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Are tips taxable? Here’s how the new ‘no tax on tips’ deduction works.

by TheAdviserMagazine
1 day ago
in Business
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Are tips taxable? Here’s how the new ‘no tax on tips’ deduction works.
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For millions of service workers, the promise of “no tax on tips” sounds like a straight boost to your paycheck. But the reality is more nuanced than the slogan popularized by President Trump suggests.

This new federal income tax deduction comes with strict income caps, reporting rules, and eligibility requirements.

With the 2026 filing season in full swing, here’s everything you need to know about the new tax rule.

Technically speaking, “no tax on tips” is a federal income tax deduction. Depending on where you live, unless your state has passed a deduction, you would still owe state taxes on your income from tips.

Here are the key takeaways about the deduction:

There’s a cap: You can deduct up to $25,000 a year in qualified tips.

It’s an above-the-line deduction: You can claim it whether you itemize or take the standard deduction.

It lowers your adjusted gross income (AGI): Claiming the deduction reduces the income the IRS uses to calculate your taxes and eligibility for certain tax breaks.

What counts: The IRS defines “qualified tips” as voluntary, non-negotiated payments determined solely by the customer. In other words, if the customer didn’t freely choose to tip, the IRS doesn’t treat it as deductible. That means:

You can deduct these tips: Cash tips, credit card tips, and pooled tips.

But you can’t deduct these tips: Automatic service charges and any “gratuities” that aren’t truly optional.

The new deduction could provide meaningful savings for tipped workers. It might lower your AGI enough for you to qualify for other tax credits or deductions you couldn’t claim before. An analysis by the CPA Journal estimates the average single taxpayer in a tipped occupation could save roughly $1,985 annually.

Read more: Best tax deductions to claim this year

Not everyone who receives tips qualifies for the deduction. To prevent high earners from reclassifying wages or salary as tips, the Treasury Department and the IRS set clear limits on who qualifies.

The deduction is aimed at lower- and middle-income workers and begins to phase out once your modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) reaches the following:

$150,000 for single filers

$300,000 for married couples filing jointly

Married couples generally must file jointly to claim the benefit.

Eligible jobs and industries

The IRS maintains a list of more than 60 “qualified occupations” that historically received tips before Dec. 31, 2024. If your role isn’t on that list, your tips may not qualify.

Common examples include:

Food and beverage: Servers, bartenders, bussers, pizza delivery drivers

Hospitality: Bellhops, concierges, valets

Personal services: Hairdressers, nail technicians, massage therapists

Entertainment: Dancers, content creators, tour guides

Transportation: Rideshare and taxi drivers

“IRS regulations are very inclusive, so people should assume they’re in rather than out,” said Elena Patel, senior fellow and co-director at Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center.

Independent contractors can also claim the deduction, but it can’t exceed the net income from the business where the tips were earned.

From waiters and barbers to hotel valets and late-night delivery drivers, tipping fuels a huge part of the U.S. workforce. Roughly 4 million workers receive tips, according to Yale Budget Lab.

The idea of “no tax on tips” first gained traction on the campaign trail, where Trump repeatedly pitched the concept as a way to put more money back in the pockets of service workers.

That message stuck — and eventually made its way into the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed into law in July 2025.

Other OBBBA tax changes are rolling out this year too, including no tax on overtime and a $6,000 boost to the standard deduction for taxpayers age 65 and older.

Tips have always been reported separately from regular income on a W-2. Generally, all credit and debit card tips are reported on your W-2 already because your employer processes them through the payroll system.

“All the information you need has always been reported on your W-2,” said Patel. “It’s the same reporting — it just enters your tax form slightly differently.”

How do you report it? Look at your W-2:

So use Box 7 of your W-2 (or Box 14 if your employer specifically labeled them) as the basis for your deduction.

“People aren’t used to paying attention to the box that reports tip income separately because it hasn’t mattered much before,” said Patel. This year it does.

But what if your employer didn’t enter your tips in Box 7? In that case, you’ll need to report them based on what’s listed on your last paystub of 2025.

One potential challenge with the deduction is recordkeeping. If you didn’t track your tips carefully in 2025, it can be harder to separate voluntary tips, which qualify, from mandatory service charges, which don’t.

“In this case, the worker and their tax preparer may have to go through paystubs or additional documentation from the worker’s employer to determine which tips are considered qualified,” said Logan Allec, a CPA and owner of Clarita CPA Group in Santa Clarita, Calif.

Next year, the process for reporting your tips should be easier, said Allec.

“The W-2 will be updated so that tipped workers know exactly the amount of their qualified tips,” he said.

Starting this year, calendar year 2026, you can choose to have less tax taken out of your tips thanks to updated IRS tables. To make sure your paycheck reflects these savings, you must fill out the new 2026 W-4 and get it to your manager or HR rep as soon as possible.

If you decide to update your W-4, you’ll take home more money each paycheck. But because less tax is withheld during the year, your refund will likely be smaller next year, or you might even owe money.

If you don’t like the sound of that, don’t worry about updating your W-4. Keep things how they are, and you’ll simply deduct your tips at tax time next year.

Read more: Where’s my refund? How to check your federal tax refund status

Plenty of service workers underreport or skip reporting their cash tips altogether. That might have made sense in the past, when reporting cash tips meant keeping less of your take-home pay. But now, it can cost you.

Throughout the year, you want to maintain a daily log where you track all your cash tips. By the 10th of each month, report the prior month’s tips if they total $20 or more. Doing so can help you deduct more at tax time.

Missed reporting your cash during the year? You still have a chance to fix it.

When you file your 1040, use IRS Form 4137 to list “unreported tips.” You’ll have to pay the required Social Security and Medicare (FICA) taxes on those tips, but by doing so, you can officially get them on the books.

Form 4137 is your last chance to turn those unreported cash tips into “qualified” income that can count toward the $25,000 deduction. Your unreported cash tips stack on top of what you already reported to your employer.

The rule applies to the 2025 tax year, covering tips earned from Jan. 1 through Dec. 31, 2025. You can claim the deduction now as you file your 2025 return.



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