Quarterly Estimated Tax Payments: When and How Much
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Quarterly Estimated Tax Payments: When and How Much
Tax information is for educational purposes only and does not constitute tax advice. Consult a licensed tax professional for your specific situation.
If you are self-employed, a freelancer, a gig worker, or have income without tax withholding, you are likely required to make quarterly estimated tax payments. Missing these payments results in penalties that add up every quarter.
Who Must Make Estimated Payments?
You generally must make estimated payments if:
- You expect to owe $1,000 or more in federal tax after subtracting withholding and credits
- Your withholding and credits will be less than the smaller of:
- 90% of the current year’s tax
- 100% of the prior year’s tax (110% if prior year AGI exceeded $150,000)
This commonly applies to:
- Self-employed individuals and freelancers
- Gig workers (Uber, DoorDash, etc.)
- Landlords with rental income
- Investors with significant capital gains or dividends
- Retirees without adequate withholding
- Anyone with a side business
2026 Quarterly Payment Deadlines
| Quarter | Income Period | Due Date |
|---|---|---|
| Q1 | January 1 – March 31 | April 15, 2026 |
| Q2 | April 1 – May 31 | June 16, 2026 |
| Q3 | June 1 – August 31 | September 15, 2026 |
| Q4 | September 1 – December 31 | January 15, 2027 |
Note: The quarters are not evenly distributed. Q2 covers only two months, while Q3 covers three.
If the due date falls on a weekend or holiday, the deadline shifts to the next business day.
For all 2026 dates, see Tax Filing Deadlines 2026: Every Important Date.
How to Calculate Your Estimated Payments
Method 1: Prior Year Safe Harbor (Simplest)
Take your total tax from last year and divide by four. Pay that amount each quarter.
| Prior Year AGI | Pay at Least |
|---|---|
| $150,000 or less | 100% of prior year tax (÷ 4 per quarter) |
| Over $150,000 | 110% of prior year tax (÷ 4 per quarter) |
Example: Your 2025 total tax was $20,000 and your AGI was under $150,000. Each quarterly payment: $20,000 / 4 = $5,000.
This guarantees no underpayment penalty, even if your 2026 income is much higher.
Method 2: Current Year Estimate
Estimate your 2026 income, deductions, and credits. Calculate the expected tax and divide by four (or by remaining quarters if starting mid-year).
This method is better if:
- Your income has dropped significantly from last year
- You are starting a new business
- Your income varies widely by quarter
Method 3: Annualized Income Installment Method
For filers with irregular income (seasonal businesses, commissioned workers), this method calculates each quarter’s payment based on income actually earned in that period. File Form 2210 Schedule AI to use this method.
Use our Estimated Quarterly Tax Calculator for an instant calculation.
How to Make Payments
| Method | Details |
|---|---|
| IRS Direct Pay (irs.gov) | Free; pay from bank account; no registration required |
| EFTPS (Electronic Federal Tax Payment System) | Free; requires registration; best for recurring payments |
| IRS2Go app | Mobile payment through Direct Pay or card |
| Credit/debit card | Through approved processors; fees apply (1.85%–1.98% credit; $2.50 debit) |
| Check/money order | Mail with Form 1040-ES voucher |
Recommended: Set up EFTPS for automatic quarterly payments. Once registered, you can schedule payments in advance and never miss a deadline.
Underpayment Penalties
If you do not pay enough by each quarterly deadline, the IRS charges a penalty calculated at the federal short-term interest rate plus 3 percentage points (approximately 8% in 2026).
The penalty is calculated separately for each quarter, so a late Q1 payment accrues penalties longer than a late Q4 payment.
How to Avoid Penalties
- Use the safe harbor — Pay 100% of last year’s tax (110% if AGI over $150,000)
- Pay on time — Even if your estimate is imperfect, paying something each quarter reduces penalties
- Increase W-2 withholding — If you have a day job, increase withholding to cover side income (withholding is treated as paid evenly throughout the year, even if increased in Q4)
- Use the annualized method — Reduces payments in low-income quarters
Estimated Payments for State Taxes
Most states with income tax also require quarterly estimated payments. Due dates typically mirror the federal schedule, but some states differ.
| State | Same as Federal? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| California | Yes | Uses Form 540-ES |
| New York | Yes | Uses Form IT-2105 |
| Texas | N/A | No state income tax |
| Illinois | Yes | Uses Form IL-1040-ES |
Check State Income Tax Comparison: All 50 States Ranked for your state’s requirements.
Tips for Managing Quarterly Payments
- Set aside money with each payment received — Transfer 25–30% of every gig or freelance payment into a dedicated tax savings account
- Automate payments — Use EFTPS to schedule quarterly payments automatically
- Reconcile quarterly — Compare estimated payments to actual income each quarter and adjust
- Keep records — Save confirmation numbers and receipts for every payment
- Overpay slightly — A small overpayment is better than an underpayment penalty; you will get the excess back as a refund
Key Takeaways
- Quarterly estimated payments are required if you expect to owe $1,000+ after withholding
- The safe harbor method (100% or 110% of prior year tax) is the simplest way to avoid penalties
- Payments are due April 15, June 16, September 15, and January 15
- IRS Direct Pay and EFTPS are the best free payment methods
- Underpayment penalties are calculated separately for each quarter at approximately 8%
- State estimated payments are usually required in addition to federal
Next Steps
- Calculate your payments with the Estimated Quarterly Tax Calculator
- Read the full Self-Employment Tax Guide: Everything Freelancers Need to Know for SE tax context
- Check all deadlines at Tax Filing Deadlines 2026: Every Important Date
- File with the right software — Best Tax Software for Self-Employed 2026
- Need help with planning? Find a CPA Near You