How to Pay Estimated Taxes Using IRS Direct Pay
A step-by-step visual walkthrough for freelancers, self-employed workers, and investors
If you’re self-employed, a freelancer, a gig worker, or earn income from investments, you’re probably required to pay estimated taxes four times a year. Unlike W-2 employees who have taxes withheld automatically, you have to send your payments in yourself — and missing them can result in penalties.
The good news? The IRS makes it free and relatively straightforward through IRS Direct Pay. This guide walks you through every screen, with annotated mockups so you know exactly what to expect.
Who needs to pay estimated taxes?
You generally need to make estimated tax payments if you expect to owe $1,000 or more in federal taxes after subtracting your withholding and refundable credits, AND your withholding covers less than 90% of this year’s tax or less than 100% of last year’s tax.
This typically includes:
- Freelancers and independent contractors (1099 workers)
- Small business owners and sole proprietors
- S-corp shareholders and partners in partnerships
- Investors with significant capital gains or dividends
- Retirees whose pension withholding is insufficient
2026 estimated tax due dates
The IRS divides the year into four payment periods. Here are the deadlines for tax year 2026:
| Payment Period | Income Earned | Due Date | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Q1 — 1st Payment | Jan 1 – Mar 31 | April 15, 2026 | Due soon |
| Q2 — 2nd Payment | Apr 1 – May 31 | June 16, 2026 | Upcoming |
| Q3 — 3rd Payment | Jun 1 – Aug 31 | September 15, 2026 | Upcoming |
| Q4 — 4th Payment | Sep 1 – Dec 31 | January 15, 2027 | Upcoming |
How much should you pay?
Use Form 1040-ES (available free on IRS.gov) to calculate your estimated tax. Most people use one of these approaches:
- Prior-year method: Divide last year’s total tax by 4 and pay that each quarter. Simple and safe-harbor compliant.
- Current-year method: Estimate this year’s income, calculate the tax owed, subtract withholding, and divide by 4. More accurate if your income changed significantly.
- Annualized income method: Best for uneven income (seasonal work, large one-time gains). Requires Form 2210 Schedule AI.
How to pay using IRS Direct Pay — step by step
IRS Direct Pay is free, requires no account, and payments post immediately. Here’s exactly how to use it:
Go to IRS Direct Pay
Navigate to directpay.irs.gov or go to IRS.gov → Payments → Direct Pay. You’ll land on the Direct Pay homepage.
Direct Pay with Bank Account
Use this secure service to pay your taxes for Form 1040 series, estimated taxes or other associated forms directly from your checking or savings account at no cost to you.
Step 1 of 5 — Select tax information
On the first screen, you’ll choose what type of payment you’re making. For quarterly estimated taxes, you’ll select 1040-ES.
* Indicates required field
Select the tax year you are paying estimated taxes FOR (not the current calendar year).
Step 2 of 5 — Verify your identity
Direct Pay requires no login, but it does verify your identity using information from a previously filed tax return. Have a prior-year return handy — the most recent one is recommended.
Enter information from your tax return. The information must match our records for the year you select.
Find your AGI on Form 1040, Line 11.
Step 3 of 5 — Enter payment information
Now enter your bank account details and payment amount. Direct Pay uses ACH bank transfer — it’s free and processes the same or next business day.
Maximum single payment: $10,000,000. Enter dollars and cents.
You may schedule up to 365 days in advance.
Find this on the bottom-left of a check.
Recommended — you’ll also get a reminder 2 days before your payment date.
Step 4 of 5 — Review and sign
Double-check all details on the review screen before signing. You’re authorizing an electronic debit from your bank account.
| Payment type | 1040-ES Estimated Tax |
| Tax period | 2026 |
| Payment amount | $1,250.00 |
| Payment date | April 15, 2026 |
| Bank account | Checking ••••7823 |
| Routing number | ••••••0042 |
Step 5 of 5 — Save your confirmation number
After submitting, you’ll see a confirmation screen with a unique confirmation number. Write this down or screenshot it — it’s the only way to look up, modify, or cancel your payment later.
Your confirmation number is:
| Payment type | 1040-ES Estimated Tax |
| Tax period | 2026 |
| Payment amount | $1,250.00 |
| Payment date | April 15, 2026 |
| Bank account | Checking ••••7823 |
| Confirmation email sent to | your@email.com |
🎯 Pro tips for staying on top of estimated taxes
- Set calendar reminders 2 weeks before each due date so you have time to calculate and submit.
- Schedule all 4 quarterly payments at once — Direct Pay lets you pay up to 365 days in advance (one payment at a time).
- For high-income years, consider using EFTPS.gov — it lets you see all scheduled payments in one place.
- Use the IRS Tax Withholding Estimator (IRS.gov) mid-year to check if you’re on track.
- If your income is higher than expected, adjust your next quarterly payment — you don’t have to pay equal amounts each quarter.
Other ways to pay estimated taxes
If Direct Pay doesn’t work for your situation, the IRS offers several alternatives:
- EFTPS (eftps.gov): Free, requires registration. Best for scheduling multiple payments and viewing payment history.
- Debit card, credit card, or digital wallet: Available via IRS-approved payment processors, but processing fees apply (typically 1.75%–2%).
- Check or money order: Mail Form 1040-ES with payment to the IRS. Make the check payable to “United States Treasury.”
- IRS2Go app: The IRS mobile app allows Direct Pay and card payments on iOS and Android.
Disclaimer: This post is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute tax or legal advice. Consult a qualified tax professional for guidance specific to your situation. IRS interface mockups are faithful recreations for illustration purposes.