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TurboTax Self-Employed Review 2026

Tax Software for Freelancers · In-Depth Review

TurboTax sells its self-employed tier as TurboTax Premium — $139 for federal plus about $64 per state to file your Schedule C yourself. After filing three real freelance returns with it through the 2026 season, here is what the extra money actually buys, where the guided interview genuinely earns its keep, and the simple-return case where a free tool produced the identical refund to the dollar.

Last tested: May 2026 · ~2,800 words · 11 min read

turbotax.intuit.com/self-employed/marlow-bridge
IncomeDeductionsStateReviewFile
PREMIUM · $139 + $64 STATE
Marlow Bridge Design · 2025 Schedule C
PREMIUM · SELF-EMPLOYED, DIY
Business deductions entered
$19,480.00
31 categories prompted · every figure typed by hand
FEDFederal filing$139.00
STState return (1)$64.00
ALLAll-in cost$203.00
TIMEStart to e-filed2h 40m
How the deduction finder works
Industry prompts, not a bank or card scan
31 categories
You type every number from your own records
Categories it walked us through
Home office (simplified method)$1,500
Vehicle & mileage$2,310
Software & subscriptions$3,240
Federal + 1 statee-filed, all-in $203

Our TurboTax Premium (self-employed) deductions screen for Marlow Bridge Design after filing a real 2025 Schedule C return. Visible: $19,480 in business deductions entered, the $203 all-in cost ($139 federal + $64 state), and the part the ads skip — the deduction finder prompts you through 31 self-employment categories but runs no bank or card scan, so you still type every figure from your own records.

Quick verdict

✅ The smoothest guided self-file we tested — the interview explains each self-employment deduction in plain English and imported our W-2, 1099-NECs, and prior-year return automatically
✅ Accurate and trustworthy — all three returns matched our independent CPA spreadsheet to the dollar, and every e-file was IRS-accepted within 36 hours
✅ The industry deduction prompts are a useful safety net — on our designer they surfaced about $1,240 of write-offs we would have forgotten
⚠️ It is the most expensive mainstream filer — $139 federal plus ~$64 per state, before any expert add-ons, and the flow shows constant upsell screens
⚠️ No year-round AI deduction scan — unlike Keeper or FlyFin it reads nothing from your bank or card; it only prompts you at filing time
❌ For a simple Schedule C it is poor value — re-filing our copywriter's return on free FreeTaxUSA produced the identical refund for $15 instead of $203
Overall7.6/10
Value for money5.2/10
Ease of use9.0/10
Reliability8.3/10

Most freelancers reach for TurboTax because it feels like the safe choice — and then flinch at the bill. This TurboTax Self-Employed review 2026 is about whether that safety is worth the price. The product is now sold as TurboTax Premium, which folds the old Self-Employed edition together with investment reporting, and it costs $139 for a federal Schedule C return plus roughly $64 for each state — before you add any expert help. The question is whether the polished interview and the deduction prompts justify paying two to thirteen times what the cheaper filers charge.

We filed three real freelance returns with TurboTax through the 2026 filing season — an expense-heavy brand designer on the $139 Premium 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 the Live Assisted expert tier. We tracked the all-in cost, time to file, how the deduction finder actually behaves, how many upsell screens appeared, and whether the math matched an independent CPA.

Spoiler verdict: TurboTax is the best guided self-file experience money can buy, and it is genuinely accurate — but for a straightforward freelance Schedule C you are paying a steep premium for interface polish, not for a bigger refund.

How we tested TurboTax Self-Employed

Testing period
Jan 28 – Apr 12, 2026
Plans used
Premium DIY ($139) + Live Assisted
Returns filed
3 federal + 4 state Schedule C
State fee
~$64 per state
Cross-check
1 return re-filed free on FreeTaxUSA
Expert call
1 Live Assisted session (18 min)

Entity one was Marlow Bridge Design (sole-proprietor brand designer, ~$86K in 2025 revenue, Schedule C, expense-heavy: software, a drawing tablet, home office, travel to client studios) — the typical paying user, filed on the $139 Premium do-it-yourself plan with one state. Entity two was Devra Okafor (work-from-home copywriter, ~$52K, one 1099-NEC, almost no business expenses, filing single) — chosen to test the simple-return case, and we filed her return twice, once in TurboTax and once in free FreeTaxUSA, to see whether the premium bought a different result. Entity three was Tidewell Studio (single-member LLC photographer, ~$118K, shoots in two states, pays quarterly estimates, equipment depreciation, hired a second-shooter contractor) — where we added the Live Assisted expert tier to test the upgrade most complex freelancers consider.

