As a self-employed professional, you must estimate your annual profit through-out the year (each quarter). This estimate is crucial because:
It determines your income tax prepayments, helping you avoid a large tax bill at the end of the year. Income tax prepayments are obligated for every self employed that has been active for more than 3 years.
It also affects your social security contributions, which are calculated based on your net taxable income.
In Accountable, the most used ways to estimate your yearly profit are:
Manual estimation: you manually enter your expected profit (or override the automatic estimate).
Extrapolation: Accountable projects your profit for the full year based on the income and expenses already recorded (it uses your history to make estimations).
When you adjust your manual profit estimate, Accountable automatically recalculates your income tax prepayments and social security contributions. Below, we’ll explore in detail what happens behind the scenes and how it impacts your taxes, cash flow, and contributions.
Read the article ‘How are social security contributions calculated and how to encode it?’ for more information about social contributions.
Read the article ‘How is my income tax calculated?’ for more information about copyright income.
Read the article ‘Social security contributions for the self-employed in 2025’ for more information about copyright income.
What is a Extraplation in Accountable?
Behind the scenes, Accountable continuously tracks your income, expenses, and deductions. Based on this, it estimates your net business result (profit after costs and contributions).
This profit estimate feeds into two major calculations:
Your estimated income tax and prepayments, and
Your estimated social security contributions.
If you decide to manually adjust this profit estimate, Accountable recalculates both of these projections immediately, which can raise or lower the amounts you’re advised to set aside or prepay.
The Impact of Changing Your Profit Estimate
Here’s a summary of the key effects:
Effect | What Changes | Explanation |
Income tax prepayments | A higher estimated profit increases the calculated prepayments. | The system assumes you’ll owe more tax, so the advised prepayments rise. |
End-of-year tax balance | If your actual profit differs from your estimate, you’ll either owe extra or get a refund. | Overestimating may lead to refunds; underestimating means paying the shortfall (possibly with interest). |
Social security contributions | Contributions are based on your profit. A higher estimate increases the projected contributions. | When your real profit is known, your social fund adjusts, charging extra or refunding overpayments. |
Cash flow impact | You may need to reserve more money for higher prepayments. | A good buffer is essential to avoid liquidity issues. |
Risk of penalties | Consistently underestimating profit can lead to penalties or interest from the tax authorities. | The Belgian tax office expects your prepayments to be reasonable. |
How Income Tax Calculations Are Affected
Prepayment calculations
Income tax prepayments help spread your tax payments throughout the year. Accountable uses your profit estimate to suggest how much you should prepay each quarter.Adjustments during the year
If you change your estimate mid-year, for instance, when business improves, Accountable updates future prepayment suggestions accordingly.Final tax return
When you file your tax return, your actual profit replaces the estimate. The tax office compares what you prepaid to what you owe:Overpaid → refund or offset.
Underpaid → you pay the difference, possibly with late-payment interest.
Progressive tax system
Belgium uses progressive income tax rates (roughly from 25 % to 50 %). Increasing your profit estimate may push you into a higher tax bracket, making additional income more heavily taxed.Social contributions as deductions
Social contributions are deductible business expenses. So while a higher profit increases your contributions, it also slightly reduces your taxable base, softening the net tax impact.
How Social Security Contributions Are Affected
Provisional contributions
Your social insurance fund charges quarterly provisional contributions, based on your income from three years ago (or the minimum if you’re a new self-employed person).Adjustments during the year
When you raise your profit estimate in Accountable, you can ask your social fund to increase your provisional payments accordingly. This helps prevent a large balance due later.Final settlement
Once your actual profit is confirmed (often a year or two later), your social fund recalculates your final contributions:Paid too little → you’ll receive a correction invoice.
Paid too much → you get a refund or credit.
Contribution rates and ceilings
Full-time self-employed professionals in Belgium typically pay around 20.5 % of net profit as social contributions (plus admin costs).
There’s both a minimum and a maximum ceiling, so beyond a certain income, the extra contributions are capped.Partial year adjustment
If you’re self-employed for only part of the year, contributions are calculated on a pro-rated basis. Accountable’s estimate adjusts accordingly.
Example Scenarios
Scenario A: Higher than expected profit
You start the year estimating € 40,000 profit.
Mid-year, revenue increases; you update the estimate to € 60,000.
Accountable recalculates your income tax and social contributions upward.
When you file your taxes, your actual profit matches the estimate, so you’ve prepaid enough and avoid surprises.
Scenario B: Lower than expected profit
You estimated € 80,000 but ended up earning € 50,000.
You likely overpaid both tax prepayments and social contributions.
You’ll get refunds or credits later, though it may take time.
Scenario C: Moving into a higher tax bracket
Increasing your profit estimate may move you into a higher marginal rate, meaning every extra euro is taxed more heavily.
Practical Tips
Be realistic and conservative, avoid overestimating unless you’re confident your income will grow significantly.
Adjust throughout the year, update your estimate if business trends change.
Maintain a buffer, keep cash aside for possible tax or contribution increases.
Coordinate with your social fund, you can often voluntarily increase provisional contributions.
Document your reasoning, keep notes for why you changed your estimate (contracts, forecasts, etc.), in case the tax office ever questions it.
Changing your manual profit estimate in Accountable directly affects your projected income tax and social contributions. It’s a powerful way to keep your finances accurate, but it also requires realism and good planning. By understanding the link between your profit forecast and your fiscal obligations, you can avoid surprises and manage your cash flow with confidence.