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Tax Guide

W2 vs 1099 Take-Home Pay: Which Actually Pays More in 2026?

A CPA-reviewed guide by Rachel Mitchell, CPA — updated for 2026 tax year

If a company offers you $80k as a W2 employee or $90k as a 1099 contractor, which is the better deal financially? We break down the tax math.

By Rachel Mitchell, CPA1 min read
1099w2self-employedfreelance
Rachel Mitchell, CPA

Lead Tax Analyst & Editorial Director, TheTaxCalc

Rachel Mitchell is a Certified Public Accountant (CPA) licensed in Illinois with over 12 years of experience in individual and small-business taxation. She specializes in federal and state income tax compliance, FICA optimization, payroll tax strategy, and multi-state tax planning. Rachel holds an MS in Taxation from Golden Gate University and a BS in Accounting from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. She is an active member of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) and the Illinois CPA Society. Before joining TheTaxCalc, Rachel spent 8 years at a Big Four accounting firm advising high-net-worth clients on tax-efficient wealth strategies.

Reviewed: January 2026Tax data verified against IRS Publication 15-T & state revenue departments

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