Guide ยท Freelance & Self-Employed Tax Calculator
How to use the Freelance & Self-Employed Tax Calculator
The TakeHomePay.ie freelance tax calculator estimates your take-home profit after income tax, USC and PRSI as a sole trader or self-employed contractor in Ireland. It accounts for the key differences between self-employment and PAYE โ including Class S PRSI, the Earned Income Credit, allowable business expenses, preliminary tax and the 3% USC surcharge on income above โฌ100,000.
Unlike a PAYE payslip where tax is deducted automatically, self-employed people in Ireland manage their own tax through the self-assessment system โ filing an annual Form 11 and paying their own income tax, USC and PRSI. This calculator helps you understand what that bill is likely to be throughout the year, not just at October's deadline.
What you need: Your expected gross annual income and an estimate of your business expenses. Everything else โ tax status, pension, medical card โ has a sensible default you can leave unchanged for a quick estimate.
How self-employed tax differs from PAYE
Before entering your figures, it helps to understand the key differences between being employed and self-employed in Ireland. Several rules are unique to self-employment and significantly affect your tax bill.
๐ PAYE employee
- Tax deducted automatically each pay period
- PAYE Credit (โฌ2,000) applied
- Class A PRSI (~4.2375%)
- No USC surcharge
- Limited expense deductions
- No preliminary tax obligation
- P60 / Employment Detail Summary
๐ผ Self-employed / sole trader
- Self-assessment โ you manage your own tax
- Earned Income Credit (โฌ2,000) instead of PAYE credit
- Class S PRSI (~4.2375%, min โฌ650)
- 3% USC surcharge on income above โฌ100,000
- Allowable business expenses reduce taxable profit
- Preliminary tax due by 31 October each year
- Annual Form 11 return required
Good news: The Earned Income Credit (โฌ2,000) gives self-employed people the same personal tax credit as PAYE employees. This was introduced to equalise the treatment of both groups โ prior to 2016, self-employed people had no equivalent to the PAYE credit, meaning they faced a higher effective tax rate.
Enter your gross annual income
Enter your expected total gross income for the year before expenses. This is your total revenue โ all invoices issued and income received during the tax year, regardless of whether you've been paid yet (accruals basis) or only when cash is received (cash basis). Most sole traders use the cash/receipts basis. If you're unsure which applies to you, use total cash received during the year.
VAT-registered? Enter your income excluding VAT. If you are VAT-registered, the VAT you collect on invoices is not your income โ it belongs to Revenue and must be paid over on your VAT return. Your taxable income is the net figure before VAT.
Enter your business expenses
This is the most powerful part of self-employed tax planning. Business expenses that are wholly and exclusively incurred for the purpose of your trade are deductible from your gross income before tax is calculated. The calculator has six expense categories:
The "wholly and exclusively" rule: Revenue only allows expenses that are genuinely and entirely for business purposes. Mixed-use expenses (like a phone used for both personal and business) can only be claimed for the business-use proportion. Personal expenses โ your own food, clothing, entertainment โ are never allowable even if you work from home.
Keep every receipt. Revenue can audit your expenses for up to 6 years from the date of filing. Use accounting software or a simple spreadsheet to log every business expense as it occurs โ not at the end of the year from memory. This also ensures you don't miss anything.
Select your tax status and pension contribution
Choose Single, Married (one income) or Married (two incomes). This determines your income tax cut-off point and personal tax credits. For married couples where both spouses work, the tax bands can be shared between you โ this is handled through joint assessment. The calculator applies standard credits for each status.
If you contribute to a pension โ a PRSA, RAC or executive pension โ enter the percentage of your gross income you contribute. Pension contributions receive income tax relief at your marginal rate (20% or 40%) and are deducted before income tax is calculated. This is one of the most tax-efficient moves available to self-employed people. Your age determines the maximum relief percentage: under 30 is 15%, rising to 40% at age 60 and over. USC and PRSI relief is not available on pension contributions.
If you hold a full medical card and your income is โฌ60,000 or less, you qualify for a reduced USC rate: 0.5% on the first โฌ12,012 and 2% on the balance, instead of the standard bands. Above โฌ60,000 the standard rates apply regardless of medical card status.
Read your results
The results show your estimated tax liability broken down across all three taxes, your net profit after all deductions, and three preliminary tax figures. Here is what each means:
Your gross income minus business expenses minus all tax (income tax, USC and PRSI). This is the money that is actually yours after all obligations are met. It does not include VAT collected (which was never yours) or any amounts still owed to clients.
