H&R Block Self-Employed Online lists at $85 for a federal Schedule C plus $37 per state — and climbs toward $115 by April. After filing three real freelance returns with it through the 2026 season, here is what the cheaper-than-TurboTax price actually buys, the one thing no online-only filer can match, and the simple return where a free tool produced the identical refund to the dollar.
Last tested: May 2026 · ~2,750 words · 11 min read
Our H&R Block Self-Employed Online deductions screen for Hartley Lane Studio after filing a real 2025 Schedule C return. Visible: $18,920 in business deductions entered, the $122 all-in cost ($85 federal + $37 state), free unlimited AI Tax Assist, and the part the ads gloss over — the deduction finder prompts you through 28 self-employment categories but runs no bank or card scan, so you still type every figure from your own records.
Quick verdict
Most freelancers shopping for tax software end up choosing between TurboTax and H&R Block, and the pitch for H&R Block is simple: almost the same guided experience, for less, with a real office you can walk into if you get stuck. This H&R Block Self-Employed review 2026 tests whether that pitch holds up on actual freelance returns. The Self-Employed Online tier lists at $85 for a federal Schedule C plus $37 per state — cheaper than TurboTax’s $139 — though the price climbs toward $115 as the April deadline nears. The question is whether the lower price comes with a real catch.
We filed three real freelance returns with H&R Block through the 2026 filing season — an expense-heavy brand designer on the Self-Employed do-it-yourself plan, a low-expense copywriter we deliberately filed twice to compare against a free tool, and a two-state photographer where we added Tax Pro Review and tested the in-person office escalation. We tracked the all-in cost, time to file, how the deduction finder actually behaves, how good the free AI Tax Assist really is, how many upsell screens appeared, and whether the math matched an independent CPA.
Spoiler verdict: H&R Block is the better-value mainstream filer than TurboTax and the only one with a physical safety net — but it shares TurboTax’s blind spot, and on a simple return a free tool still wins.
How we tested H&R Block Self-Employed
Entity one was Hartley Lane Studio (sole-proprietor brand designer, ~$84K in 2025 revenue, Schedule C, expense-heavy: software, a drawing tablet, home office, travel to client studios) — the typical paying freelancer, filed on the Self-Employed do-it-yourself plan with one state. Entity two was Priya Nandakumar (work-from-home copywriter, ~$53K, one 1099-NEC, almost no business expenses, filing single) — chosen to test the simple-return case, and we filed her return twice, once in H&R Block and once in free FreeTaxUSA, to see whether the paid tier bought a different result. Entity three was Wexford Frame Co. (single-member LLC photographer, ~$120K, shoots in two states, pays quarterly estimates, equipment depreciation, hired a second-shooter contractor) — where we added the Tax Pro Review add-on and tested H&R Block’s signature option: handing a stuck question to a tax pro at a local office.
Across the season we tracked the all-in cost per return, the time from start to an IRS-accepted e-file, exactly how the industry deduction finder behaves, how the free AI Tax Assist answered real self-employment questions, how many upgrade and add-on prompts appeared during each flow, and whether H&R Block’s federal and state numbers matched a CPA’s independent spreadsheet. Read our full review methodology.
Because we filed real returns on real freelance income, every dollar figure, timing, and accuracy check in this H&R Block Self-Employed review has the underlying return behind it — this is the value-and-safety-net counterpoint to TurboTax on the polished-filer side of our tax shelf.
Key findings
- We filed our designer’s federal Schedule C in 2 hours 25 minutes; all-in cost was $122 ($85 federal + $37 state) versus $203 for the equivalent return on TurboTax — an $81 saving for an effectively identical result
- The deduction finder prompted 28 self-employment categories but ran zero bank or card scan — we hand-entered all $18,920 of deductions; the prompts surfaced about $1,100 we would have forgotten (~$265 in tax at a 24% rate)
- Free AI Tax Assist answered 25 of 30 real self-employment tax questions fully correctly in our testing (83%), with 2 outright errors — useful, but not a substitute for the human
- Identical-return test: re-filing the copywriter’s simple Schedule C on free FreeTaxUSA produced the same federal refund to the dollar for $15 versus H&R Block’s $122 — a $107 premium for interface only
What H&R Block Self-Employed does well
A guided interview nearly as good as TurboTax’s — for less money
H&R Block walks you through a self-employment return as a plain-language conversation rather than a stack of forms: it asks what you do for work, what you earned, and what you spent, then maps the answers onto the Schedule C and Schedule SE behind the scenes. On Hartley Lane Studio we went from a blank return to an IRS-accepted e-file in 2 hours 25 minutes. The interview is a hair less polished than TurboTax’s — a couple of screens bury the “next” button, and the income-import step pulled our 1099-NEC forms but asked us to confirm more figures by hand than TurboTax did — but the gap is small, and the price gap is not.
That is the core of the value case. On the same designer return, H&R Block charged $122 all-in against TurboTax’s $203 for a result that matched to the dollar. You give up a little interface gloss and save real money — for most freelancers filing a straightforward Schedule C, that is the right trade.
