Dental Associate W2 vs. 1099 Calculator — Utah
Find out exactly how much more you need to earn as a 1099 independent contractor to match a W2 offer — after taxes, benefits, and self-employment costs.
A 1099 offer at the same dollar amount is almost always worse than W2. You pay self-employment tax (an extra ~7.65%), fund your own benefits, and lose the employer's 401(k) match. Adjust the inputs below to see your break-even 1099 income.
Utah's 4.65% flat income tax is moderate. The Wasatch Front corridor — from Ogden through Salt Lake City to Provo — is one of the more dynamic dental markets in the West, driven by Utah's young and growing population. Associates here should expect a break-even 1099 premium of around 13% above a comparable W2 offer when full benefits are included.
Your Situation
The gross annual salary (W2) or contract rate (1099) being compared. Drag or tap to adjust.
Affects federal tax brackets and standard deduction.
W2 Benefits Included
Check each benefit your W2 employer provides. Their dollar value is added to your W2 total compensation.
Malpractice insurance
State-adjusted default: $3,200/yr
401(k) employer match
3% of gross salary match (common dental practice offering)
CE reimbursement
~$2,500/yr covers ~35 CE credits per 2-year renewal cycle (ADA)
W2 vs. 1099 Comparison
At the same $200,000 gross income.
| Item | W2 | 1099 |
|---|---|---|
| Gross income | $200,000 | $200,000 |
| FICA / SE tax | −$14,339 | −$28,234 |
| Federal income tax | −$36,734 | −$21,985 |
| Utah income tax | −$8,551 | −$5,694 |
| Benefits / costs | +$16,200 | −$12,700 |
| Net take-home | $140,376 | $131,387 |
| Total comp value | $156,576 | $131,387 |
Break-even 1099 income in Utah
$235,185
For 1099 at $200,000 to match W2 at $200,000 in Utah, you need $235,185 as 1099 — 17.6% more. Make sure any 1099 offer accounts for this gap before you accept.
Ready to set your own income?
Practice owners control their compensation structure — and their tax strategy. Minty+ helps associates buy their first practice, so you can move from negotiating a 1099 rate to building equity as an owner.
Sources & References
Tax rates, formulas, and benefit benchmarks are based on the following sources. Consult a CPA for advice specific to your situation.
IRS & Tax Code
- •IRS Publication 15 (Circular E), 2026 — FICA tax rates, SS wage base ($184,500)— irs.gov
- •IRS Publication 334 (Tax Guide for Small Business), 2026 — SE tax calculation (92.35% base)— irs.gov
- •IRS Publication 535 (Business Expenses), 2026 — health insurance, malpractice, CE deductibility— irs.gov
- •IRS Rev. Proc. 2025-32 — 2026 standard deductions, tax brackets, and inflation adjustments (incl. OBBBA changes)— irs.gov
- •IRS Form 8995-A and IRC § 199A — QBI deduction and SSTB phase-out (OBBBA widened phase-out range to $75k/$150k)— irs.gov
State Tax Data
- •Tax Foundation — State Individual Income Tax Rates and Brackets 2025— taxfoundation.org
Dental Industry
- •ADA Survey of Dental Practice — typical benefits packages for dental associates— ada.org
- •ADA News — Navigating 1099 vs. W2 classification (2023)— ada.org
- •DentVest — W2 vs. 1099: What's Better for the Associate Dentist?— dentvest.net
- •Engage Advisors — Independent Contractor vs. W2 Employee for Dentists— engageadvisors.com
Disclaimer: This calculator is for educational purposes only and does not constitute tax, legal, or financial advice. Tax figures use 2026 IRS parameters (IRS Rev. Proc. 2025-32) including changes from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA). State tax rates reflect the top marginal rate from Tax Foundation data and are applied as a simplified flat marginal rate; actual state liability may differ based on graduated brackets and deductions. The QBI deduction for dentists (a specified service trade or business) begins phasing out above $201,775 (single) / $403,500 (MFJ) in 2026 over a $75,000 / $150,000 range — verify with your CPA. Always consult a qualified tax advisor before making employment or entity-structure decisions.