10 flat / credit 1.82%
- Pay1040 — debit $2.50 flat / credit 1.75%
- ACI Payments — debit $2.20 flat / credit 1.85%
For a $5,000 estimated payment on credit, that's roughly $87.50-$92.50 in fees. The math only makes sense if your card rewards exceed the fee (uncommon — most cards earn 1-2%) or if you need the float and won't carry a balance. Carrying a balance at 24% APR to pay taxes is almost always a bad trade.
Each processor allows two payments per quarter per tax type. Useful if you want to split a large payment across two cards.
Method 5: Mail Form 1040-ES with a check
Still allowed, occasionally useful. Reasons you might:
- You don't want the IRS to have your bank info on file (some people care).
- You're paying from a trust or business check that doesn't have an EFTPS account set up.
- You want a paper trail that survives a digital outage.
Process: print the 1040-ES voucher for the right quarter, write a check to "United States Treasury" with your SSN + "2026 Form 1040-ES" in the memo, mail to the IRS address listed on the form for your state. Mail it well before the due date — postmark counts, but you want a USPS Certified Mail receipt as backup. See our Form 1040-ES walkthrough for details.
Timing: when does a payment "count" as on time?
- Direct Pay / EFTPS: any payment scheduled or submitted by 11:59 PM local time on the due date counts as on time, even if the actual bank debit happens 1-2 business days later. Submit before 8 PM Eastern for same-day processing if the due date is also a banking day.
- Card payments: the date the processor authorizes the charge is the payment date. Confirmation email = your proof.
- Mailed check: US postmark date is the payment date. Use a post office, not a drop box, on the day of — drop boxes can sit overnight.
The four quarterly due dates for the 2026 tax year: April 15, June 15, September 15, and January 15. If a date falls on a weekend or federal holiday, it shifts to the next business day. See our deadlines page.
What to do if your confirmation says "paid" but your bank shows nothing
This happens occasionally with Direct Pay. The fix:
- Wait 2-3 business days. Bank batching delays are normal.
- Check the IRS payment lookup at directpay.irs.gov → Look Up a Payment, using your confirmation number, SSN, and date.
- Check your bank for a "pending" entry separately from posted transactions.
- If still missing after 5 business days, call the IRS Direct Pay help line (800-829-1040) with your confirmation number ready. Don't re-pay — you'll just create a duplicate that takes weeks to refund.
Proof to keep (and for how long)
- Confirmation number from each payment — keep at least 3 years (the standard IRS audit window) and ideally 7.
- Bank statement showing the debit. Save the PDF, don't rely on the bank's web portal alone (most banks purge after 7 years).
- EFTPS payment history — log in once a year and download the year's history as PDF.
- Form 1040-ES voucher carbons + Certified Mail receipts if you mail.
Tax professionals will reconstruct your year from these at filing time. Every payment you can prove reduces what you owe in April; every payment you can't prove will likely just get re-paid.
FAQs
Can I pay state estimated taxes through IRS Direct Pay?
No. Direct Pay is federal only. Each state has its own portal — California uses FTB Web Pay, New York uses the Tax Department's Online Services, etc. The state due dates often (but not always) match federal.
What if I pay too much?
The overpayment becomes a refund when you file your return. You can also elect to apply it to next year's first estimated payment (line on Form 1040). No penalty for overpaying.
Can someone else pay for me?
Direct Pay requires the bank account to match the taxpayer name. EFTPS allows third-party authorized payers (a bookkeeper, for example). Card processors don't care whose card it is, only that the SSN matches.
Do I have to pay all four quarters if I started mid-year?
You only owe estimated payments for the quarters in which you had income. If you started freelancing in August, your first estimated payment is the September 15 one (Q3). The IRS uses the "annualized income installment method" for this — most tax software handles it automatically.
Is there a minimum payment amount?
No minimum on Direct Pay or EFTPS. Card processors typically have a $1 minimum. If you owe less than $1,000 total for the year, you don't need to pay quarterly at all.