2026 tax year Graduated

1099 Take-Home Pay in District of Columbia (2026)

District of Columbia uses a graduated income tax from 4% to 10.75% (top rate above $1,000,000 for single filers), applied here as a labeled approximation on top of federal taxes. Below: a calculator preset to District of Columbia, the 2026 facts, and a worked $75,000 example.

Estimates, not tax advice. State figures are simplified approximations — District of Columbia-specific deductions, exemptions, credits are not modeled. Methodology & sources.
State tax type
Graduated
2026 state rate
4% – 10.75%
$75k → monthly take-home
$4,699
$75k → quarterly set-aside
$4,653

Worked example: $75,000 of 1099 income in District of Columbia

Single filer, no business expenses, 20% QBI deduction applied — computed with the exact same engine as the calculator above:

Gross 1099 income$75,000
Self-employment tax (15.3% on 92.35% of profit)−$10,597
Federal income tax (after ½-SE, standard & QBI deductions)−$4,898
District of Columbia state income tax (approximate)−$3,116
Take-home per year$56,389
Take-home per month$4,699
Set aside per quarter (estimated taxes)$4,653

Effective total tax rate in this scenario: 24.8%. Quarterly payments follow the 2026 IRS schedule — April 15, June 15, September 15, 2026 and January 15, 2027 (details and safe-harbor rules).

How District of Columbia compares

Graduated brackets mean your District of Columbia rate grows with income — this page approximates the curve with an interpolated effective rate (labeled everywhere it appears). Nine states charge nothing at all; see how District of Columbia stacks up in the full state comparison.

District of Columbia 1099 tax FAQ

How much do I keep from $75,000 of 1099 income in District of Columbia?

In this 2026 model (single filer, no expenses, QBI applied): about $56,389 per year — $4,699 per month. The breakdown: $10,597 self-employment tax, $4,898 federal income tax, and roughly $3,116 District of Columbia state tax (approximate). Effective total rate ≈ 24.8%.

Does District of Columbia tax 1099 (self-employment) income?

Yes. District of Columbia has a graduated income tax: 2026 rates run from 4% to 10.75%, with the top rate starting at $1,000,000 of taxable income for single filers. This calculator approximates it with an interpolated effective rate, clearly labeled.

How much should I set aside for taxes in District of Columbia?

On $75,000 of 1099 income, about $4,653 per quarter (24.8% of net income overall) in this model. The right number scales with your income, expenses and filing status — use the calculator above, then pay on the 2026 IRS schedule: April 15, June 15, September 15, 2026 and January 15, 2027.

State data: Tax Foundation, State Individual Income Tax Rates 2026 (verified June 10, 2026). Federal: IRS Rev. Proc. 2025-32, 2026 Form 1040-ES, SSA.