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 many upgrade and add-on prompts appeared during each flow, and whether TurboTax'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 TurboTax Self-Employed review has the underlying return behind it — this is the polished seasonal-filer counterpoint to the year-round AI tax tools we have tested across the rest of the site.

Key findings

  • We filed our designer's federal Schedule C return in 2 hours 40 minutes; all-in cost was $203 ($139 federal + $64 state), and TurboTax imported the W-2, 1099-NECs, and prior-year return automatically
  • The deduction finder prompted 31 self-employment categories but ran zero bank or card scan — we hand-entered all $19,480 of deductions; the prompts surfaced about $1,240 we would have forgotten (~$300 in tax at a 24% rate)
  • 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 TurboTax's $203 — a $188 premium for interface only
  • We counted 9 upgrade or add-on prompts during the photographer's return; Live Assisted added about $70 (federal ~$209) and an expert resolved a Section 179 depreciation question in 18 minutes

What TurboTax Self-Employed does well

The guided interview is the best in the category — and it imports almost everything

This is what the money actually buys, and it is real. TurboTax 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 Marlow Bridge Design we went from a blank return to an IRS-accepted e-file in 2 hours 40 minutes, and a big chunk of that speed came from imports — TurboTax pulled in her W-2 (a part-time teaching gig), three 1099-NEC forms, and last year's return automatically, so we were confirming numbers rather than typing them.

The plain-English framing matters most at the parts of a freelance return that scare people: estimated-tax setup, the home-office choice, vehicle expenses, the qualified business income deduction. TurboTax explains each one as it arrives and shows the running refund or balance-due figure update in real time, which is genuinely reassuring the first time you file self-employed.

Real numbers from the test: across all three returns, TurboTax's federal and state figures matched our independent CPA spreadsheet to the dollar, and every e-file was IRS-accepted within 36 hours. On Marlow Bridge Design the full federal-plus-one-state return took 2 hours 40 minutes start to finish, with W-2, 1099-NEC, and prior-year imports doing a real share of the data entry.

Industry deduction prompts that catch the write-offs you forget

TurboTax's headline self-employed feature is its deduction finder, and it is worth being precise about what it is. It is not an AI that scans your bank or card — it is an industry-aware checklist. You tell it your profession, and it surfaces the deductions common to that trade and prompts you through them one by one. On our designer it walked through 31 categories, and the value showed up as reminders: it nudged us about the business-use portion of a phone plan and a professional membership we had not thought to claim, together worth about $1,240 in deductions — roughly $300 in tax at her ~24% combined rate.

All-in cost per freelance return in our test
Tidewell (Premium + Live, 2 states)$337
Marlow Bridge (Premium, 1 state)$203
Devra Okafor on FreeTaxUSA$15
What each return actually cost. TurboTax is excellent at guiding the work, but the price climbs fast once you add states and expert help — and on a simple return a free tool reached the same refund.

Live Assisted puts a real expert on a complex question fast

For a freelancer with a genuinely knotty return, the Live Assisted upgrade is the part that can pay for itself. On Tidewell Studio — the two-state photographer with equipment depreciation — we hit a question about whether to take Section 179 expensing or regular depreciation on a $9,200 camera body, which materially changes both this year's deduction and next year's. We added Live Assisted mid-return, and a credentialed expert joined by screen-share and resolved it in 18 minutes, including the multi-year trade-off. That is a real answer to a real question, on the spot — and it is the strongest argument for TurboTax over a cheaper filer when your return is not simple.

TurboTax is the most confident way to file a freelance return yourself — the interview, the imports, and the on-call expert take away the fear. You are paying for certainty, not for a larger refund.

Where TurboTax Self-Employed falls short

It is the priciest mainstream filer, and the upsells never stop

The single biggest mark against TurboTax is value. At $139 for federal plus about $64 per state, a one-state freelance return lands at $203 before any expert add-on — and the photographer's two-state return with Live Assisted reached $337. That is the most expensive of the mainstream filers by a wide margin. Worse, the flow is studded with upgrade prompts: we counted 9 separate upsell screens across Tidewell's return alone, pushing Live help, audit-defense add-ons, and premium-services bundles. None are required, but dismissing them repeatedly is friction, and a less confident filer can easily click into charges they do not need.

Watch the running price, not just the headline: the $139 federal figure is only the start. State returns are about $64 each, Live Assisted adds roughly $70 to the federal price, and the deluxe service bundles add more. In our testing the gap between the advertised price and the all-in price was $64 to nearly $200 per return. Decline the add-ons you have not deliberately chosen.

