Tax Comparison · New Hampshire · 2026
New Hampshire 1099 vs W2 Calculator (2026)
Should you take the 1099 contract or the W2 job offer in New Hampshire? This calculator shows your real take-home after self-employment tax, federal income tax, and New Hampshire state tax (0% on wages — no income tax on earned income). Enter both hourly rates below — the state tax rate is pre-filled for New Hampshire.
New Hampshire 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.
| W2 Annual Salary | W2 Take-Home | 1099 Take-Home (same gross) | 1099 Shortfall | Break-Even 1099 | Premium % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $50,000 | $42,214 | $39,398 | −$2,816 | $53,769 | +7.5% |
| $60,000 | $50,248 | $46,869 | −$3,379 | $64,522 | +7.5% |
| $75,000 | $61,148 | $57,455 | −$3,694 | $80,646 | +7.5% |
| $100,000 | $78,736 | $73,811 | −$4,925 | $107,528 | +7.5% |
| $125,000 | $96,190 | $90,167 | −$6,024 | $134,408 | +7.5% |
| $150,000 | $113,278 | $106,102 | −$7,176 | $161,289 | +7.5% |
| $200,000 | $148,414 | $137,907 | −$10,507 | $214,268 | +7.1% |
* 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 New Hampshire 1099 vs W2 comparison
Since New Hampshire has no state income tax, the 1099 vs W2 comparison is driven entirely by the self-employment tax gap. As a W2 employee, your employer pays 7.65% FICA on your behalf — you never see it. As a 1099 contractor in New Hampshire, you pay the full 15.3% SE tax, but deduct half above the line, reducing your federal taxable income. The net effect: 1099 contractors in New Hampshire typically need 15–20% higher gross income than their W2 peers to take home the same amount.
W2 Employee — Deductions Applied
1099 Contractor — Deductions Applied
New Hampshire tax context for contractors
New Hampshire has no state income tax, so neither W2 employees nor 1099 contractors pay state income tax on earned income. This makes New Hampshire one of the more contractor-friendly states — the only premium you need to negotiate is to cover the SE tax gap and benefits.