Calculated on your net profit (gross income minus expenses minus pension) at the standard and higher rates after applying the Personal Credit (โฌ2,000) and Earned Income Credit (โฌ2,000). Note: self-employed people receive the Earned Income Credit โ not the PAYE credit โ which are the same amount but have different rules.
USC is charged on your taxable business income in four bands โ gross income minus allowable business expenses, before pension deductions. The key difference from PAYE is that self-employed people whose taxable self-employed income exceeds โฌ100,000 face an additional 3% USC surcharge โ bringing the top rate from 8% to 11% on that portion. The calculator flags this with a warning banner when your income crosses this threshold.
Self-employed people pay Class S PRSI at a blended 2026 rate of approximately 4.2375%. The minimum annual contribution is โฌ650 where liable. You are exempt if your total income is below โฌ5,000. Class S provides a different range of social welfare benefits than Class A employment contributions โ check gov.ie for current entitlements as coverage has expanded in recent years.
The calculator shows three figures used for preliminary tax planning: your total liability for the year, your preliminary tax amount (90% of current year, or 100% of prior year โ whichever method you use), and the balance figure โ shown as 10% of your current year liability, representing the amount still outstanding after a 90% preliminary payment. See Step 5 for a full explanation of preliminary tax.
Worked example โ freelance consultant earning โฌ75,000
Here is a complete walkthrough for a single freelance consultant with โฌ75,000 gross income and โฌ8,000 in allowable business expenses.
Single ยท Gross income โฌ75,000 ยท Expenses โฌ8,000 ยท No pension ยท 2026
Pension impact: If this consultant contributes 10% of gross income (โฌ7,500) to a pension, their taxable income drops from โฌ67,000 to โฌ59,500. At the 40% marginal rate, that saves approximately โฌ3,000 in income tax โ meaning the real cost of the pension contribution is only โฌ4,500 after tax relief. Use the pension field in the calculator to see the exact impact.
Note on USC and PRSI: In this calculator, USC and PRSI are both calculated on net profit after expenses (โฌ67,000 in this example) โ the same base as income tax. This reflects how Revenue assesses self-employed income under self-assessment.
Preliminary tax โ Ireland's self-employed payment system
Preliminary tax is one of the most important concepts for anyone moving from PAYE employment to self-employment. Unlike PAYE where tax is deducted in real-time, self-employed people pay their tax in arrears โ with a preliminary payment in advance for the current year.
The double payment in year one: In your first year of self-employment, you must pay two amounts on 31 October: a preliminary payment for the current year and the balance for your first year of trading. This means your first October tax bill can be up to 1.9ร your annual liability. Plan for this from day one โ it catches many new freelancers off guard.
File via ROS: Revenue Online Service gives you an extended deadline (typically mid-November instead of 31 October) for both filing and payment if you use ROS. Register at ros.ie.
The 3% USC surcharge โ income above โฌ100,000
Self-employed people whose taxable self-employed income exceeds โฌ100,000 face an additional 3% USC surcharge that does not apply to PAYE employees. This brings the top USC rate from 8% to 11% on the portion above โฌ100,000.
USC on โฌ120,000 gross income โ self-employed vs PAYE
The calculator automatically applies the surcharge and displays a warning banner when your income exceeds โฌ100,000. One way to reduce exposure to the surcharge is through pension contributions โ if you can contribute enough to bring gross income below โฌ100,000, the surcharge may not apply.
Self-employed tax rates at a glance โ 2026
| Tax | Rate / bands | Key self-employed difference |
|---|---|---|
| Income Tax | 20% up to cut-off; 40% above | Earned Income Credit (โฌ2,000) instead of PAYE Credit โ same amount, different eligibility |
| USC | 0.5% / 2% / 3% / 8% | +3% surcharge on income above โฌ100,000 (top rate 11%) โ PAYE employees exempt |
| PRSI | Class S: ~4.2375% | Minimum โฌ650/year. Different social welfare entitlements than Class A contributors. No employer PRSI payable. |
| Filing | Form 11 annually | 31 October deadline (mid-November via ROS). Preliminary tax also due on same date. |
| VAT | Register if income > โฌ42,500 (services) / โฌ85,000 (goods) | VAT-registered sole traders file separate VAT returns (typically bi-monthly) |
How much tax does a freelancer pay in Ireland?
