How To Make a Budget:The Do's and Don'ts of Managing Your Own Business
Running your own business means running your own finances. There is no payroll department setting money aside for taxes, no employer matching your retirement, and no one warning you when a slow month is coming. As a Pro, your budget is the system that keeps your business alive.
The good news is that managing your money as an independent worker is not complicated once you know the rules. This guide covers the core do's and don'ts so you can keep more of what you earn, avoid the most common financial traps, and build something that lasts.
How to Make a Budget for Independent Contractors: What You Actually Need to Know:
Before the do's and don'ts, there are two rules that every Pro needs in place from the start.
Rule 1: Separate your personal and business money
Open a dedicated business checking account the week you start working independently. This one move saves hours of stress at tax time, gives you a real picture of what your business earns and spends, and makes you look more professional when clients ask about payment. When personal and business finances are mixed together, nothing is clear and managing your money can become extremely stressful.
Rule 2: Pay yourself a set amount each month
When income is irregular, the most common mistake is spending everything good months bring in. Instead, decide on a monthly salary for yourself and transfer that amount consistently. Move any extra income into a separate savings buffer and pull from it when you need to. This is a great way to budget and while we know that with contract work money flow can be unpredictable, this tip can help you make it less of a guessing game. It’s all about budgeting.

Contractor Budgeting: Do's and Don'ts at a Glance
We mapped out the most impactful habits as well as the most damaging mistakes you can make when being a contractor, based on what independent workers actually experience running their businesses day to day.
Taxes: The Biggest Blindspot
Taxes can be confusing for everyone, but independent contractor taxes can be a bigger challenge. Here is some helpful information about how to handle them:
How much should independent contractors set aside for taxes?
This is the question that catches most new Pros off guard. In the US, when you work for yourself, no one withholds taxes from your earnings. That means at the end of the year; or every quarter, you owe the IRS (International Revenue Services) a lump sum that can feel like it comes out of nowhere.
Experts consistently recommend setting aside 25 to 30% of every payment you receive specifically for taxes. That covers both income tax and self-employment tax, which includes your Social Security and Medicare contributions that an employer would normally split with you.
What is Self Employment Tax?
Self-employment tax is the 15.3% tax that independent workers pay to cover Social Security and Medicare. When you work a regular job, your employer splits this cost with you, each paying 7.65%. When you work for yourself, there is no employer, so you cover both halves.
Of that 15.3%, 12.4% goes toward Social Security and 2.9% goes toward Medicare. The one upside is that the IRS lets you deduct half of what you pay in self-employment tax when you file, which lowers your overall taxable income slightly.
Quarterly estimated tax deadlines (Keep these in mind)
• Quarter 1 payment due: April 15
• Quarter 2 payment due: June 15
• Quarter 3 payment due: September 15
• Quarter 4 payment due: January 15 of the following year
What Business Expenses can Pros Deduct?
Every legitimate business expense reduces the income you pay taxes on. Common deductible expenses for independent workers include:
• Tools, equipment, and supplies used for work
• Vehicle mileage or fuel costs for job-related travel
• Phone and internet bills, at the percentage used for work
• Business insurance premiums
• Marketing costs; such as, business cards, website, app subscriptions
• Licensing and certification fees
• A portion of your home if you use dedicated space as an office
Pro tip: Use a simple expense tracking app or spreadsheet and log expenses as they happen. The IRS requires receipts for most deductions, so keeping records in real time will help make filing easier.
Making Money: How to Price Your Services
We’ve talked about budgeting, but how do you make sure your business is making money in the first place? It’s all about setting your prices. Like with every business, how much you make starts by determining how much what you are selling is worth. As an independent contractor selling services, how do you determine that? Here’s how:
How do independent contractors set prices that cover all their costs?
Underpricing is one of the most common reasons independent workers struggle financially. In the push to win opportunities, it is easy to set your rate just below what competitors charge, without accounting for the full cost of running your business.
A profitable price covers four things: the direct cost of doing the work, your overhead expenses, your target income, and a margin for the unexpected. Here is a simple way to think about it:
A job that looks profitable on the surface can actually lose money once you factor in drive time, tool wear, and the admin hours it takes to manage. We go deeper on pricing strategy in our guide on how to set your rates as a Pro on uSource.
Financial Safety as an Independent Contractor
It can feel daunting to think about what will happen if work stops coming in, but it doesn’t have to be. With proper planning you can build a safety net around your business so you can be okay through the highs and lows. What you need is a cash buffer.
Why do independent contractors need a cash buffer?
Every Pro hits slow months. Things like a slower flow of customers, or even bad weather can cause disruptions in your business. When that happens, the difference between a stressful situation and a crisis is whether you have a financial buffer in place.
The target we recommend: at least two months of your basic operating expenses sitting in a dedicated savings account. That covers your must-pay costs like insurance, fuel and any subscriptions without touching your personal finances. Build toward it gradually if you have to. Even one month of coverage changes how you handle slow periods.
Three buckets every Pro should maintain
• Day-to-day business money, what comes in, what goes out for expenses Operating account
• 25–30% of every payment, held here and paid quarterly Tax account
• Emergency fund — minimum two months of business expenses, do not touch unless necessary Buffer account
We Can Make it Easier: Meet the App Built for Pros Just Like You
The financial side of running your own business gets easier when opportunities are steady and payments are clear. That’s why we created uSource, a platform that connects Pros with customers directly at no cost. We have consistent opportunities, transparent pricing, and a platform built around your success. Ready to grow your business? Join uSource as a Pro.


