Key takeaways
A 1099-NEC just means you were paid as a contractor — not that you messed up.
It can mean you owe taxes, but it’s manageable once you know what counts as income and expenses.
You don’t need to be an expert — the right tools can guide you through what to do next.
I opened my email to “Important Tax Document” and my heart did a weird flop. I was expecting a W‑2 like every other year, but I saw Form 1099‑NEC instead.
My first thought: “Did I do something wrong”
Second: “Am I about to owe a bunch of money I didn’t plan for?”
If you freelanced, did DoorDash runs, coached on the side, or did similar work as a business owner rather than as an employee, that 1099‑NEC is your “hey, you were an independent contractor this year” moment.
Absolutely normal to panic, but it’s also completely manageable once you know what it actually means and what to do next.
What your 1099‑NEC is really telling you
A W‑2 means that you were an employee. As such, your employer already took taxes out from your paycheck.
A 1099‑NEC means that you were an independent contractor. You were paid, but no taxes were withheld. So when you see a 1099‑NEC:
That number is what a client or app (DoorDash, Uber, Lyft…etc.) paid you before any taxes. It can also include the value of items given to you in exchange for services (non-cash compensation)
No federal income tax, Social Security, or Medicare was automatically withheld
The IRS gets a copy, so they’re expecting to see that income on your tax return
The important thing to note is that you didn’t mess up by getting this form. It just means you got paid like a small-business owner instead of a traditional employee.
Why it feels scarier than a W‑2 (and what that means for your taxes)
With a W‑2, your employer usually handles:
Withholding income tax from each paycheck
Withholding your share of Social Security and Medicare
With a 1099‑NEC, you handle all of that yourself. It can feel like a burden, but it doesn’t have to.
Here are two big takeaways to help you prepare:
You’ll probably owe self‑employment tax on that income (this covers Social Security and Medicare for yourself)
You also may owe income tax, depending on how much you made overall and what expenses you had
The good news is that you’re not taxed on every dollar that hits your account. If you spent money to earn that 1099‑NEC income — vehicle expenses, supplies, platform fees, phone bills — those can often count as business expenses and reduce your gross income down to a smaller taxable income.
Your no-shame “I’m freaking out but still functional” checklist
Step 1: Pull together anything tied to your 1099-NEC
You don’t need perfect records — just get everything in one place:
Your 1099-NEC form
Invoices, payout screenshots, or app reports connected to that income
Receipts or records for expenses related to the work (mileage, gear, software, supplies, fees)
A rough list is more than enough to get started.
Step 2: Separate what you earned from what it cost you to earn itAsk yourself:
How much you actually received
What you realistically spent to do that work
This helps you see the difference between gross income (what’s on the form) and profit (what’s left after work-related expenses).
Step 3: Let the software guide you instead of guessing
You don’t need to understand every line on a 1099-NEC to file correctly.When you use tax software built for self-employed income, you’ll typically be asked:
What kind of work you did
How you earned the money
Which common expenses apply to your situation
From there, the software helps apply the right forms in the background — so you’re less likely to miss deductions or overpay.
One thing to remember
You’re not expected to have all this memorized. Being honest about how you earned the money — and roughly what it cost — is usually enough to move forward confidently.
Got a 1099? We’ll walk you through exactly what it means and what to do next with TurboTax Do It Yourself Premium.





















