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Bibs said in May 10th, 2008 at 11:12 am

When you retire some day, you will be glad that you have all those accumulated benefits. Do not fudge on this one. It is like shooting yourself in the foot.

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tkahrs12122 said in May 12th, 2008 at 2:48 am

That 15.3 is for social security and must be paid. There is no option.

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Jason said in May 14th, 2008 at 5:09 pm

Realistically speaking you will have wanted to pay the 15.3% of SE Tax, which is both Social Security and Medicare Taxes for you for the year. Your other option would be to put your income into a Tax Deferred retirement plan, like a Solo 401(k), a SEP, or a Traditional IRA. A financial adviser can help with this.

If you don’t want to reduce your income, the best option would be to make quarterly estimates to the IRS to reduce your liability at the end of the year. Failing to do that would also incur penalties to your balance due.

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travelguruette said in May 17th, 2008 at 4:47 pm

If you dont have any income you dont have income tax. You still have to pay ss and medicare

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wartz said in May 19th, 2008 at 10:30 am

There is no options here. If you were a wage earner the same amount of tax would be due but it would be paid by withholding and the employer’s share.

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xtraheavy01 said in May 20th, 2008 at 5:54 pm

That makes no sense. If you prepared your Schedule C from the 1099 you received and you took deductions and you had more deductions then income., then you should wind up with a negative or loss on your Schedule C. There would be no self employment tax owed.

Unless what you are saying is that you have itemized deductions and you ended up with a net income from your Schedule C. then that would make sense.

Then the only way to reduce your SE tax is to reduce your net schedule C , in effect, claim more deductions to offset the Schedule C income.

If you have W-2 wages, make sure you take credit for the fica and medicare.

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ninasgramma said in May 23rd, 2008 at 6:58 pm

You must have expenses against your self-employment income. Expenses would include any of those listed on Schedule C.

Contributing to your own 401k, or other retirement plan will reduce your income taxes, it will not reduce your self-employment tax. However, if you have an employee, your payments toward the employee’s retirement plan is a deduction against your self-employment income. However, you will pay the employee’s half of SS and Medicare.

Contributions to your health insurance, or to your employee’s health insurance, are treated similarly to retirement contributions.

Depending on the nature of your business, you could look into forming an S Corporation. If it is appropriate to treat some of your payments as dividends from the S Corporation, you may escape some self-employment taxes, and pay self-employment taxes only on the payments you receive for services rendered.

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Jss said in May 24th, 2008 at 12:10 pm

On schedule C you can deduct business related expenses.
You are self employed or independent contractor. You will report your income and expenses on schedule C or C-EZ (Form 1040). This income is subject to SE tax at 15.3%. Read about self employed (or independent contractor) tax filing and payment of estimated taxes:

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