Tip taxes — SC

What tipped workers in South Carolina owe in tax.

Federal income tax + FICA + progressive state income tax up to 6.2%. The honest breakdown for South Carolina tipped and gig workers, with worked examples.

Top state rate

6.2%

progressive structure

State std deduction

$14,600

single filer, 2026

Federal income tax

10-37%

progressive, 7 brackets

FICA (W-2 employee)

7.65%

SS 6.2% + Medicare 1.45%

The state tax structure in South Carolina

Three brackets after 2024 reform: 0% / 3% / 6.2%. Income under $3,460 exempt.

South Carolina uses a progressive income tax with multiple brackets reaching 6.2% at the top. Like the federal system, only the income that falls in each bracket faces that bracket's rate. Most tipped workers face the lower or middle brackets.

Total effective tax on a $40,000 tipped worker

Single filer, taking standard deduction at both federal and state level:

Tax typeAmountNotes
Federal income tax~$2,20022% bracket on income above $12,400, after $15,750 std deduction
FICA (W-2)$3,0607.65% × $40,000 — employer matches the other half
State income tax (South Carolina) ~$866 blended rate, lower brackets soften the top
Total approximate tax ~$6,126 Effective rate ~15.3%

For a $40,000 gross-income tipped worker in South Carolina, the effective tax rate is approximately 15.3%. Take-home: roughly $33,874. Your actual result will vary based on filing status, dependents, retirement contributions, and other deductions.

If you're a 1099 contractor in South Carolina

Replace the 7.65% W-2 FICA with the 15.3% self-employment tax. You owe both halves of FICA yourself plus an additional Medicare consideration. The math:

  • Federal SE tax: 15.3% on adjusted SE income (92.35% of net Schedule C profit)
  • Federal income tax: same brackets, but you can deduct half of SE tax from taxable income
  • South Carolina state tax: applies to net SE income just like wages

See our self-employment tax guide and try the SE tax calculator for your specific numbers.

How tips are taxed (universal rule)

Federal rule applies in every state: all tip income is fully taxable. You are required to:

  • Track tips daily using IRS Form 4070 or any equivalent log
  • Report monthly to your employer when you receive $20+ in tips from a single employer in a month
  • Pay FICA on reported tips (employer withholds from your paycheck where possible)
  • Report unreported cash tips on Form 4137 at year-end if any

See our tip-tracking guide for details.

Quarterly estimated taxes

If you're a 1099 worker or a W-2 worker whose withholding isn't enough to cover the tax on tip income, you owe quarterly estimated payments. The federal deadlines (April 15, June 15, September 15, January 15) apply universally. South Carolina typically has its own state quarterly deadlines that mirror the federal schedule. See quarterly tax deadlines.

State-specific notes

  • No state minimum wage law
  • Always cross-check current rates and brackets with the official agency before filing: https://dor.sc.gov/

Related

Project the math, not just read about it.

NeighCheck applies South Carolina tax rates automatically to every shift you log, with a running year-to-date projection. Free, no subscription.