New Jersey · Self-employment & S-corp tax

New Jersey S-Corp Tax Calculator

In New Jersey, electing S-corp status can cut your self-employment tax by paying yourself a reasonable salary and taking the rest as distributions. The main NJ cost is the $125/yr minimum franchise/LLC fee. The calculator below shows your estimated New Jersey net savings — it generally starts paying off around $40,000 of net SE income.

Last updated: July 14, 2026

New Jersey S-corp savings calculator

Enter your annual net self-employment income (after business expenses).

$
Self-employment tax as a sole prop / LLC$16,955
FICA on your S-corp salary (60% = $72,000)$11,016
Distributions (SE-tax-free)Not subject to FICA/SE tax$48,000
Federal SE-tax saved$5,939
Payroll + tax-prep admin−$1,800
NJ minimum franchise / LLC fee−$125
Net NJ S-corp savings / year$4,014

At $120,000 of net SE income, electing S-corp status pencils out in New Jersey — it generally starts paying off around $40,000 of net SE income.

Estimate for planning — federal SE tax + New Jersey S-corp/franchise cost only; confirm reasonable-compensation with a CPA before electing.

The rules

New Jersey self-employment & S-corp rules

  • State income tax: up to 10.75%. Self-employment tax itself (15.3%) is federal and identical in every state.
  • Minimum franchise / LLC fee: $125/year for an LLC or S-corp in New Jersey, regardless of income.
  • PTET (SALT-cap workaround): Available — the pass-through entity tax election lets the business deduct state tax federally, bypassing the $10k SALT cap.
  • Property tax averages 2.49% — the highest effective rate in the US.
Questions

Frequently asked questions

How much self-employment tax will I pay in New Jersey?
Self-employment tax is federal — 15.3% (12.4% Social Security up to the $184,500 wage base + 2.9% Medicare) on 92.35% of your net self-employment income, the same in New Jersey as everywhere. New Jersey then taxes that same income at its state income-tax rate (up to 10.75%). The calculator above shows your SE tax at any income.
Is an S-corp worth it for a New Jersey freelancer or LLC owner?
In New Jersey, electing S-corp status generally starts saving money once net self-employment income is around $40,000. Below that, the payroll/admin cost plus the NJ minimum ($125/yr) outweighs the self-employment-tax savings.
Does New Jersey have a PTET (SALT-cap workaround)?
Yes. New Jersey offers a pass-through entity tax (PTET) election that lets the business pay state income tax and deduct it federally, bypassing the $10,000 SALT cap. If you elect S-corp, this often stacks on top of the SE-tax savings.
How is my "reasonable salary" set for an S-corp?
The IRS requires S-corp owner-employees to pay themselves a reasonable salary (subject to FICA) before taking distributions. This calculator assumes 60% salary / 40% distributions as an illustration — your actual reasonable compensation depends on your role and industry and should be set with a CPA.

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