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Gig Worker Finances: Taxes, Benefits, and Retirement in 2026

The complete financial guide for Uber drivers, DoorDash couriers, freelancers, and other gig workers. Taxes, quarterly payments, health insurance, and how to build retirement without a 401k.

February 24, 20269 min read
$1.240.500 Disponible este mes Gastos 68% Ahorro 32% Registrar gasto

Over 59 million Americans participated in gig work in 2025. The flexibility is real — but so are the financial challenges: no employer tax contributions, no automatic retirement savings, no employer health insurance, and an income volatility that makes budgeting harder.

The tax reality gig workers discover too late

As a gig worker, you pay both the employee AND employer portions of Social Security and Medicare tax. That's 15.3% on top of income tax. An employee earning $50,000 has their employer pay 7.65% invisibly. A gig worker earning $50,000 net pays 15.3% = $7,650 in SE tax before any income tax.

Quarterly estimated tax payments: your new calendar

Period coveredPayment due
January 1 – March 31April 15
April 1 – May 31June 16
June 1 – August 31September 15
September 1 – December 31January 15 (next year)

Safe harbor rule: pay at least 100% of last year's total tax liability (110% if income over $150,000) in quarterly payments to avoid underpayment penalty.

Deductions gig workers should track obsessively

  • Mileage: 67 cents/mile in 2026 for business miles. On 20,000 business miles: $13,400 deduction.
  • Phone: Percentage used for business. Keep records.
  • Home office: Dedicated space used exclusively for work. Simplified: $5/sq ft, max 300 sq ft = $1,500.
  • Platform fees: Uber, DoorDash, Upwork service fees are deductible.
  • Equipment: Camera, laptop, tools specific to the gig.
  • Health insurance premiums: 100% deductible above the line.

Retirement options without a 401(k)

  • Solo 401(k): For self-employed with no employees. Employee contribution: $23,500. Employer contribution: up to 25% of net SE income. Total potential: up to $70,000 in 2026.
  • SEP-IRA: Simpler to set up. Contribute up to 25% of net SE income, max $70,000.
  • Roth IRA: $7,000/year, income limits apply. Best for lower-income years.

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