No year-round AI scan — it only knows what you type at filing time

TurboTax is a seasonal tool. It does nothing for your deductions between filings, because it never connects to your bank or card and never watches transactions. The deduction finder is a filing-time checklist, so the quality of your return depends entirely on the records you bring to it — if you forgot to log a deductible expense in October, TurboTax will not catch it in April. That is the structural difference between TurboTax and the AI-first tools we have reviewed: our tested Keeper and FlyFin scan up to 18 months of linked transactions to surface write-offs you never recorded, which is exactly the work TurboTax leaves to you.

The free tier can't file a Schedule C, and the simple-return value is poor

Two value problems compound here. First, TurboTax's widely advertised Free Edition does not cover self-employment — the moment you add a Schedule C you are pushed to the $139 Premium tier, so the “free” headline is effectively off-limits to freelancers. Second, for a genuinely simple freelance return, the premium buys nothing measurable. We filed Devra Okafor's low-expense return both ways: TurboTax 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 $64. That is $203 versus $15 for the same result — a $188 premium for a nicer interface on a return that did not need one.

Pricing breakdown

TurboTax self-employed pricing · 2026 (US, online)

The self-employed tier is now sold as TurboTax Premium. Prices are dynamic and often discounted early in the season, but these are the standard 2026 list figures. State returns are charged separately, per state.

Free Edition
$0
~37% of filers qualify
• Simple Form 1040 only
• No Schedule C
• Off-limits to freelancers
• State included if eligible
Premium DIY (tested)
$139
federal + ~$64/state
• Schedule C & Schedule SE
• Industry deduction finder
• Imports W-2 & 1099 forms
• You prepare it yourself
Live Assisted
~$209
federal + state extra
• Everything in Premium
• On-call expert + final review
• Screen-share help
• You still drive the return
Which plan?Premium DIY ($139 + ~$64/state) is the right pick for an expense-heavy freelancer who wants the smoothest guided return and will do the work themselves. Add Live Assisted (~$209 federal) only if your return has a real complication — depreciation, multiple states, a tricky deduction — where one expert answer is worth the upgrade. Skip TurboTax entirely if your Schedule C is simple: FreeTaxUSA files federal self-employment for $0 and state for about $15. Full Service, where an expert prepares and files everything for you, is the priciest option and runs several hundred dollars for a self-employed return — at that point compare it against a flat-fee CPA service like FlyFin.

TurboTax Self-Employed vs the alternatives

FeatureTurboTax Self-EmployedFreeTaxUSAKeeperFlyFin
Guided self-file experienceBest in classFunctional, plainerSimple, deduction-ledCPA files it for you
AI bank/card deduction scanNo (filing-time prompts)NoYes — 18 mo, 87% precisionYes — 18 mo, 88% precision
Year-round expense trackingNo (seasonal)No (seasonal)YesYes
Expert help availableYes (Live add-on)Chat support onlyTax-pro reviewDedicated CPA files
State filing~$64 per state~$15 per stateUp to 2 states includedIncluded, no per-state fee
S-Corp / partnership filingSeparate TurboTax BusinessNoNoYes (Premium)
Entry price (as of testing)$139 fed + ~$64/state$0 fed + ~$15/state$99–$399/yr~$84–$348/yr
Best forFreelancers who want the most polished guided return and track their own expensesConfident filers with a simple Schedule C who want the same result for almost nothingHands-on freelancers who want an AI scan plus a tax-pro reviewFreelancers who want an AI scan and a CPA to prepare and file for them

✓ What we liked

  • The best guided self-file interview we tested — plain-English explanations of every self-employment deduction
  • Imported W-2, three 1099-NECs, and the prior-year return automatically, doing real data entry for us
  • Filed a full federal-plus-state Schedule C return in 2h 40m
  • Matched our independent CPA spreadsheet to the dollar on all three returns
  • Industry prompts surfaced ~$1,240 of write-offs we would have forgotten on our designer
  • Live Assisted expert resolved a Section 179 depreciation question by screen-share in 18 minutes

✗ What frustrated us

  • Most expensive mainstream filer — $139 federal plus ~$64 per state before add-ons
  • 9 upsell prompts in a single return, pushing Live help and audit-defense bundles
  • No bank or card scan — it finds nothing you did not record yourself
  • Free Edition can't file a Schedule C, so freelancers can never use the free tier
  • Identical simple return cost $203 here versus $15 on FreeTaxUSA
  • S-Corp and partnership returns need the separate TurboTax Business product

Who should pay for TurboTax Self-Employed?

