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Home IRS & Taxes

How to Update Payroll for New IRS Rules

by TheAdviserMagazine
3 days ago
in IRS & Taxes
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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How to Update Payroll for New IRS Rules
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If you are feeling the weight of the new OBBBA payroll requirements, you’re not alone. Payroll updates don’t happen in a vacuum. Usually, transitions in procedure or payroll software arrive alongside overfilled to-do lists, tight timelines, and year-end planning. 

There is good news in all of this — you don’t have to overhaul everything at once.

Once you strip away that mindset, you can focus on the pressing questions as payroll rules shift, including:

How can we capture overtime and tip data without interrupting day-to-day operations?

Can our existing payroll system support the new requirements?

What do we need to do to keep our payroll teams confident, aligned, and prepared as reporting expectations change.

Instead of getting deep into technicalities, we’ll walk you through the updates step by step to help you focus on staying compliant while ensuring payroll keeps running smoothly.

Key takeaways

The OBBBA introduces new federal income tax deductions for qualified tips and overtime, requiring employers to understand eligibility and track these earnings separately.

While core reporting forms won’t change until 2026, employers can begin preparing in 2025 by reviewing payroll systems, updating pay codes, and organizing supporting data.

The IRS is providing temporary penalty relief for tax year 2025, giving businesses time to adjust payroll processes as long as filings remain complete, accurate, and on time.

Clear documentation and communication with employees help ensure payroll accuracy and reduce confusion as these updates are implemented.

A practical guide to the OBBBA transition

1. Build Your Knowledge Base

The OBBBA provides employees with two new significant tax advantages: 

The Qualified Tip Deduction. People who are in traditionally tipped roles can now exclude up to $25,000 in qualified tips from their adjusted gross income (AGI). 

The Qualified Overtime Deduction. For those who go above and beyond the typical 40-hour work week, there is now a deduction for qualified overtime compensation. Taxpayers will be able to deduct up to $25,000 (for joint filers) or $12,500 (for individual filers). 

It’s important to clarify with your team that these are deductions for federal income tax only. Standard FICA (Social Security and Medicare) tax still applies. Setting clear expectations now ensures that your employees can plan ahead. 

You will also want to identify which roles are eligible for these new deductions. The IRS released a list of nearly 70 occupations, ensuring that a wide variety of service-based roles can benefit from these changes.  

Eligible roles now include occupations such as:

Delivery drivers

Digital content creators and influencers

Guest service representatives

House cleaners

Fitness trainers

Pet sitters 

Travel guides

Manicurists

2. Review Current Systems and Workflows

Before making updates, it helps to take stock of what’s already working and where small gaps could morph into bigger headaches later. This step is about understanding how payroll data moves today so you’re not scrambling when new requirements go live.

Where to start:

Start with what you have: Look at your existing recordkeeping processes and payroll tools. Knowing your baseline makes it easier to spot what needs adjusting — and what doesn’t.

Map how data flows: Pay attention to how information moves between systems, from time tracking to payroll reporting. Understanding where data is (and isn’t) shared helps prevent errors or duplications. 

Look at payroll through an employee lens. Review pay stubs and tax forms as your team would see them. Easy-to-read information builds trust and reduces questions when changes roll out.

Organize occupation codes early: Document the correct occupation codes for each role now so you’re not chasing details amongst reporting deadlines.

3. Implement Updates

This is where the action happens — it’s time to put those updates into motion. Prioritize small, focused changes.

What to prioritize:

Update pay tracking: Make sure your payroll system can distinguish between regular wages and qualified overtime or tips so eligible amounts are tracked correctly. Separating these categories now helps ensure eligible amounts are tracked correctly from the jump.

Confirm system sync: Work with your HRIS or payroll provider to ensure new pay codes flow cleanly into payroll and reporting fields. This minimizes the opportunity for gaps, duplicates, or manual fixes down the road.

Automate where possible: Schedule regular payroll and hours reports so you can spot discrepancies early—especially around overtime or tipped income. 

Plan for documentation: While official reporting on tax forms doesn’t become mandatory until 2026, keeping organized records now will make future filings and audits much easier. 

Test before year-end: Running some sample scenarios helps confirm your setup is working as intended and builds confidence before updates go live.

Think long-term: Know where records are stored and how to access them so reviews or transitions don’t become last-minute scrambles.

4. Share Your Progress 

Many businesses approach this by:

Providing simple guidance that explains what is changing and what (if anything) employees need to do about it.

Confirming understanding, so everyone knows where to find accurate information.

Empowering managers with the context and tools needed to answer questions or flag discrepancies.

Explaining the “why” behind updates helps employees feel confident that their payroll information is handled correctly.

Encouraging individual tax guidance when questions reach beyond general information.

5. Stay Informed as Guidance Evolves

While the OBBBA introduces new payroll requirements, more core reporting forms — like W-2 and Form 941 — won’t officially change until tax year 2026. For 2025 filings, you’ll continue using the forms you already know, giving you time to prepare without pressure.

To support this transition, the IRS has announced a temporary safe harbor for tax year 2025. The IRS will grant penalty relief for employers not separately reporting tips or overtime pay on tax year 2025 forms. This gives you the time needed to refine your internal payroll system without the fear of penalties. This grace period is given to help you transition smoothly into payroll compliance with these new laws. 

As additional guidance is released, staying connected to official IRS updates and trusted resources can help you plan ahead with confidence and avoid last-minute changes.

Where to turn for help if questions arise while you update your payroll systems for compliance

There are more changes to come this tax season, and we’re here to help you navigate all of them. TurboTax and TurboTax Experts can help you understand the new deductions and how they might apply to you.

¹IRS: Treasury and IRS provide penalty relief for tax year 2025 for information reporting on tips and overtime under the One Big Beautiful Bill.

²IRS Notice 2025-62, page 11.



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