State Gig Tax Guide
Texas Gig Worker Taxes: What You Actually Owe
Good news for Texas gig workers: Texas has no personal state income tax, so you won't file a state income-tax return on your gig earnings. The catch is that federal taxes don't change by state — you still owe federal income tax and the 15.3% self-employment tax on your net earnings, with nothing withheld from your payouts. Here's what that means and how to keep your bill down.
← Part of the complete Gig Worker Taxes guideHow gig taxes work for Texas workers
You're an independent contractor — nothing is withheld
Gig platforms pay you as a 1099 contractor, not an employee, so no income or payroll tax comes out of your payouts. You're responsible for setting aside and paying your own taxes.
Federal self-employment tax is 15.3%
That's 12.4% Social Security + 2.9% Medicare on your net earnings — the employer-plus-employee share that a regular job would split with you. It applies in every state, on top of federal income tax.
Federal income tax applies to your net profit
After deductions, your net gig profit is added to your other income and taxed at your federal rate. You can deduct half of your self-employment tax when figuring federal income tax.
Report all income — even without a 1099
You must report every dollar you earn whether or not a platform sends a 1099-NEC or 1099-K. Reporting thresholds for the forms change year to year; your obligation to report does not.
Does Texas have a state income tax for gig workers?
No. Texas is one of a handful of states with no personal income tax, so there's no state income-tax return on your gig earnings and no state estimated payments to make. Texas does not have an equivalent of California's FTB or New York's IT-2105 for individual income tax.
That does not make your gig income tax-free. The federal side is identical to every other state: you owe federal income tax on your net profit plus the 15.3% federal self-employment tax (12.4% Social Security + 2.9% Medicare). Because nothing is withheld, you set that money aside yourself and pay the IRS directly.
Texas funds itself largely through sales and property taxes rather than an income tax — but those aren't filed on your gig earnings. For most gig workers in Texas, the only income-tax obligation is federal, paid to the IRS through quarterly estimated payments.
Remember: no Texas income tax does not mean no taxes — the 15.3% federal self-employment tax and federal income tax still apply in full.
What Texas gig workers can deduct
Business mileage
Every mile driven while online or on a job, deducted at the IRS standard mileage rate. Usually the single largest deduction — keep a contemporaneous log.
Phone & data
The business-use percentage of your phone and data plan — you cannot accept jobs without it.
Supplies & equipment
Insulated bags, phone mounts, chargers, and other gear bought specifically for the work.
Tolls & parking
Tolls and parking paid while working are deductible (ordinary commuting tolls are not).
You can deduct the IRS standard mileage rate or your actual vehicle expenses — not both. For most drivers the standard mileage rate is simpler and larger. Keep a contemporaneous mileage log either way.
Quarterly estimated taxes
Because no tax is withheld from your payouts, the IRS expects you to pay as you go through quarterly estimated payments rather than one lump sum in April. If you expect to owe $1,000 or more in federal tax for the year, paying quarterly avoids an underpayment penalty.
Federal estimated payments are generally due around April 15, June 15, September 15, and January 15 of the following year. You file your annual federal return by April 15. Texas has no personal income tax, so there are no separate state estimated payments to make.
Frequently asked questions
Do Texas gig workers pay state income tax?
No. Texas has no personal state income tax, so you don't file a state income-tax return on your gig earnings. You still owe federal income tax and the 15.3% federal self-employment tax on your net earnings, paid to the IRS.
How much should I set aside for taxes in Texas?
A common rule of thumb is to set aside roughly 20–25% of your net earnings (what's left after mileage and other deductions) to cover the 15.3% self-employment tax plus federal income tax. With no state income tax to add, your set-aside is often a little lower than in states that tax income — but your exact rate depends on your total household income. Use the Tax Set-Aside calculator for a number tailored to your situation.
If Texas has no income tax, are my gig earnings tax-free?
No. The lack of a Texas income tax only removes the state portion. You still owe federal income tax on your net profit and the 15.3% self-employment tax, and you must report all income whether or not you receive a 1099.
Do Texas gig workers pay quarterly taxes?
Yes — federal ones. If you expect to owe $1,000 or more in federal tax for the year, the IRS generally expects quarterly estimated payments (around April 15, June 15, September 15, and January 15) to avoid an underpayment penalty. There are no Texas state estimates to make.
What can Texas gig workers deduct?
The biggest deduction is business mileage at the IRS standard mileage rate for every mile driven while working. You can also deduct the business-use share of your phone, supplies and equipment, tolls, and parking — all of which lower your federal taxable income and self-employment tax.
Authoritative resources
Federal (IRS)
- IRS: Self-Employed Individuals Tax Center ↗
- IRS: Self-Employment Tax (Social Security and Medicare) ↗
- IRS: Estimated Taxes ↗
- IRS: Standard Mileage Rates ↗
Texas state tax agency
Free calculators
Stop guessing what you owe
UnifyOne tracks your gig earnings, mileage, and tax set-aside automatically — so quarterly taxes in Texas are never a surprise.
This guide is educational information, not tax advice. Federal and state tax rules, brackets, and the IRS standard mileage rate change yearly — confirm current figures with the IRS, the Texas tax agency, or a qualified tax professional for your situation.