
Side Hustle Taxes 2026: What You Actually Owe the IRS (The Math Nobody Shows You)
You made $10,000 driving Uber last year. You think you owe about $1,200 in taxes. The actual number? $2,826. That missing $1,530 is self-employment tax — and the IRS will charge you penalties for not paying it quarterly. If you're earning extra income from freelancing, contract dev work, SaaS side projects, or gig platforms and haven't figured out your side hustle taxes 2026 situation, you're already behind. The IRS has new tools, new reporting thresholds, and zero patience for people who "didn't know." Let's break down exactly what you owe, why it's more than you think, and how to stop hemorrhaging money to penalties. The IRS Knows About Your Side Hustle Now Remember when you could freelance on Upwork or sell digital products and nobody reported anything under $20,000? Those days are dead. Starting in 2024, the IRS dropped the 1099-K reporting threshold to $600 . That means every payment platform — Venmo, PayPal, Cash App, Stripe, Etsy, Gumroad, Lemon Squeezy — is legally required to
Continue reading on Dev.to
Opens in a new tab