A common question for anyone going self-employed is: "What percentage of my income will go to tax?" The table below shows approximate effective tax rates for a single sole trader with no expenses or pension contributions in 2026. Unlike the worked example above, these figures assume the annual profit shown is the full taxable amount โ no expenses have been deducted. Use the calculator for your specific situation.
| Annual profit | Income Tax | USC | PRSI (Class S) | Total tax | Effective rate | Take-home |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| โฌ30,000 | โฌ2,000 | โฌ433 | โฌ1,271 | โฌ3,704 | 12.3% | โฌ26,296 |
| โฌ50,000 | โฌ7,200 | โฌ1,033 | โฌ2,119 | โฌ10,352 | 20.7% | โฌ39,648 |
| โฌ75,000 | โฌ17,200 | โฌ2,031 | โฌ3,178 | โฌ22,409 | 29.9% | โฌ52,591 |
| โฌ100,000 | โฌ27,200 | โฌ4,031 | โฌ4,238 | โฌ35,468 | 35.5% | โฌ64,532 |
| โฌ120,000 | โฌ35,200 | โฌ6,231 | โฌ5,085 | โฌ46,516 | 38.8% | โฌ73,484 |
These are estimates for illustration only โ for a single person, no expenses, no pension, no medical card. Your actual tax bill will be different. Adding business expenses and pension contributions can significantly reduce the effective rate. Use the calculator with your specific figures for a personalised estimate.
Above โฌ100,000 the effective rate rises sharply because the 3% USC surcharge kicks in. A sole trader earning โฌ100,001 pays 11% USC on that extra โฌ1 โ making pension contributions particularly valuable around this threshold.
Frequently asked questions
Do freelancers pay more tax than employees in Ireland?
Not necessarily. At many income levels the overall tax burden is broadly similar. Self-employed people may pay additional USC on income above โฌ100,000 (the 3% surcharge does not apply to PAYE employees) and have different PRSI entitlements. However, self-employed people have access to more tax-reduction tools โ particularly pension contributions, allowable business expense deductions, and the ability to manage the timing of income. A well-organised sole trader can often achieve a lower effective tax rate than an equivalently-paid PAYE employee. The answer depends heavily on income level and individual circumstances.
How much should I set aside for tax as a sole trader?
A common rule of thumb is to set aside 25โ35% of every payment you receive into a separate savings account. At lower income levels (โฌ30,000โโฌ50,000), 25% is usually sufficient. At higher incomes โ particularly above โฌ44,000 where the 40% income tax rate kicks in โ 35โ40% is safer. Use this calculator with your expected annual income to get a more precise estimate for your situation.
Can I claim broadband as a business expense?
Yes, but only the business-use proportion. If you use broadband 50% for work and 50% personally, you can claim 50% of the cost. Revenue does not accept a 100% claim for broadband that is also used for personal purposes. The same applies to phone bills โ only the business-use proportion is allowable. Keep records of how you calculate the split.
Do I need to register for VAT as a sole trader?
VAT registration is required once your annual turnover exceeds โฌ42,500 for services or โฌ85,000 for goods. Below these thresholds, registration is voluntary. Voluntary registration can be beneficial if your suppliers charge VAT โ it allows you to reclaim that input VAT. Once registered, you must charge VAT on applicable sales, file VAT returns (usually bi-monthly) and pay the net VAT to Revenue. Use our VAT Calculator to calculate VAT on your invoices.
When is Form 11 due?
The Form 11 self-assessment return for a given tax year is due by 31 October of the following year. If you file and pay through ROS (Revenue Online Service), the deadline is typically extended to mid-November. On the same date, your preliminary tax for the current year is also due. Register at ros.ie early โ setting up ROS access takes time and you don't want to be doing it in late October.
How much can I earn before paying tax as a sole trader in Ireland?
As a single sole trader with no expenses or pension contributions in 2026, you begin paying income tax once your profit exceeds โฌ20,000 โ the point at which your total tax credits (โฌ2,000 Personal Credit + โฌ2,000 Earned Income Credit = โฌ4,000) exactly offset the 20% tax on that income (โฌ20,000 ร 20% = โฌ4,000). USC begins at โฌ13,001. PRSI Class S is exempt below โฌ5,000 annual income. In practice, most sole traders have some business expenses which reduce their taxable profit and push the tax entry point higher.
What is the difference between a sole trader and a limited company?
As a sole trader, you and your business are the same legal entity โ you are personally liable for any business debts and all profits are taxed at your personal income tax rates. As a director of a limited company, the company is a separate legal entity, profits are subject to Corporation Tax (12.5% on trading profits), and you extract money via salary and/or dividends. For lower incomes, sole trader is simpler. For consistent profits above โฌ60,000โโฌ80,000, incorporating may offer tax advantages, depending on how much profit you need to draw personally โ but comes with additional compliance costs. Always take professional advice before incorporating.
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