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I've been thinking of doing some Freelance work on the side but am just unsure of how to handle the taxes from the extra income.

  • Is it a special form that you have to file? Or is it just a line item on the normal 1099?
  • Do I need to declare everything? If someone pays me 300 dollars to build them 1 page, can't I declare that as a gift?
  • Should I just put away 33% of everything I earn in a savings account to give to the IRS at the end of the year?
  • Also, will this knock my normal income into a higher tax bracket causing me to have to pay higher taxes on that?
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SO is very definitely not a place to ask tax advice questions. – Greg Hewgill Sep 23 '08 at 1:50
Keep in mind that there will be different rules and regulations everywhere.. I assume you're in the US? – Dexter Sep 23 '08 at 1:50

closed as not programming related by Greg Hewgill Sep 23 '08 at 1:50

2 Answers

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You have to file a Form 1040 Schedule C (Or C-EZ). You can't declare such income as a gift. You should pay estimated taxes quarterly, and good to save it for the quarterly payments. If you wait until the end of the year you may have to pay a penalty. It depends on how much you make as to whether it will put you in a higher bracket, but the higher brackets are graduated smoothly, so it won't just be a sudden jump. You may want to take advantage of the retirement plans such as SEP and SIMPLE which allow you to save a lot of it for yourself and reduce your taxes.

See the IRS site for more info: Small Business and Self Employment

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I suggest that an accountant or Tax Advisor would be the best person to help you with this issue. I doubt the IRS would look kindly on an explanation of 'But this is what someone of the internet told me to do' for any mistake you might make.

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