1099 Quarterly Taxes in New Hampshire (2025-2026)

Updated April 2026 · Sources: New Hampshire Department of Revenue Administration, IRS Form 1040-ES

If you're self-employed in New Hampshire — freelancer, contractor, gig worker, or single-member LLC — your tax burden is entirely federal. New Hampshire levies no personal income tax, which makes it one of the most tax-friendly states for self-employed Americans. You'll still owe federal income tax plus the 15.3% self-employment tax, but you skip the state filing entirely.

New Hampshire state income tax (2025)

0%. New Hampshire is one of nine states without a personal income tax (the others: Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, Wyoming). Self-employed New Hampshire residents file a federal return (Form 1040 + Schedule C + Schedule SE) but no state income tax return is required for personal 1099 income.

Quarterly payments — federal only for New Hampshire residents

Federal estimated tax due dates apply nationwide:

Pay through IRS Direct Pay (irs.gov/payments) for free bank transfers, or mail Form 1040-ES with a check.

New Hampshire-specific quirk freelancers miss

New Hampshire has no tax on wages, salary, or 1099 self-employment income. The state did historically tax interest and dividends (the I&D Tax) at 5%, but this was repealed effective 2025. NH freelancers now have a true 0% state return on all income types.

Common federal deductions for New Hampshire freelancers

Without a state return, your only itemization layer is federal. The deductions that matter most:

Try the calculator with New Hampshire pre-selected

Run the Quarterly1099 calculator →

Ad placement

New Hampshire freelancer tools

Software for 1099 deduction tracking, mileage, and quarterly estimates — useful for any state, but especially when New Hampshire's rules add complexity.

Other states