QuickBooks has two products aimed at small business owners: QuickBooks Self-Employed and QuickBooks Online. They sound similar. They’re not. Picking the wrong one wastes money or leaves you with a tool that doesn’t do what you need. Here’s the real breakdown.
What QuickBooks Self-Employed Actually Is
QuickBooks Self-Employed is built for one specific person: the solo freelancer or gig worker who needs to track income, expenses, and estimated quarterly taxes. That’s mostly what it does.
Key features:
- Automatic mileage tracking via your phone’s GPS
- Swipe-to-categorize transactions (business vs. personal)
- Estimated quarterly tax calculations
- Schedule C export for tax filing
- Basic invoicing
It does not have a proper chart of accounts. It does not support multiple users. It cannot track accounts payable, inventory, or project profitability. It’s a simplified tax-prep tool, not a real accounting system.
Pricing: Self-Employed runs around $15/month. The Self-Employed Tax Bundle (which includes TurboTax Self-Employed) is around $25/month.
What QuickBooks Online Actually Is
QuickBooks Online is a full accounting platform. It tracks income and expenses, but it also handles invoicing, vendor bills, payroll integration, project tracking, inventory, and real financial reporting.
There are four tiers:
- Simple Start ($30/month): One user, basic income and expense tracking, invoicing, and reports. Good for solo service businesses that need proper books.
- Essentials ($60/month): Up to 3 users, adds accounts payable (tracking bills to vendors), time tracking.
- Plus ($90/month): Up to 5 users, adds inventory tracking and project profitability.
- Advanced ($200/month): Up to 25 users, advanced reporting, dedicated customer support.
The Real Difference: Who Each Version Is For
Choose QuickBooks Self-Employed if:
- You’re a freelancer, consultant, or gig worker (Uber, DoorDash, Etsy, etc.)
- You file a Schedule C (not a business entity return)
- Your main goal is tracking quarterly taxes and basic expenses
- You have no employees and don’t invoice many clients
- You want the cheapest option that gets the job done
Choose QuickBooks Online if:
- You’ve formed an LLC, S-Corp, or any business entity
- You invoice clients regularly and need to track receivables
- You have employees or contractors you need to pay
- You need real financial reports (P&L, balance sheet, cash flow)
- You want your accountant or bookkeeper to have access
- You’re building a business, not just freelancing on the side
This is the core issue most people miss. If you have a real business entity, QuickBooks Online is almost always the right call. Self-Employed doesn’t produce the financial statements you need for business credit, investors, or SBA loans. Once you’ve built the right financial foundation (see our guide on how to set up your business finances from day one), you need a tool that matches that structure.
Can You Switch From Self-Employed to Online?
Sort of, but it’s painful. QuickBooks does not offer a direct migration path from Self-Employed to Online. You’d need to export your data and manually re-enter it in QuickBooks Online. That’s a significant headache if you’ve been using Self-Employed for a year or more.
The lesson: if there’s any chance you’ll grow, start with QuickBooks Online Simple Start from day one. The $15/month difference is not worth the migration headache later.
Pricing Side-by-Side
| Plan | Price/Month | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Self-Employed | ~$15 | Freelancers, gig workers |
| Self-Employed + TurboTax | ~$25 | Freelancers who DIY taxes |
| Online Simple Start | ~$30 | Solo business owners with an entity |
| Online Essentials | ~$60 | Small teams, need bill tracking |
| Online Plus | ~$90 | Businesses with inventory or projects |
When to Upgrade Within QuickBooks Online
Start with Simple Start and upgrade when you hit a real limitation, not before. Signs you need to upgrade:
- Simple Start to Essentials: When you have a bookkeeper or VA who needs access, or when you’re paying enough vendors that tracking bills becomes necessary.
- Essentials to Plus: When you take on projects and need to know which ones are actually profitable, or when you carry physical inventory.
- Plus to Advanced: When you have a team of 5+ people using QuickBooks daily and need batch invoicing, custom reporting, or a dedicated support rep.
Bottom Line
If you’re freelancing and want a simple way to track taxes, Self-Employed works fine. If you’re running an actual business, even a solo one, QuickBooks Online is worth the extra cost. You’ll get real financial reports, better invoicing, and books your accountant can actually work with. Start with Simple Start and grow from there.