You’ve likely heard of the new “no tax on tips.” Incredible, right? Well, the real story is a little more nuanced than NO TAX.
Starting with the 2025 tax year, if you work in a tipping-occupation and meet some conditions, you can deduct up to $25,000 of “qualified tips” from your federal taxable income.
Here’s how it works:
- The deduction applies whether you itemize or take the standard deduction.
- To qualify, your occupation needs to “customarily and regularly” receive tips before 2025. Also, the tips must be voluntarily given (not automatic service charges) and appropriately reported.
- The deduction is subject to a phase-out based on your Modified Adjusted Gross Income (MAGI). For single filers: phase-out begins around $150,000 MAGI; for married filing jointly: around $300,000. If your MAGI keeps climbing, the deduction keeps shrinking — and at certain income levels it disappears altogether.
What does this mean for you? If you’re a server, bartender, rideshare driver, hairstylist or in another traditional tip job, this is a legit tax strategy you’ll be able to consider. It lowers your income subject to income tax and could keep you in a lower tax bracket or help you qualify for other benefits that cut off at certain income thresholds.
Don’t get confused though: you likely will still want to pay income and payroll taxes over the year (you will still owe social security and medicare taxes). Your benefit will come at tax-time at year end when you get to claim this deduction, and you’ll need quality records to properly claim it.
So don’t skip the paperwork. In fact, embrace the paperwork: report the tips properly, keep your records, track your total income. If you qualify, lean into this deduction and enjoy the benefits.
