Most free budget templates are built for people with a steady paycheck. They assume the same income every month, no quarterly tax payments, and a clean separation between "work" and "personal" expenses. If you're self-employed — freelancer, contractor, gig worker, small business owner — those templates don't fit your life.
This template is built specifically for self-employed people. It handles variable income, automatically calculates your quarterly tax set-aside, separates business and personal expenses, and tracks your net profit alongside your personal budget.
What Makes This Template Different
Variable income handling. Instead of a fixed monthly income, the template has an income log where you enter each client payment as it arrives. The budget auto-recalculates based on what you've actually received, not what you expected.
Automatic quarterly tax set-aside. The template calculates 27% of your net self-employment income and moves it to a tax reserve automatically. You can adjust this percentage based on your tax bracket. This money is shown as "reserved" — not available for spending.
Business vs. personal expense separation. The template has two expense sections: business expenses (Schedule C deductions) and personal expenses. Business expenses reduce your taxable income; personal expenses come from your after-tax take-home. The template keeps these separate so you're not confusing deductible business costs with personal spending.
Net profit dashboard. At a glance, you can see your gross income, business expenses, estimated taxes, and personal take-home for the month. This is the number that matters for your personal budget.
Template Structure
Tab 1 — Income Log
- Date, client name, invoice number, amount received, payment method
- Running total of monthly income
- Auto-calculated tax reserve (27% of net)
- Spendable income (gross income − business expenses − tax reserve)
Tab 2 — Business Expenses
- Date, merchant, category (Schedule C line), amount, receipt scanned (checkbox)
- Categories match Schedule C lines: advertising, car & truck, contract labor, insurance, office expenses, supplies, utilities, etc.
- Running total of deductible business expenses
Tab 3 — Personal Budget
- Standard personal expense categories: housing, groceries, utilities, transportation, dining out, entertainment, personal care, etc.
- Budgeted vs. actual columns
- Funded from "spendable income" calculated in Tab 1
Tab 4 — Quarterly Tax Tracker
- Shows accumulated tax reserve month by month
- Quarterly payment due dates (April 15, June 16, September 15, January 15)
- Estimated quarterly payment amount based on year-to-date net income
Tab 5 — Annual Summary
- Month-by-month income, expenses, taxes, and net profit
- Useful for spotting seasonal patterns and planning for slow months
→ Download the free expense tracker template — open it in Google Sheets via File → Import.
How to Set Up the Template
Step 1: Enter your business expense categories. In Tab 2, review the pre-filled Schedule C categories and add any that are specific to your business. If you're a photographer, add "camera equipment." If you're a consultant, add "professional development."
Step 2: Set your tax reserve percentage. The default is 27% — a reasonable estimate for most self-employed people in the 22% federal bracket after accounting for the self-employment tax deduction. If you're in a higher bracket or a high-tax state, increase this to 30–35%. If you're in a lower bracket or have significant deductions, you may be able to use 20–25%.
Step 3: Set your personal budget targets. In Tab 3, fill in your budgeted amounts for each personal expense category. These should be funded from your spendable income (Tab 1), not your gross income.
Step 4: Log income as it arrives. Every time a client pays you, add a row to the Income Log. The tax reserve and spendable income recalculate automatically.
Step 5: Log business expenses as they occur. Every business purchase goes into Tab 2. Check the "receipt scanned" box after you've scanned the receipt in ReceiptSync.
Tracking Business Receipts Alongside Your Budget
The biggest gap in most self-employed budgets is the business expense side. Personal expenses are easy — they show up in your bank account. Business expenses are harder: some are cash, some are on a business card, some are on a personal card, and some are digital subscriptions that you might forget to log.
The most reliable system is to scan every business receipt immediately in ReceiptSync. The app captures the merchant, date, and amount. At the end of each week, export your ReceiptSync data and paste it into the Business Expenses tab. The template auto-calculates your total deductible expenses and updates your net profit and tax reserve.
This matters at tax time because every dollar of legitimate business expenses you log reduces your taxable income — and therefore your tax bill. A freelancer with $60,000 in gross income and $15,000 in documented business expenses pays taxes on $45,000, not $60,000. At a 27% effective rate, that's $4,050 in tax savings. The receipts are the documentation that makes those deductions stick in an audit.
For a complete list of what qualifies as a deductible business expense, see our Schedule C expense categories guide.
Handling Slow Months
Variable income is the hardest part of self-employed budgeting. The template handles this with a "monthly buffer" concept: in high-income months, you don't increase your personal spending — you build a buffer in a separate savings account. In slow months, you draw from the buffer to maintain consistent personal spending.
The rule of thumb: keep 2–3 months of personal expenses in your buffer account at all times. This smooths out the feast-or-famine cycle that makes self-employed finances stressful.
Related guides: Free Zero-Based Budget Template for Google Sheets, Schedule C Expense Categories Complete Guide, Best Expense Tracker for 1099 Contractors, and How to Scan Receipts to Google Sheets.