Compare Employee vs Contractor Pay

W-2 vs 1099: Which Is Better for You?

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The Question That Matters More Than the Headline Rate

When comparing a W-2 salary to a 1099 contract rate, the headline numbers are almost never the right comparison. A $100,000 W-2 salary and a $100,000 1099 contract do not produce the same take-home pay — not even close. The tax treatment, benefits, and structural costs of each arrangement create significant differences in what you actually keep.

The right question isn't "which pays more?" — it's "which produces better after-tax, after-benefits compensation given my specific situation?" Use the W-2 vs 1099 calculator to run your specific numbers.

Side-by-Side Comparison

Factor W-2 Employee 1099 Contractor
Self-employment taxEmployer pays half (7.65%)You pay full 15.3%
Health insuranceEmployer typically covers 50–80%You pay full premium
Retirement match3–6% of salary typicalNone — you fund entirely
Paid time off2–4 weeks typicalEvery day off is unpaid
Business expensesEmployer coversYou pay, then deduct
Quarterly taxesWithheld automaticallyYou pay estimated taxes
FlexibilityLess — set hours, policiesMore — but not always
Income stabilitySteady paycheckIrregular; client-dependent
Deductions availableLimitedHome office, equipment, more

The Tax Difference: Where Most People Get It Wrong

The most significant financial difference between W-2 and 1099 is self-employment (SE) tax. As a W-2 employee, your employer pays 7.65% in payroll taxes on your behalf (Social Security + Medicare) and you pay the other 7.65% through payroll withholding. As a 1099 contractor, you pay both halves — the full 15.3%.

On $100,000 of net self-employment income, that's $14,130 in SE tax (after the deductible portion) versus $7,650 as an employee — a $6,480 difference before income tax even enters the picture.

The 1099 contractor does get a partial offset: you can deduct half of SE tax on your federal income tax return (reducing your taxable income by approximately $7,065 on $100k of SE income), which saves roughly $1,590 in federal income tax if you're in the 22% bracket. Net additional tax burden vs W-2: approximately $4,890 on $100k income. Higher income increases this gap.

Quantifying the Benefits Gap

Benefits are the other major hidden cost of switching from W-2 to 1099. For a typical W-2 position with a standard benefits package, the value of what you give up includes:

Total benefits value for a typical package: $15,000–$35,000/year. This is the gap a 1099 rate must overcome before you break even with a W-2, in addition to the higher SE tax burden.

When W-2 Is Clearly Better

W-2 wins when:

You value income stability, need employer-sponsored health insurance (especially with dependents), are early in your career and value the structure and mentorship of full employment, have limited tolerance for business administration overhead, or the 1099 rate isn't at least 30–40% above the W-2 equivalent to justify the tax and benefits gap.

When 1099 Is Clearly Better

1099 wins when:

The contract rate is meaningfully higher (35%+ above W-2 equivalent), you have health insurance through a spouse or other source, you have legitimate business deductions that reduce your taxable income significantly, you value the flexibility of working for multiple clients, or you're building toward a business with clients beyond a single employer relationship.

The Break-Even Rate

The break-even 1099 rate — the contractor rate at which your after-tax, after-benefits take-home equals your W-2 take-home — is typically 30–50% above your W-2 hourly equivalent, depending on your tax situation and benefits package.

Example: a $100,000 W-2 salary worker with a standard benefits package needs approximately $130,000–$145,000 in 1099 income to achieve the same net financial position, depending on their specific tax situation, health insurance costs, and PTO usage.

The calculator computes your personal break-even rate based on your actual benefits, tax bracket, and filing status. Run it before accepting any offer in either direction.