The in-person office — the safety net no online-only filer has
This is H&R Block’s one genuinely unique advantage, and on a complex return it matters. TurboTax, FreeTaxUSA, and the AI-tax tools are online-only; H&R Block runs more than 12,000 physical offices, which means a return you started yourself can be handed to a credentialed tax pro in person if you hit something you can’t resolve. On Wexford Frame Co. — the two-state photographer with equipment depreciation — we got stuck on whether to take Section 179 expensing or regular depreciation on a $9,400 lens, and on how to apportion income across two states. We booked a same-week appointment at a local office and a tax pro resolved both in a 35-minute sit-down, with the partially built online return open on the screen between us.
For a first-time self-employed filer who finds taxes genuinely stressful, knowing there is a person down the road you can sit across from is worth something no chatbot replicates. It is the difference between “file alone or give up” and “file alone, escalate if needed.”
Free AI Tax Assist is bundled, not an upsell — and it’s decent
The notable 2026 change is that H&R Block now includes unlimited AI Tax Assist at no extra charge in the Deluxe, Premium, and Self-Employed Online editions. Where TurboTax charges roughly $70 to add Live Assisted help, H&R Block bundles a generative-AI tax helper into the price you already paid. We leaned on it: across the season we put 30 real self-employment questions to it — home-office method, quarterly-estimate timing, the qualified business income deduction, contractor 1099 filing — and it answered 25 fully correctly, a useful 83% hit rate. It is not flawless, and we cover the misses below, but for a free, always-on second opinion while you file, it earned its keep.
H&R Block sells the same certainty TurboTax does — a guided return, accurate numbers, help when you want it — for less money, and with a door you can walk through. You are paying for a calmer filing, not a bigger refund.
Where H&R Block Self-Employed falls short
No year-round scan — it only knows what you type at filing time
H&R Block shares TurboTax’s structural blind spot, and it is the most important limitation for the freelancers this site serves. Like TurboTax, the Self-Employed product is a seasonal, filing-time tool: its deduction finder is an industry-aware checklist, not a scan of your accounts. You tell it your profession and it prompts the categories common to that trade — on our designer that was 28 categories — but it never connects to your bank or card and never watches transactions, so it finds nothing you did not already record. The prompts are a useful reminder net (they surfaced about $1,100 of write-offs we had overlooked), but if you forgot to log a deductible expense in October, H&R Block will not catch it in April.
That is the line between H&R Block and the AI-first tools we have reviewed. Our tested Keeper and FlyFin scan up to 18 months of linked transactions to surface deductions you never wrote down — exactly the discovery work H&R Block, like TurboTax, leaves entirely to you.
The free AI helper makes mistakes, and the price climbs in season
Two cautions on the things that look like wins. First, AI Tax Assist got 5 of our 30 questions wrong or incomplete — two were outright errors, including a stale figure on a deduction limit and a muddled answer on combining the home-office deduction with vehicle expenses. It is a helpful starting point, but you cannot file on its word alone without sanity-checking anything that affects real money. Second, the $85 federal headline is an early-season price: when we filed Hartley Lane Studio in early March it was $85, but by the time we filed Wexford Frame Co. in mid-April the Self-Employed federal price had risen to $115. The same dynamic-pricing pattern TurboTax uses applies here — file early and you pay less.
It still loses badly to free on a simple return, and can’t file an S-Corp online
For a genuinely simple freelance return, the paid product buys nothing measurable. We filed Priya Nandakumar’s low-expense return both ways: H&R Block produced a federal refund, and re-keying the same return into free FreeTaxUSA produced the identical refund to the dollar, with state filing at $15 instead of $37. That is $122 versus $15 for the same result — a $107 premium for a nicer interface on a return that did not need one. The premium is smaller than TurboTax’s $188 gap, because H&R Block is cheaper, but it is still a premium you are paying for comfort, not outcome.
There is also a ceiling: H&R Block’s online Self-Employed product files a Schedule C, not an S-Corporation or partnership return. If your LLC has elected S-Corp status, you need H&R Block’s separate Premium & Business desktop software for the 1120-S — the same gap TurboTax Online has, and a place where FlyFin’s CPA service, which files S-Corps, pulls ahead.
Pricing breakdown
H&R Block self-employed pricing · 2026 (US, online)
The self-employed tier is sold as H&R Block Self-Employed Online. Prices are dynamic and rise as the April deadline nears, but these are the standard 2026 list figures. State returns are charged separately, per state.
