Calculate your IRS safe harbor amount for estimated taxes. See if you're at risk for underpayment penalties and how much more to pay. Includes quarterly payment schedule.
How to Use This Safe Harbor Calculator
Enter your prior year total tax (line 24 of Form 1040) and prior year AGI (line 11) to determine whether the 100% or 110% threshold applies. Enter your current year estimated tax if you know it (this enables the 90% alternative comparison). Then enter how much you have already paid in estimated payments and W-2 withholding this year.
The calculator shows your minimum required payment under both safe harbor methods, your current payment status (SAFE / AT RISK / PENALTY LIKELY), and how much more you need to pay to be in the clear.
The Formula
Prior Year Safe Harbor = prior year tax Γ 100% (or Γ 110% if prior AGI > $150K)
Current Year Alternative = current year estimated tax Γ 90%
Minimum Required = lower of the two safe harbors
Total Paid = estimated payments + W-2 withholding
Remaining = max(0, Minimum Required β Total Paid)
Status: SAFE if remaining = 0; AT RISK if short by <$1,000; PENALTY LIKELY if short by $1,000+
Example
Jordan, single, prior year tax $18,000 (AGI $120,000), current year est. $22,000:
Prior year safe harbor: $18,000 Γ 100% = $18,000 (AGI β€ $150K β 100%)
Current year alternative: $22,000 Γ 90% = $19,800
Minimum required: lower = $18,000
Paid so far: $8,000 (estimates) + $5,000 (withholding) = $13,000
Still needed: $18,000 β $13,000 = $5,000 across remaining quarters
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the IRS safe harbor for estimated taxes?
The IRS safe harbor is a threshold that, if met, protects you from underpayment penalties even if you owe tax when you file. There are two safe harbors: (1) Pay at least 100% of your prior year's total tax liability (110% if prior year AGI exceeded $150,000 for single/MFJ, or $75,000 for married filing separately). (2) Pay at least 90% of the current year's actual tax liability. You only need to meet ONE of these two thresholds to avoid penalties.
What counts as "estimated tax payments" for safe harbor purposes?
Both estimated quarterly tax payments (Form 1040-ES) AND employee W-2 withholding count toward your estimated tax payments. W-2 withholding is treated as paid ratably throughout the year. If you have a job and also freelance income, your paycheck withholding may already cover the safe harbor threshold. Add your year-to-date withholding to your estimated payments made when checking if you have met the safe harbor.
What is the penalty for underpayment of estimated taxes?
The IRS charges interest on underpaid estimated taxes at the federal short-term rate plus 3 percentage points (currently around 8% annualized). The penalty accrues from the due date of each missed quarterly payment, not just at tax filing time. Even if you pay everything by April 15, you may still owe penalties for quarters where you were short. The penalty is calculated quarter-by-quarter on Form 2210.
When should I use the 110% safe harbor instead of 100%?
If your prior year adjusted gross income (AGI) exceeded $150,000 (or $75,000 if married filing separately), you must use the 110% safe harbor β paying at least 110% of your prior year tax. This higher threshold applies to higher-income taxpayers and is meant to reduce large underpayment situations. Below these AGI thresholds, 100% of prior year tax is sufficient. The calculator automatically applies the correct threshold based on your AGI.
What if my current year income will be much lower than last year?
The 90% current year safe harbor can save you money if your income dropped significantly. If your current year estimated tax is much lower than last year's, paying 90% of that lower amount is cheaper than paying 100%/110% of last year's higher tax. The calculator shows both options side-by-side so you can see which requires less payment. You can choose either β use whichever is lower.