Estimated tax penalty calculator (2026)

Compute the IRS §6654 underpayment penalty for missed or late quarterly estimated tax payments. Per-quarter calculation using the 2026 rates (7% Q1, 6% Q2 onward).

Federal income tax + SE tax + Additional Medicare. Doesn't include refundable credits.
Last year's Form 1040 line 24. Used for safe-harbor check.
If > $150k, safe harbor requires 110% of prior tax (not 100%).
Treated as paid evenly across all 4 quarters regardless of when withheld.

Quarterly estimated payments made

Estimated underpayment penalty

Safe harbor analysis

Required annual payment (lesser of two methods)
90% of current-year tax
100% (or 110%) of prior-year tax
Total payments + withholding
Underpayment (if any)

Per-quarter penalty breakdown

Q1 underpayment × 7% × ~272 days
Q2 underpayment × 6% × ~211 days
Q3 underpayment × 6% × ~120 days
Q4 underpayment × 6% × ~90 days

How the underpayment penalty works

The IRS computes the §6654 underpayment penalty per quarter, not annually. If you under-paid Q1 by $5,000, you owe a penalty on that $5,000 from April 15 to whenever you finally paid it (or to the next April 15 filing date, whichever is earlier). Paying $5,000 extra in Q4 doesn't undo the Q1 underpayment.

2026 penalty rates

The IRS sets the rate quarterly as the federal short-term rate + 3%. For 2026:

Required annual payment (the safe-harbor test)

You owe NO penalty if you've paid the lesser of:

  1. 90% of current-year tax (this year's actual tax × 0.90)
  2. 100% of prior-year tax (last year's actual tax × 1.00) — or 110% if your prior-year AGI exceeded $150,000

The IRS automatically picks whichever is smaller for you. The required annual payment is then divided by 4 — that's the per-quarter target. Pay at least that each quarter and you're penalty-free regardless of how much your income changed.

The under-$1,000 escape hatch

Per §6654(e), no penalty applies if your total tax minus withholding is under $1,000. If your W-2 withholding (or your spouse's) covers all but $999 of your federal liability, you're safe even with zero quarterly estimated payments.

How to avoid the penalty going forward

Form 2210 — fight the penalty

You can compute the penalty yourself on Form 2210 (Schedule AI for the annualized income method) and attach it to your tax return. Alternatively, leave it blank and the IRS will compute it for you and bill you separately. The IRS computation is sometimes slightly higher because they use compounding daily; the manual computation rounds to month-ends.

Penalty waiver requests (Form 2210, Part I)

The IRS may waive the penalty in cases of:

Document everything (medical records, FEMA disaster declarations, etc.) and check the waiver box on Form 2210 Part I.

Caveats on this calculator

The calculator uses standardized day-counts per IRS computation conventions:

Actual penalty may differ slightly because:

Treat the result as an estimate — the IRS bill is the authoritative number. For amounts over $1,000 in penalty, check the IRS computation against this calc to spot any errors.

Related guides + tools

Estimates only — not tax, legal, or financial advice. Sources: IRC §6654, IRS Form 2210 instructions, IRS Quarterly Interest Rate Notice (Rev. Rul. 2025-21 setting Q1 2026 = 7%, Q2-Q4 2026 = 6%). The IRS's actual penalty computation may differ slightly due to daily compounding. For decisions affecting your finances, consult a licensed CPA or enrolled agent.