Why Gig Workers Pay Quarterly
The US tax system operates on a pay-as-you-go basis. Traditional employees have taxes withheld from every paycheck, so they're paying throughout the year automatically. Gig workers have no employer withholding — which means the IRS requires you to estimate and pay your taxes four times per year instead of once.
If you expect to owe more than $1,000 in taxes for the year, you're required to make these quarterly payments. Missing them doesn't mean you lose the right to pay — it means you'll owe a small underpayment penalty on top of your regular tax bill when you file in April.
The Unusual Q2 Period
Note that Q2 covers only April and May — just two months instead of three. This is a quirk of the IRS calendar. Q1 covers January–March (3 months), Q2 covers April–May (2 months), Q3 covers June–August (3 months), and Q4 covers September–December (4 months). Budget accordingly — Q2 is a shorter period but still requires a payment.
How to Calculate Your Payment Amount
You have two options for determining how much to pay each quarter, and either satisfies the IRS requirement to avoid penalties:
Option A: Pay based on actual quarterly income (most accurate)
Calculate your actual net self-employment income for the quarter (gross earnings minus business deductions), then apply your estimated tax rate (SE tax + income tax). This requires tracking your income and deductions actively throughout the quarter. Use our Quarterly Tax Calculator to get your exact number.
Option B: Safe harbor payments (simplest method)
The IRS "safe harbor" rule protects you from underpayment penalties as long as you pay a qualifying amount — regardless of what you actually owe. See the safe harbor rules table below.
| Your Situation | Safe Harbor Requirement | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Prior year tax under $150,000 AGI | 100% of prior year's tax bill | No underpayment penalty |
| Prior year tax over $150,000 AGI | 110% of prior year's tax bill | No underpayment penalty |
| Any year | 90% of current year's actual tax | No underpayment penalty |
| Practical approach | Pay 25% of last year's total tax bill each quarter | Simplest safe harbor method |
Underpayment Penalty Estimator
Missed a quarterly payment or underpaid? Estimate your penalty here:
How to Make Your Quarterly Payment
- Go to irs.gov/payments
- Click "Pay Now with Direct Pay"
- Select reason: "Estimated Tax"
- Select form: "1040-ES"
- Enter your bank info and amount
- Save the confirmation number
- Download "IRS2Go" from your app store
- Tap "Make a Payment"
- Follow same steps as Direct Pay
- Confirmation sent by email
- Download Form 1040-ES from irs.gov
- Fill in the quarterly payment voucher
- Write a check to "United States Treasury"
- Mail to the IRS address for your state
- Found Plus: auto-pays quarterly taxes
- TurboTax: calculates and can initiate payment
- Lance: has IRS payment integration
What Happens If You Miss a Quarterly Deadline
Missing a quarterly deadline is not catastrophic — but it does cost you. Here's what actually happens and what to do:
The underpayment penalty
The IRS charges an underpayment penalty of approximately 8% annually (2% per quarter) on the amount you should have paid but didn't. For a $2,000 underpayment for one quarter, that's about $40 in penalty — annoying but not devastating. The penalty is calculated when you file your annual return.
What to do right now
If you've missed a quarter, the best action is to pay now — even late. Late payment stops additional penalty from accruing. You can pay Q1 and Q2 amounts together when Q3 is due if needed. The IRS applies late payments to the oldest outstanding quarter first.
Situations where no penalty applies
- You met the safe harbor requirements (100%/110% of prior year tax)
- Your total tax bill for the year is under $1,000
- You had no tax liability in the prior year
- You experienced a qualifying hardship or disaster (requires IRS waiver form)
Quarterly Tax FAQ
Not necessarily. If your W-2 employer withholds enough tax to cover your total liability (including gig income), you may not need to make separate quarterly payments. The simplest check: increase your W-4 withholding at your day job by the amount you'd otherwise pay quarterly. Ask your payroll department to withhold an extra fixed dollar amount per paycheck to cover your gig income taxes.
Yes, but you can use the annualized income installment method (Form 2210, Schedule AI) to calculate payments based on actual income per period rather than an annual estimate divided by 4. This helps if your income is heavily seasonal — say you earn most of your income in Q3 and Q4, you can pay less in Q1 and Q2 without penalty. This calculation is more complex; tax software handles it automatically.
Yes. If you overpay estimated taxes throughout the year, the excess will appear as a refund when you file your annual return (or you can apply it toward next year's estimated taxes). Many gig workers deliberately overpay slightly to guarantee a refund rather than risk an underpayment situation. The downside is you're giving the IRS an interest-free loan — but the peace of mind may be worth it.
Look at Line 24 "Total tax" on your prior year Form 1040. If you filed with tax software, you can find this in your prior year return documents. Divide that number by 4 and pay that amount each quarter. If your prior year AGI was over $150,000, use 110% of the prior year tax divided by 4.