What is FICA tax and what does it fund?+
FICA stands for Federal Insurance Contributions Act. It funds Social Security (disability, retirement, and survivor benefits) and Medicare (hospital insurance). Employees pay 6.2% for Social Security up to the wage base and 1.45% for Medicare on all wages. Employers match both contributions. Self-employed individuals pay both shares (15.3% total) but deduct 50% of SE tax from gross income.
What is the Social Security wage base for 2025?+
The 2025 Social Security taxable wage base is $176,100. Wages above this amount are exempt from the 6.2% Social Security employee tax (and the matching employer contribution). The wage base adjusts annually for inflation. Medicare tax has no cap - the 1.45% rate applies to all wages without limit, and the 0.9% Additional Medicare applies to high earners on top of that.
What is the Additional Medicare Tax and who pays it?+
The Additional Medicare Tax (0.9%) applies to wages above $200,000 (single/HOH), $250,000 (married filing jointly), or $125,000 (married filing separately). Employers begin withholding it at $200,000 per employee regardless of filing status. Any shortfall or overpayment is reconciled on the annual tax return. Unlike the base FICA, there is no employer match for the Additional Medicare Tax.
How does self-employment tax differ from FICA?+
Self-employment (SE) tax is functionally equivalent to FICA but applies to sole proprietors, freelancers, and single-member LLC owners. Because self-employed individuals have no employer to match contributions, they pay both the employee and employer shares - 12.4% Social Security and 2.9% Medicare (15.3% total) - applied to net earnings multiplied by 92.35%. The 92.35% factor removes the employer's share of FICA from the base, mirroring how employees don't pay FICA on the employer's contribution.
Can I deduct self-employment tax from my income taxes?+
Yes. You can deduct 50% of your total self-employment tax as an "above-the-line" deduction on Schedule 1 of Form 1040. This reduces your adjusted gross income (AGI), which lowers your federal income tax. For example, if your SE tax is $11,304, you deduct $5,652 from AGI. This deduction does not require itemizing and is available regardless of your other deductions.
How much should I save for FICA taxes as a freelancer?+
Self-employed individuals should generally set aside 25–35% of net profit for taxes. Of that, roughly 14.13% covers SE tax on a typical income (15.3% applied to 92.35% of net profit). The remainder covers federal and state income taxes. A common rule of thumb is to save 30% of every payment received for quarterly estimated taxes (due April, June, September, January), accounting for both SE tax and income tax.
What happens if I have multiple jobs and overpay Social Security tax?+
Each employer withholds SS tax independently until wages from that employer reach $176,100. If you have two jobs with $100,000 wages each, both withhold SS tax - but you only owe SS tax on the first $176,100 across all jobs. The excess is claimed as a credit on your federal return (Form 1040 Schedule 3, Line 11), effectively refunding the overpaid SS tax. There is no overpayment issue for Medicare, which has no wage base cap.
Do employers pay FICA taxes separately from employee withholding?+
Yes. Employers pay the employer share of FICA (6.2% SS + 1.45% Medicare = 7.65% of gross wages) entirely from their own funds - this is not deducted from employee wages. It is a separate employer payroll cost. For a $75,000 salary, the employer pays $5,737.50 in FICA on top of the gross salary, making the true cost to hire that employee $80,737.50. Employers also collect and remit the employee's FICA withholding.
Are independent contractors subject to FICA taxes?+
Independent contractors (1099 workers) are not employees, so no FICA is withheld by the payer. Instead, they pay SE tax on their net profit - which is the self-employed equivalent of FICA. The rates and calculations are identical to SE tax: 12.4% SS + 2.9% Medicare on 92.35% of net earnings. Contractors must pay quarterly estimated taxes to cover both SE tax and income tax obligations.
Do Social Security benefits depend on FICA contributions?+
Yes. The Social Security Administration tracks your 35 highest earning years on which FICA was paid and uses them to calculate your Primary Insurance Amount (PIA) - your monthly benefit at full retirement age. Higher FICA-taxed wages translate to a higher Social Security benefit. For Medicare Part A, premium-free eligibility requires 40 quarters (10 years) of covered work with FICA contributions. Self-employment SE tax counts toward both benefits.
Are tips included in FICA taxable wages?+
Yes. Cash tips of $20 or more per month must be reported to your employer and are subject to FICA withholding just like regular wages. Your employer collects the employee FICA on tips from your next paycheck and remits the employer match. The total tips plus wages count toward the SS wage base limit. Allocated tips shown on Box 8 of your W-2 are also subject to FICA and must be reported on Form 4137.
Does FICA apply to retirement income and Social Security benefits?+
No. FICA taxes apply only to earned income - wages, salaries, tips, and net self-employment income. Retirement distributions (401k, IRA, pension), investment income (dividends, capital gains), rental income, Social Security benefits, and most passive income are all exempt from FICA. However, if you work part-time in retirement and earn wages, FICA applies to those wages as normal.