Self-Employed US Expats: Complete Tax Guide for Freelancers & Founders

Self-Employed US Expats: Complete Tax Guide for Freelancers & Founders
Being self-employed while living abroad gives freedom — but it also creates unique US tax obligations that many freelancers and founders misunderstand.
If you're earning income outside the US, you may still owe US self-employment tax, even if you don't owe income tax.
Who Is Considered Self-Employed?
You are considered self-employed if you:
Freelance or consult
Run an online business
Own a foreign company
Work as an independent contractor
This applies whether clients are US-based or international.
Do Self-Employed Expats Pay US Taxes?
In most cases:
Income tax may be reduced or eliminated
Self-employment tax often still applies
This is the biggest surprise for expats.
Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE)
The Foreign Earned Income Exclusion allows qualifying expats to exclude earned income up to the IRS limit.
However:
FEIE does not eliminate self-employment tax
It only applies to earned income
You must meet residency or physical presence tests
Many freelancers incorrectly assume FEIE means "no US tax at all."
Self-Employment Tax Explained
Self-employment tax covers:
Social Security
Medicare
Currently, it's assessed at 15.3% on net earnings.
This applies even if:
You live abroad
You pay foreign income tax
You use FEIE
Unless a Totalization Agreement applies.
Totalization Agreements: The Key Exception
Some countries have Totalization Agreements with the US that prevent double Social Security taxation.
If you qualify:
You may be exempt from US self-employment tax
You'll contribute to the foreign system instead
Required Forms for Self-Employed Expats
Common forms include:
Schedule C
Schedule SE
Form 2555 (FEIE)
Foreign tax forms (if applicable)
Common Freelance Mistakes
Self-employed expats often:
Skip quarterly estimated taxes
Misclassify foreign income
Ignore Social Security obligations
Miss FBAR or FATCA filings
Staying Compliant as a Global Freelancer
Self-employment abroad requires intentional planning, not guesswork.
Exemplary helps freelancers and founders structure their taxes correctly, minimize exposure, and stay compliant — without overpaying or risking penalties.
