The Hands-Off Financial System for Physicians With 1099 Income
If you are a locum, telehealth, moonlighting, or independent contractor physician, your income comes with no withholding, no employer plan, and no one coordinating the pieces. The real opportunity is not one isolated trick. It is building a system that handles structure, taxes, retirement, bookkeeping, and compliance together.
Being paid on a 1099 gives a physician more control over taxes and more responsibility for them. No employer withholds automatically, no payroll department keeps the records clean, and no one is checking whether your entity, compensation, retirement, and estimated payments are working together. The income is strong. The system behind it usually has not kept up.
1 Why 1099 physicians outgrow “figure it out later”
The pattern is predictable. Income rises, tax exposure rises with it, administrative complexity goes up, and financial visibility gets worse instead of better at exactly the moment the stakes are higher.
As a W-2 employee, withholding happened in the background and retirement options often came through an employer. As a contractor, all of that is now your responsibility. That includes estimated taxes, retirement planning, bookkeeping, entity decisions, documentation, and compliance.
2 What you actually owe as a 1099 physician
On top of regular federal and California income tax, contractor income carries self-employment tax. That covers the Social Security and Medicare taxes an employer would normally split with you.
Self-employment tax is calculated on about 92.35% of net self-employment income, and half of it is deductible for income tax purposes. Because nobody withholds it for you, it has to be planned and paid through estimates.
California creates another trap. Its individual estimated-tax schedule is front-loaded: 30% due in April 2026, 40% in June 2026, no payment due in September 2026, and the final 30% in January 2027. Physicians who set aside in even quarters often discover the shortfall by summer instead of year-end.
3 The first real decision: sole proprietor or S-corp
Many physicians jump straight to “I need an S-corp” without understanding where the savings actually come from. The honest version is narrower than the internet usually makes it sound.
An S-corp does not reduce income tax. It reduces payroll tax, and mainly on the portion of profit you take as a distribution instead of salary. But for a high-earning physician, the Social Security portion is already capped at the 2026 wage base. The remaining savings come largely from the Medicare side on the amount above a defensible salary, and a physician’s reasonable salary is usually high.
Illustrative example: physician netting $400,000
| Defensible salary taxed through payroll | $300,000 |
| Distribution above salary | $100,000 |
| Potential Medicare-side payroll tax avoided | Limited, not massive |
| California S-corp tax | 1.5% of California-source income |
| Payroll, filings, admin, and bookkeeping | Additional ongoing cost |
The point is not that an S-corp never helps. It is that the net benefit for a physician is real but often more modest than people expect, so it should be modeled, not assumed.
The right answer depends on profit level and consistency, reasonable salary support, California costs, admin tolerance, and how the structure interacts with retirement planning and the QBI rules below.
4 Reasonable compensation is where S-corps go wrong
Once an S-corp is in place, reasonable compensation becomes the issue that decides whether the structure actually holds up. The IRS pays close attention to owners who run low salary and high distributions, and physicians are especially exposed because market compensation data for their specialties is public and often high.
- The business is real and not just on paper
- Payroll is set up correctly and filed on time
- The salary is defensible for the specialty and work performed
- The rest of the tax plan supports the structure all year
A salary set too low to chase savings is the fastest way to turn a legitimate strategy into an audit problem.
5 The QBI phaseout most physicians never hear about
The qualified business income deduction can be valuable for pass-through owners, but medicine is a specified service trade or business. That means the deduction phases out as taxable income rises and disappears completely once you are above the top of the range.
The practical takeaway is that many full-time attending physicians earn above the cutoff and get no QBI deduction at all. That is not a mistake. It is how the rule treats healthcare as a specified service business.
What can help is reducing taxable income enough to move back into the phaseout range. For physicians, the strongest lever for that is often retirement contributions.
6 Retirement is usually the biggest lever you control
For high-earning physicians, retirement planning often saves more tax than the S-corp question, and it can also help recover part of a QBI deduction that would otherwise be lost.
- Solo 401(k): up to $72,000 in 2026 before catch-up contributions, combining employee and employer contributions. The employee deferral limit is $24,500.
- SEP IRA: also up to $72,000 in 2026, funded from the employer side.
- Cash balance or defined benefit plan: can allow substantially larger contributions for the right physician profile, especially in peak earning years.
Because every deductible retirement dollar lowers taxable income, the right plan can do two jobs at once: build long-term wealth and improve the current-year tax picture.
7 Clean books, and the deductions that actually apply
Bookkeeping feels administrative, so it often gets delayed. In reality, it is what makes every strategy above usable. Without current books you cannot project taxes accurately, support retirement contributions, evaluate compensation, or claim deductions cleanly.
- Malpractice insurance
- State licensing, DEA registration, and board certification
- CME, required courses, and related travel
- Professional society and hospital staff dues
- Required equipment and specialized clothing
- Business mileage between work sites
- A legitimate home office if there is a dedicated, regular business-use space
With an S-corp, many of these can be handled through an accountable plan instead of being tracked loosely. The standard is documentation, not aggressiveness.
Not sure which of these are being missed?
A short review usually costs less than another year of disorganized planning.
Request a tax review8 What a hands-off plan actually looks like
Hands-off does not mean silence until tax season. It means the moving parts are set up to work together so you are not personally managing each one.