Self-Employment Tax Calculator for Independent Architects (2025)
How much tax does a self-employed architect pay? A architect earning $130,000 with about $25,000 in business expenses owes roughly $27,753 in total federal tax for 2025 — a 15.3% self-employment tax plus federal income tax — or about $6,938 per quarter. A common rule of thumb is to set aside 25–30% of net income for taxes. Use the calculator below for your own numbers and state.
Independent and sole-practitioner architects are paid on 1099s or through their own firms with no withholding, so you owe self-employment tax plus income tax on net profit. This calculator estimates both and flags S-corp savings for higher earners.
This tool provides estimates for educational purposes only and is not tax advice. Tax rules change; figures are based on 2025 federal rules. Consult a tax professional for your specific situation.
Deductions Architects often miss
Solo and small-practice architects commonly net $70,000–$160,000, and principals with steady commercial work earn more. Because income is high, an S-corp election is often a major self-employment-tax saver — discuss with a CPA.
- CAD & design software
- AutoCAD, Revit, ArchiCAD, SketchUp Pro, Adobe, and BIM/rendering subscriptions are fully deductible business tools.
- Computers & plotters (Section 179)
- Workstations, large monitors, and large-format plotters/printers can often be fully expensed under Section 179 in the purchase year.
- Licensing & continuing education
- State licensing fees, NCARB dues, AIA membership, and continuing-education (HSW) courses required to keep your license are deductible.
- Professional liability insurance
- Architects' errors & omissions (E&O) insurance is a significant and fully deductible business expense.
- Home office & travel
- A dedicated home office (actual costs or $5/sq ft up to 300 sq ft) and travel to sites, jurisdictions, and clients (70¢/mile driving) are deductible.
Common tax mistakes for architects
- Not electing S-corp status at high, stable profit and overpaying self-employment tax.
- Forgetting to deduct expensive E&O insurance and licensing renewals.
- Under-paying quarterly estimates on large, milestone-based project fees.
- Missing Section 179 on workstations and plotters by depreciating slowly instead.
How self-employment tax works
As a self-employed architect, you pay a 15.3% self-employment tax (12.4% Social Security + 2.9% Medicare) on 92.35% of your net profit, plus federal and state income tax. A common rule of thumb is to set aside 25–30% of your net income for taxes.
Quarterly estimated tax deadlines (2025)
If you expect to owe $1,000 or more, the IRS requires quarterly estimated payments. For 2025 income the deadlines are: April 15, 2025; June 16, 2025; September 15, 2025; and January 15, 2026. Missing them can trigger underpayment penalties. The calculator above estimates your quarterly amount.
Frequently asked questions
- Should an independent architect form an S-corp?
- Often yes once net profit is reliably above roughly $90,000–$100,000. You pay a reasonable salary (subject to payroll tax) and take the rest as distributions that avoid the 15.3% SE tax, which can save thousands annually. Confirm the reasonable-salary figure with a CPA.
- What can architects deduct on their taxes?
- CAD/BIM software, workstations and plotters (often Section 179), state licensing, NCARB/AIA dues, continuing education, E&O insurance, a home office, and site travel. Ordinary, necessary business costs qualify.
- How much self-employment tax do solo architects pay?
- 15.3% on 92.35% of net earnings (12.4% Social Security up to $176,100 for 2025, plus 2.9% Medicare with no cap), on top of income tax. High earners also owe the 0.9% Additional Medicare Tax above certain thresholds.
- Is professional liability insurance tax deductible for architects?
- Yes. Errors & omissions (E&O) insurance is an ordinary and necessary business expense and is fully deductible on Schedule C (or the S-corp return), reducing both income and self-employment tax.