Indiana 1099 vs W2 Tax Calculator

Tax Comparison · Indiana · 2026

Indiana 1099 vs W2 Calculator (2026)

Should you take the 1099 contract or the W2 job offer in Indiana? This calculator shows your real take-home after self-employment tax, federal income tax, and Indiana state tax (3.05% flat rate). Enter both hourly rates below — the state tax rate is pre-filled for Indiana.

✓ 3.05% flat rate state tax rate pre-filled for Indiana

Indiana 1099 vs W2 take-home by income (2026)

All figures assume a single filer, 2026 standard deduction, no business expenses or benefits deductions. "Break-Even 1099" is the gross income a contractor needs to take home the same as the W2 amount.

Indiana 1099 vs W2 After-Tax Comparison — 2026
W2 Annual SalaryW2 Take-Home1099 Take-Home
(same gross)
1099 ShortfallBreak-Even 1099Premium %
$50,000$40,688$37,873−$2,816$53,929+7.9%
$60,000$48,418$45,039−$3,379$64,715+7.9%
$75,000$58,861$55,167−$3,694$80,922+7.9%
$100,000$75,686$70,761−$4,925$107,896+7.9%
$125,000$92,378$86,354−$6,024$134,882+7.9%
$150,000$108,703$101,527−$7,176$161,858+7.9%
$200,000$142,314$131,807−$10,507$214,884+7.4%

* Premium % = how much more gross income a 1099 contractor needs vs the W2 salary to take home the same amount, before accounting for benefits.

How we calculate the Indiana 1099 vs W2 comparison

The Indiana state income tax rate (3.05% flat rate) applies to both W2 and 1099 income equally, so it doesn't change the relative comparison. The key gap comes from SE tax: W2 employees pay 7.65% employee FICA while employers silently cover another 7.65%. As a 1099 contractor in Indiana, you pay the full 15.3% (on 92.35% of gross), but deduct half to reduce your federal taxable income. After the SE deduction and tax savings, 1099 contractors in Indiana typically need 18–25% higher gross income to match W2 take-home, depending on the bracket.

W2 Employee — Deductions Applied

Employee FICA 7.65% (SS + Medicare) — employer pays another 7.65%
Federal income tax 2026 IRS brackets — effective rate method
Indiana state income tax 3.05% flat rate

1099 Contractor — Deductions Applied

Self-employment tax 15.3% on 92.35% of gross (SS capped at $184,500)
SE tax deduction 50% of SE tax deducted above the line
Federal income tax 2026 IRS brackets on reduced taxable income
Indiana state income tax 3.05% flat rate

Indiana tax context for contractors

Indiana has a state income tax rate of 3.05% flat rate. This applies to both W2 and 1099 income, so it doesn't create a relative advantage for either arrangement. However, higher overall tax burden in Indiana makes benefits valuation — especially health insurance and retirement matching — especially important when evaluating offers.

?Indiana 1099 vs W2 questions

Yes — at the same gross income. As a 1099 contractor, you pay the full 15.3% self-employment tax (both the employer and employee FICA portions). As a W2 employee, your employer covers half (7.65%) on your behalf. However, 1099 contractors can deduct half of their SE tax above the line, which reduces their federal taxable income. In Indiana, state income tax (3.05% flat rate) applies equally to both W2 employees and 1099 contractors, so it doesn't change the relative comparison — the key difference remains the self-employment tax.
Typically 15–25% more, depending on income level. At $75,000 W2 gross, a Indiana 1099 contractor needs roughly 18–22% more gross income to take home the same amount — before accounting for benefits like health insurance, PTO, and 401(k) matching, which can add another $10,000–$20,000 in value to the W2 side. Use the comparison table on this page to see exact figures for your income level.
The SE tax rate is 15.3% on 92.35% of your net self-employment income (2026 rate). It breaks down as 12.4% Social Security (on income up to $184,500) and 2.9% Medicare (no cap). The good news: you can deduct exactly half of the SE tax you paid when calculating your federal taxable income, which partially offsets the extra burden.
Neither arrangement changes due to Indiana's tax rules — the state income tax (3.05% flat rate) applies equally to both W2 and 1099 income. The deciding factor is always the SE tax gap. High earners in Indiana should pay particular attention to benefits valuation when comparing offers.
Absolutely — benefits are often the deciding factor. A W2 offer typically includes employer-sponsored health insurance ($5,000–$15,000/year value), paid time off (2–4 weeks = 4–8% of salary), 401(k) matching (often 3–6% of salary), and other perks. A 1099 contractor must fund all of these independently. The table on this page shows the tax math; add benefits value on top to get the full comparison for your situation.

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Results are estimates for planning purposes only and do not constitute tax or financial advice. Tax rates and rules are subject to change. Updated for the 2026 tax year. Consult a qualified tax professional for advice specific to your situation.
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