Let’s be completely honest about it: taxes are really complicated. If you’re an employee, they’re relatively benign because they’re automatically taken out of your paycheck before you even see it. But if you’re a freelancer or you’re running your own business, dealing with taxes is not so black and white.
One of these more opaque areas is quarterly taxes. When you’re an employee, the government gets paid every time you get paid. However, the same is not true for money earned by a company or freelancer, there is no money being withheld from your income. That leaves the government without its cut and instead of waiting until the end of the year, the government would rather get their payments every quarter.
Unlike in employee income taxes where they know exactly how much they owe, a freelancer or a company will pay taxes based on a system of estimated taxes. This means the freelancer or company calculates how much taxes they think they’ll owe for that quarter and they make a payment.
This is not equivalent to filing taxes. Taxes will be filed at the end of the year when you have full information about how much you made. You then will either receive a refund or a bill, depending on whether you underpaid or overpaid in these estimated quarterly payments.
In this two part series, we’ll be explaining quarterly taxes for both freelancers