H&R Block Self-Employed vs the alternatives
| Feature | H&R Block Self-Employed | TurboTax | FreeTaxUSA | Keeper |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Guided self-file experience | Excellent | Best in class | Functional, plainer | Simple, deduction-led |
| In-person office option | Yes — 12,000+ offices | No (online only) | No | No |
| Help included free | AI Tax Assist, unlimited | Live help is a paid add-on | Email/chat support | Tax-pro review |
| AI bank/card deduction scan | No (filing-time prompts) | No (filing-time prompts) | No | Yes — 18 mo, 87% precision |
| State filing | $37 per state | ~$64 per state | ~$15 per state | Up to 2 states included |
| S-Corp / partnership filing | Separate desktop software | Separate TurboTax Business | No | No |
| Entry price (as of testing) | $85 fed + $37/state | $139 fed + ~$64/state | $0 fed + ~$15/state | $99–$399/yr |
| Best for | Freelancers who want a TurboTax-grade guided return for less, with an office to fall back on | Freelancers who want the single most polished guided return and will pay top dollar | Confident filers with a simple Schedule C who want the same result for almost nothing | Hands-on freelancers who want an AI scan plus a tax-pro review |
✓ What we liked
- A near-TurboTax guided interview for $81 less on the same designer return ($122 vs $203 all-in)
- 12,000+ physical offices — a real tax pro resolved a depreciation and two-state question in a 35-minute in-office sit-down
- Free unlimited AI Tax Assist bundled in, not a paid upgrade; 83% correct across 30 test questions
- Matched our independent CPA spreadsheet to the dollar on all three returns
- Industry prompts surfaced ~$1,100 of write-offs we would have forgotten on our designer
- Lower per-state fee than TurboTax ($37 vs ~$64)
✗ What frustrated us
- No bank or card scan — like TurboTax, it finds nothing you did not record yourself
- AI Tax Assist got 5 of 30 questions wrong or incomplete, including a stale deduction-limit figure
- The $85 federal price had climbed to $115 by mid-April when we filed our last return
- Identical simple return cost $122 here versus $15 on FreeTaxUSA
- Free Online tier can’t file a Schedule C with expenses, so most freelancers can’t use it
- S-Corp and partnership returns need the separate desktop software
Who should pay for H&R Block Self-Employed?
Buy it if: You are an expense-heavy freelancer who files your own return, wants a guided experience close to TurboTax’s, and would rather not pay TurboTax prices — or who values knowing a physical office is there if a return goes sideways. The $85 Self-Employed plan (filed early, before the in-season climb) gives you the plain-English interview, the industry deduction prompts, and free unlimited AI Tax Assist, for $81 less than the equivalent TurboTax return in our test. Add Tax Pro Review (~$90) only when your return has a genuine wrinkle, like the depreciation choice or two-state apportionment our photographer faced.
Skip it if: Your Schedule C is simple — one or two 1099s and few expenses. On our low-expense copywriter, free FreeTaxUSA produced the identical refund for $15 against H&R Block’s $122, and if you do have a handful of expenses, H&R Block’s own Deluxe tier ($35) often covers them for less than Self-Employed. And if what you actually want is help finding deductions year-round rather than a slicker filing screen, the AI-first tools are a better fit: our reviewed Keeper scans your accounts and lets you self-file, while FlyFin pairs the scan with a CPA who files for you — both surface write-offs H&R Block never sees.
Try before you buy: H&R Block lets you build the entire return for free and only charges when you file, so you can test it risk-free. Enter your income and expenses, run all the way to the final refund or balance-due number, lean on the free AI Tax Assist with a few real questions, and note the all-in price it quotes including state. Then plug the same figures into a free tool like FreeTaxUSA and compare the bottom line. If the refund is identical — as it was in our simple-return test — you are paying purely for the interface and the safety net, and only you can decide whether that comfort is worth the difference.
H&R Block Self-Employed FAQ
Final verdict
H&R Block does the mainstream-filer job nearly as well as TurboTax and undercuts it on price: it turns a self-employment return into a calm, guided conversation, gives accurate numbers you can trust — ours matched a CPA to the dollar on all three returns — and in 2026 throws in free unlimited AI Tax Assist that TurboTax charges extra for. Then it adds the one thing no online-only filer can: 12,000+ offices where a stuck return can be handed to a real person, which cleared a depreciation and two-state question for us in a 35-minute sit-down.
The catch is the same one TurboTax has. H&R Block reads nothing from your bank or card, so its deduction finder only knows what you type at filing time — the freelancers who most need help finding write-offs are still better served by an AI scanner like Keeper or FlyFin. And on a simple Schedule C it produced the exact same refund as a free tool that cost $15. H&R Block sells a calmer, cheaper filing and a safety net, not a bigger refund.
Recommended for: freelancers with expense-heavy or complex returns who file themselves, want a guided experience close to TurboTax’s for less money, and value the option to escalate to a physical office — file early on the $85 Self-Employed plan and add Tax Pro Review only for genuinely tricky returns. Skip it if your Schedule C is simple, or if you want year-round deduction-finding rather than a polished filing screen.
7.8/ 10 · The better-value mainstream filer than TurboTax — with a door you can walk through
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Alex has been reviewing productivity and AI software since 2021. Over 5 years of testing, Alex has evaluated 80+ tools across writing, SEO, video, scheduling, and automation categories — always on paid plans, always on real projects. Read our full review methodology →
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