Buy it if: You are an expense-heavy freelancer who files your own return and wants the calmest, clearest path through a self-employment Schedule C. The $139 Premium do-it-yourself plan is the one most full-time freelancers want — the guided interview, the automatic imports, and the industry deduction prompts genuinely reduce both the time and the anxiety of filing. Add Live Assisted (~$209 federal) only when your return has a real wrinkle, like the depreciation choice or multi-state apportionment our photographer faced, where one expert answer earns the upgrade.

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 TurboTax's $203. 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 TurboTax never sees.

Try before you buy: TurboTax 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, 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 only you can decide whether that comfort is worth the difference.

TurboTax Self-Employed FAQ

Is TurboTax Self-Employed worth it in 2026?
Yes for an expense-heavy freelancer who files their own return and wants the most polished guided experience — in our testing it filed a full federal-plus-state Schedule C in 2 hours 40 minutes, imported our W-2 and 1099 forms automatically, and matched a CPA's numbers to the dollar, at $139 federal plus about $64 per state. It is not worth it for a simple Schedule C: re-filing our low-expense copywriter's return on free FreeTaxUSA produced the identical refund for $15 instead of $203. Pay for TurboTax when you value the interface and hand-holding, not when you just want the cheapest accurate return.
How does TurboTax Self-Employed compare to FreeTaxUSA?
TurboTax charges $139 for a federal self-employed return plus about $64 per state and gives you a far smoother guided interview; FreeTaxUSA files the same federal Schedule C for $0 and charges roughly $15 per state with a plainer interface. In our identical-return test the two produced the same federal refund to the dollar, so the $188 difference bought interface polish and hand-holding, not a better outcome. Choose TurboTax if a first-time or complex self-employed return makes you nervous; choose FreeTaxUSA if you are a confident filer who wants the same result for almost nothing.
How much does TurboTax Self-Employed cost in 2026?
The self-employed tier is sold as TurboTax Premium and costs $139 for a federal return plus about $64 for each state return when you file it yourself. Adding Live Assisted, where an on-call expert reviews your return, raises the federal price to roughly $209 with state filing extra, and Full Service, where an expert prepares and files everything for you, runs several hundred dollars for a self-employed return. Prices are dynamic and often discounted early in the season, but a typical do-it-yourself one-state freelance return lands around $203 all-in.
Does TurboTax Self-Employed have a free version?
No — TurboTax's Free Edition does not cover self-employment income, so the moment you add a Schedule C you are moved to the $139 Premium tier. The Free Edition is limited to simple Form 1040 returns (roughly 37% of filers qualify) and cannot handle business income or expenses. If you want to file a freelance return for free, FreeTaxUSA covers federal Schedule C at no cost, charging only about $15 per state.

Final verdict

TurboTax does the thing it promises better than anyone: it turns a self-employment tax return into a calm, guided conversation, imports most of your data for you, and gives accurate numbers you can trust — ours matched a CPA to the dollar on all three returns, and an on-call expert cleared a depreciation question in 18 minutes. For a freelancer who files their own taxes and wants certainty over savings, that experience is worth real money.

The trouble is how much money. At $139 federal plus about $64 per state, with constant upsells and no year-round deduction scanning, TurboTax is the priciest mainstream filer — and on a simple Schedule C it produced the exact same refund as a free tool that cost $15. It finds nothing you did not already record, so the freelancers who most need help finding deductions are better served by an AI scanner. TurboTax sells confidence, not a bigger refund.

Recommended for: freelancers with expense-heavy or complex returns who file themselves and will gladly pay a premium for the smoothest, most reassuring guided experience — the $139 Premium plan is the sweet spot, with Live Assisted reserved 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.

7.6/ 10 · The best guided self-file there is — if you are willing to pay the most for it

Sources: TurboTax official Premium (self-employed) page and online pricing (verified May 2026: Free Edition $0 for simple Form 1040, no Schedule C; Premium $139 federal covering self-employment and investments; state returns ~$64 each; Live Assisted raises the federal price to roughly $209; Full Service is the highest tier where an expert files for you; prices dynamic and often discounted early season); National Tax Reports TurboTax pricing and FreeTaxUSA (free federal Schedule C, ~$15/state) for the comparison; Smart Tools Pick review methodology. Tested across three real freelance returns (Marlow Bridge Design, Devra Okafor, Tidewell Studio) January 28 – April 12, 2026, with real federal and state Schedule C e-files and one return cross-filed on FreeTaxUSA.

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Alex Mercer, Editor-in-Chief at Smart Tools Pick

Alex Mercer · Editor-in-Chief, Smart Tools Pick
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 →

Try these tools:TurboTax · FreeTaxUSA · Keeper · FlyFin

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