Small Business Tax Refund Calculator 2025-2026 | Free Tax Estimator | OmniCalculator

Free small business tax refund calculator. Estimate your federal & state tax refund, self-employment tax, deductions, and credits using official IRS formulas for sole proprietors, partnerships, and S-Corps.

Small Business Tax Refund Calculator

Estimate Your 2025-2026 Business Tax Refund or Balance Due

Based on official IRS Small Business guidelines

Enter Your Small Business Information

Small Business Tax Results

Gross Profit$0
Net Business Income$0
Self-Employment Tax$0
SE Tax Deduction (50%)-$0
QBI Deduction (20%)-$0
Adjusted Gross Income$0
Standard Deduction-$0
Federal Income Tax$0
Total Tax Liability$0
Tax Credits Applied-$0
Total Payments Made$0
Estimated Refund / (Amount Owed)
$0
Effective Tax Rate: 0% | Next Year Quarterly Payment: $0

How to Calculate Small Business Tax Refund

  1. Calculate Gross Profit: Subtract cost of goods sold from gross revenue.
  2. Determine Net Income: Subtract all business expenses from gross profit.
  3. Calculate Self-Employment Tax: Apply 15.3% to 92.35% of net self-employment income.
  4. Take Above-the-Line Deductions: Deduct 50% of SE tax, retirement contributions, and health insurance.
  5. Apply QBI Deduction: Take 20% Qualified Business Income deduction if eligible.
  6. Calculate Federal Tax: Apply tax brackets to taxable income after standard deduction.
  7. Subtract Credits: Apply eligible business tax credits to reduce liability.
  8. Determine Refund: Compare payments made to total tax liability.

Small Business Tax Formulas

Net Business Income

Self-Employment Tax

Qualified Business Income Deduction

Tax Refund Calculation

Common Small Business Deductions

DeductionDescriptionIRS Reference
Home Office$5/sq ft (simplified) or actual expensesPub 587
Vehicle Expenses67¢/mile (2024) or actual costsPub 463
Section 179Up to $1,160,000 equipment expensingIRC §179
Health Insurance100% of premiums for self-employedPub 535
Retirement PlansSEP-IRA up to $69,000, Solo 401(k)Pub 560
Business InterestInterest on business loansIRC §163

2024-2025 Tax Brackets (Single Filers)

Tax RateSingleMarried Filing Jointly
10%$0 - $11,600$0 - $23,200
12%$11,601 - $47,150$23,201 - $94,300
22%$47,151 - $100,525$94,301 - $201,050
24%$100,526 - $191,950$201,051 - $383,900
32%$191,951 - $243,725$383,901 - $487,450
35%$243,726 - $609,350$487,451 - $731,200
37%Over $609,350Over $731,200

Official IRS Resources

Frequently Asked Questions

How do small businesses get tax refunds?+

Small business owners receive refunds when their estimated tax payments and withholdings exceed their total tax liability. Since most small businesses are pass-through entities, the refund comes on the owner's personal tax return (Form 1040), not a separate business return.

What is self-employment tax and how is it calculated?+

Self-employment tax is 15.3% (12.4% Social Security + 2.9% Medicare) applied to 92.35% of net self-employment income. For 2024, the Social Security portion applies only to the first $168,600 of income. An additional 0.9% Medicare tax applies above $200,000 (single) or $250,000 (MFJ).

What is the QBI deduction for small businesses?+

The Section 199A Qualified Business Income deduction allows eligible pass-through business owners to deduct up to 20% of their qualified business income. Phase-outs apply for specified service businesses (law, health, consulting) when taxable income exceeds $182,100 (single) or $364,200 (MFJ).

When must I make estimated tax payments?+

If you expect to owe $1,000+ in taxes, you must make quarterly payments: April 15, June 15, September 15, and January 15. Use Form 1040-ES and pay via IRS Direct Pay or EFTPS. Missing payments incurs underpayment penalties.

What deductions can reduce my small business taxes?+

Key deductions include: home office ($5/sq ft simplified method), vehicle expenses (67¢/mile for 2024), health insurance premiums, retirement contributions (SEP-IRA, Solo 401(k)), supplies, software, professional services, advertising, and Section 179 equipment expensing up to $1,160,000.

Should I file as a sole proprietor or form an LLC/S-Corp?+

Sole proprietorship is simplest (Schedule C). LLCs provide liability protection without changing taxation. S-Corp election (Form 2553) can save SE tax if profits exceed ~$40K, but requires reasonable salary and payroll administration. Consult a tax professional for your situation.

Can I deduct business losses against other income?+

Yes, business losses generally offset other income on your personal return, subject to at-risk rules, passive activity limitations, and excess business loss limits ($289,000 single / $578,000 MFJ for 2024). Unused losses may carry forward to future years.

What retirement plans can self-employed individuals use?+

Options include: SEP-IRA (contribute up to 25% of net SE income, max $69,000), Solo 401(k) (up to $69,000 + $7,500 catch-up if 50+), SIMPLE IRA ($16,000 + match). Contributions reduce taxable income and grow tax-deferred. See Publication 560.

What small business tax credits are available?+

Common credits include: Small Business Health Care Tax Credit, Research & Development Credit, Work Opportunity Tax Credit (WOTC), Disabled Access Credit, and employer credits for paid family leave. Credits directly reduce tax liability dollar-for-dollar.

What records should I keep for small business taxes?+

Keep records for at least 3-7 years: income documentation, expense receipts, bank statements, mileage logs, asset purchase records, payroll files, prior tax returns, and 1099 forms. Digital records are acceptable if properly organized and backed up.

Disclaimer: This calculator provides estimates for educational purposes only. Tax laws are complex and individual circumstances vary. Consult a qualified CPA or tax professional for personalized advice. Visit IRS.gov for official information.

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Last Updated: January 2025 | Based on IRS Tax Year 2024-2025 Guidelines