Tools/Tax Estimator

Reseller Tax Estimator

Rough self-employment tax estimate for resellers selling on eBay, Poshmark, and other platforms. Not tax advice — talk to a CPA for your specific situation.

Your annual numbers
Total gross sales across all platforms this year.
What you paid for inventory you sold this year.
eBay, Poshmark, Mercari fees + postage paid.
Supplies, storage, mileage, equipment, phone/internet portion.
Salary or wages from other jobs. Affects income tax bracket estimate.
Results
$0
Total estimated tax
Net profit
Self-employment tax (15.3% × 92.35%)
Estimated income tax
Monthly set-aside
Track expenses in stokd

Log every cost year-round. No April scramble.

Disclaimer

This is a rough estimate only. It uses a simplified 22% income tax rate and does not account for the standard deduction, itemised deductions, state taxes, QBI deductions, additional Medicare tax, or other individual factors. Self-employment tax rules vary. Consult a qualified CPA or tax professional for your situation.

How it works
Know your number before April.
01
Calculate net profit
Revenue minus COGS, platform fees, and other deductible expenses gives your net resale profit — the number the IRS cares about.
02
Self-employment tax hits first
SE tax is 15.3% applied to 92.35% of your net profit. As a solo seller you pay both the employer and employee halves — this surprises a lot of resellers.
03
Get your monthly set-aside
Divide total estimated tax by 12 so you know exactly how much to move to savings each month instead of scrambling at year end.
FAQ
Reseller tax questions answered
Do I have to pay taxes on resale income?

Yes — resale income is taxable. If you sell items for profit (not just liquidating personal items at a loss), that income is subject to self-employment tax and income tax. Most platforms now issue 1099-K forms when you exceed $600 in annual payments, making it straightforward for the IRS to track. Keep COGS records to substantiate your deductions.

What is self-employment tax for resellers?

Self-employment tax is 15.3% — 12.4% for Social Security and 2.9% for Medicare — applied to 92.35% of your net self-employment income. As a self-employed reseller, you pay both the employer and employee portions of these taxes, whereas traditional employees only pay half. That's why it feels so high.

How much should I set aside for taxes as a reseller?

A common rule of thumb is 25–30% of net resale profit. This covers self-employment tax (which hits first and hard) plus estimated income tax. If reselling is your primary income and you have minimal other income, 25% is a reasonable starting point. If you also have a W2 job, the additional resale income may push you into a higher bracket — set aside closer to 30–35%.

Can I deduct platform fees and shipping from my reseller taxes?

Yes — platform fees, shipping costs, packaging materials, mileage to sourcing locations, a portion of your phone and internet, photography equipment, and storage costs are all potentially deductible business expenses. Cost of goods sold is also deductible. Keep detailed records throughout the year; recreating them at tax time is painful and error-prone.

Do I need to pay quarterly estimated taxes as a reseller?

If you expect to owe $1,000 or more in taxes for the year, the IRS requires quarterly estimated tax payments. Deadlines are typically April 15, June 15, September 15, and January 15 of the following year. Failing to pay quarterly can result in an underpayment penalty even if you pay everything by the April filing deadline. Your monthly set-aside figure × 3 gives your approximate quarterly payment.

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