1099 Quarterly Taxes in Oklahoma (2025-2026)
If you're self-employed in Oklahoma — freelancer, contractor, gig worker, or single-member LLC — you owe quarterly estimated taxes to two agencies: the IRS (federal) and Oklahoma Tax Commission (state). Oklahoma's top marginal rate is 4.75%, applied progressively. Getting your estimates right matters because under-payment penalties stack on top of the actual tax owed.
Oklahoma state income tax (2025)
Oklahoma uses a progressive bracket system on top of federal tax. For single filers in 2025:
| Income (single filer) | Marginal rate |
|---|---|
| $0 – $1,000 | 0.25% |
| $1,000 – $2,500 | 0.75% |
| $2,500 – $3,750 | 1.75% |
| $3,750 – $4,900 | 2.75% |
| $4,900 – $7,200 | 3.75% |
| $7,200+ | 4.75% |
How to pay Oklahoma estimated taxes
Federal estimated tax due dates (April 15, June 16, September 15, 2026, and January 15, 2027) apply to your Oklahoma state estimated payments as well — most states piggyback on the federal schedule. Pay Oklahoma taxes through the Oklahoma Tax Commission's online portal: oktap.tax.ok.gov. You can also mail Form OW-8-ES with a check.
Oklahoma-specific quirk freelancers miss
Oklahoma has six brackets but the top rate of 4.75% kicks in at just $7,200 — meaning nearly all freelancers above poverty line pay the top rate.
Common deductions for Oklahoma freelancers
- Oklahoma allows the same business expenses (home office, mileage, software, etc.) as federal.
- Half of SE tax is deductible federally; check Oklahoma's rules for state conformity.
- OK conforms to federal QBI deduction.
- SEP-IRA / Solo 401(k) contributions reduce both federal and Oklahoma taxable income.
- Self-employed health insurance premiums are deductible federally.