Meta description: Wondering how much to save for gig worker taxes? This simple formula helps DoorDash, Uber Eats & freelance workers avoid a nasty surprise at tax time.
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If you’re driving for DoorDash, shopping for Instacart, or delivering for Uber Eats, nobody is withholding taxes from your paycheck — because there is no paycheck in the traditional sense. Every week, that deposit hits your bank account looking clean and full. No deductions. No withholding. Just money.
And that’s exactly how gig workers get wrecked at tax time.
The IRS absolutely still expects its cut. The difference is you have to be the one holding it in reserve. Miss that memo, and April becomes an expensive, stressful month. This guide breaks down the gig worker tax savings formula in plain language — with real numbers — so you know exactly how much to set aside and when.
The Core Formula: Save 25–30% of Every Deposit
Here’s the honest number most experienced gig workers eventually land on: save 25–30% of your net earnings every single time you get paid. That sounds aggressive, but let’s see exactly why.
As a 1099 independent contractor, you’re hit with two layers of tax:
1. Self-Employment (SE) Tax — 15.3%
This replaces the Social Security and Medicare taxes that a W-2 employer would split with you. When you’re self-employed, you pay both the employee and employer share. That’s 12.4% for Social Security and 2.9% for Medicare. The good news: you can deduct half of this SE tax on your federal return.
2. Federal Income Tax — 10–22% for most gig workers
This depends on your total income for the year. If gig work is your main income and you’re bringing in $40,000–$60,000 net, you’re likely sitting in the 22% federal bracket.
Put it together with a real example:
Say you make $1,200 in a week across DoorDash and Uber Eats deliveries.
\The IRS lets you calculate SE tax on 92.35% of net self-employment income, which slightly reduces the base.*
Now, once you factor in deductions (more on those below), your actual taxable income drops significantly — which is why the real-world sweet spot for most delivery drivers settles around 25–30%. Saving 30% keeps you safe without over-withholding. Saving 25% works if you’re diligent about tracking deductions.
The simple rule of thumb from r/doordash: “Save 15–20% minimum if you’re tracking mileage aggressively. Save 25–30% if you’re not tracking much.” That’s solid street-level wisdom backed by the math.
> Quick action: Open a separate savings account labeled “Taxes.” Every time you get paid — Stripe transfer, DasherDirect deposit, whatever — move 25–30% straight into it. Treat it like it was never yours. Tools like [TurboTax Self-Employed](https://turbotax.intuit.com/self-employed-taxes/) let you estimate your quarterly bill in real time so you’re never caught off guard.
Deductions That Can Seriously Lower Your Bill
Here’s where gig workers leave the most money on the table: deductions. The IRS allows independent contractors to deduct legitimate business expenses, which reduces the net income that gets taxed. Less taxable income = smaller tax bill.
The biggest deductions for delivery drivers:
Check out mileage tracking apps for our top picks on automatically logging your miles — it takes two minutes to set up and can save you hundreds at tax time.
A tool like QuickBooks Self-Employed automatically categorizes these expenses throughout the year and exports them directly to your Schedule C at tax time. No more digging through receipts in March.
When to Actually Pay: The 2026 Quarterly Deadlines
Here’s the part most new gig workers miss: the IRS doesn’t want to wait until April. If you expect to owe $1,000 or more in taxes for the year, you’re required to make quarterly estimated tax payments using Form 1040-ES.
2026 Quarterly Estimated Tax Due Dates:
Miss these dates and the IRS tacks on an underpayment penalty — not huge, but annoying and completely avoidable. Set calendar reminders now.
How much do you send each quarter? Take your saved tax amount and divide by four — or use your actual earnings that quarter multiplied by your 25–30% rate. Many gig workers just pay what they’ve saved each quarter and call it done. This works great if you’ve been disciplined about that separate savings account.
For budgeting DoorDash income, building quarterly tax payments into your monthly budget from day one makes this process painless.
The Bottom Line: The Formula That Keeps You Safe
There’s no single magic number that works for every gig worker, but this framework covers the vast majority of DoorDash drivers, Uber Eats couriers, Instacart shoppers, and freelancers:
Save 25–30% of every deposit. Track every mile. Pay quarterly.
Let’s run the full picture one more time with a realistic annual income:
Gig worker earning $45,000/year gross:
That’s the goal — no nasty surprises, no scrambling for cash in April. If you’re not already using a self-employed tax tool to track this in real time, TurboTax Self-Employed walks you through every deduction and calculates your quarterly payments automatically. It’s worth it for the peace of mind alone.
Stay consistent, keep that tax account separate, and treat your gig income like the small business it actually is.
This article is for informational purposes only. Consult a tax professional for personalized advice.