Here’s something nobody tells you when you start driving for Uber or delivering for DoorDash: that first big payday feels amazing—until you realize the IRS wants a chunk of it. And unlike your old W-2 job, nobody’s withholding taxes for you.
I learned this the hard way. My first year as a gig worker, I owed the IRS over $4,000 at tax time. Didn’t have it. Had to set up a payment plan. Not fun.
So let me save you from that nightmare. Here’s exactly how much you should set aside for taxes—and the simple system I use now to never get surprised again.
The Short Answer: 25-30% of Your Earnings
For most gig workers, setting aside 25-30% of every payment covers your tax bill. Here’s why that number works:
- Self-employment tax: 15.3% (this covers Social Security and Medicare)
- Federal income tax: 10-22% for most people (depends on your bracket)
- State income tax: 0-13% depending on your state
Now, you won’t actually pay the full 25-30% after deductions. But setting aside that much means you’ll have a nice buffer—or even a little extra at tax time. Way better than coming up short.
My Simple “Untouchable” Tax Savings System
Okay, knowing you should save 25-30% is one thing. Actually doing it? That’s where most people fail.
Here’s what worked for me:
Step 1: Open a Separate Savings Account
Seriously, do this today. I use a free high-yield savings account (Ally and Marcus both work great). The key is keeping your tax money completely separate from your spending money.
If it’s in your checking account, you’ll spend it. Trust me.
Step 2: Transfer 30% Every Time You Get Paid
DoorDash deposits hit on Tuesday? Move 30% to your tax account that same day. Don’t wait until the end of the week. Don’t “round down.” Just transfer it immediately.
Example: Got paid $400? Move $120 to your tax savings. No exceptions.
Step 3: Pretend That Money Doesn’t Exist
Here’s the mindset shift that changed everything for me: that 30%? It was never yours to begin with. It’s the government’s money that you’re holding temporarily. Spend the 70%, budget with the 70%, live on the 70%.
Wait, But What About Deductions?
Good question. Deductions will lower your actual tax bill, sometimes significantly. But I still recommend saving 25-30% because:
- You might not track every deduction perfectly
- Some deductions get disallowed
- Income varies, and one good month could bump you into a higher bracket
- Having extra is way better than coming up short
Plus, whatever you don’t spend on taxes becomes your bonus. I ended up with an extra $800 last year that I used for a vacation. Not bad.
How Deductions Actually Work (Quick Breakdown)
Let’s say you earned $40,000 driving for Uber and drove 20,000 business miles.
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Gross Income | $40,000 |
| Mileage Deduction (20,000 × $0.70) | -$14,000 |
| Phone Bill (75% business use) | -$900 |
| Other Supplies | -$300 |
| Taxable Income | $24,800 |
See how deductions dropped your taxable income from $40K to under $25K? That’s huge. But notice I still had taxable income—which means I still owed taxes.
The Quarterly Tax Payment Thing (Yes, You Have to Do This)
Here’s something that trips up a lot of new gig workers: you can’t just save up and pay everything on April 15th. The IRS wants their money throughout the year.
If you expect to owe more than $1,000, you need to make quarterly estimated tax payments. Miss these, and you’ll get hit with penalties.
2025 Quarterly Tax Deadlines:
| Quarter | Due Date |
|---|---|
| Q1 (Jan-Mar) | April 15, 2025 |
| Q2 (Apr-May) | June 16, 2025 |
| Q3 (Jun-Aug) | September 15, 2025 |
| Q4 (Sep-Dec) | January 15, 2026 |
I set calendar reminders a week before each deadline. Life-saver.
State Taxes: Don’t Forget About These
Your state wants money too (unless you’re in one of the lucky nine with no income tax).
No state income tax: Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, Wyoming
Everyone else? Add your state’s rate to your savings percentage. California gig workers, for example, should probably save closer to 35%.
What If I’m Doing Multiple Gigs?
Same rules apply. Add up all your gig income—Uber, DoorDash, Instacart, Etsy, freelance writing, whatever—and save 25-30% of the total.
One thing to watch: more income can push you into a higher tax bracket. If you’re crushing it across multiple apps, you might want to bump your savings rate to 30-35% to be safe.
Frequently Asked Questions
What if I already spent the money I should have saved?
Been there. Set up a payment plan with the IRS (they’re more flexible than people think). Then start the 25-30% savings habit going forward. Don’t beat yourself up—just fix it.
Can I save less if I have a lot of deductions?
I’d still start with 25-30% until you have a full year of tax data. After your first year, you can adjust based on what you actually owed. Better to have extra than come up short.
Should I make quarterly payments or just save it all?
If you’ll owe more than $1,000, make quarterly payments to avoid penalties. You can use the IRS Direct Pay website—it takes five minutes.
What’s the best app to track this?
I use Stride (free) to track mileage and see my estimated tax savings in real-time. For the separate savings account, any bank works—just make sure it’s truly separate from your spending money.
The Bottom Line
Save 25-30% of every gig payment into a separate “untouchable” account. Pay quarterly taxes to avoid penalties. Track your mileage and deductions to lower your actual bill.
Do this, and tax season goes from stressful nightmare to just another task on your list. Maybe even a pleasant surprise when you get some of that savings back.
Trust me—future you will be grateful you started today.