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Showing posts with label 2025. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2025. Show all posts

Thursday, January 29, 2026

No Tax On Overtime

 

Let’s look at the overtime tax changes.

This is one of the provisions from the One Big Beautiful Bill (OBBB) that the president signed on July 4, 2025. It is retroactive to January 1, 2025, and we will be seeing the overtime deductions on individual tax returns filed in 2026 for tax year 2025.

Note that I said “deduction.” As we have discussed before, tax credits are generally worth more than a deduction. The tax impact of a credit is dollar-for-dollar. The tax impact from a deduction depends on your tax rate (if you are at a 22% rate, then your deduction is worth 22 cents on the dollar).  That said, we will take the break.

The key thing here is that the break applies to overtime, so you must be in a job that pays overtime. Multiple parties might address overtime requirements: the federal government, a state government, a union, a voluntary arrangement by your employer, but only the federal definition will work here.

The Code looks at the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), which introduces us to the terms: “exempt” and “nonexempt” employee. Generally speaking, nonexempt employees are required to be paid overtime, whereas exempt employees are not. The overtime pay is defined as 1.5 times the regular pay rate for all hours over 40 and that itself over a 7-day period.

COMMENT: The definition of exempt looks to a duties test (executive, administrative, or professional). A CPA will be considered a professional and therefore exempt for purposes of the FLSA.

Let’s say you are nonexempt under FLSA. You next question should be: how is your overtime computed? The FLSA requires 1.5 times the regular pay rate. Let’s say that your employer pays double time (I wish). How much is your overtime and how much qualifies for the deduction?

EXAMPLE: You make $35/hour and your employer pays double rate for overtime. You have 150 hours of overtime for the year.

150 hours times $35 times 200% = $10,500

That is what you were paid for those overtime hours, but that is not the deduction.

We have previously discussed how the Code likes to take a common term and restrict it by placing “qualified” in front. Your qualified overtime deduction caps out as follows:

150 hours times $35 times 50% = $2,625

Note that the deduction does not apply to the base pay ($35) for your overtime hours. It applies only to the additional pay, and the additional only up to 50% ($35 times 50%). Chances are good that is not the way you think of overtime, but we are talking tax.

COMMENT: Not quite “No Tax On Overtime.”

The FLSA refers to a 7-day period. There are occupations (firefighters come to mind) that are paid on a different cycle. The Code allows for this variation, and we will not discuss it further.

There is a significant reporting issue for 2025 returns to be filed in 2026: the 2025 Form W-2 does not have a box to report “qualified” overtime. In fact, it does not have a specific box to report overtime at all, although an employer may use an available box (probably box 14) to report. The tax bill (OBBA) was signed by the president on July 4, 2025, a bit late into the year to reasonably demand retroactive changes in W-2 reporting. The new 2026 W-2 forms (for returns to be filed in 2027) will be changed to include the amount of qualified overtime.

But what are we to do for the 2025 returns filed in 2026?

First, it is a concern only if you are paid overtime. That knocks out quite a few of us.

Second, I suspect that tax preparers will routinely request a copy of your last 2025 paystub, if you are paid overtime. The stub should have information showing the calculation. Granted, the numbers may have to be reworked, but it is a logical place to start.

Third, your employer might voluntarily provide this information for 2025, in which case you likely have an attachment to your Form W-2. I suppose an employer could alternatively send you to a website for this information. There is a one-time reporting safe harbor for employers: if they tracked your overtime for the second half of 2025 (remember, OBBA was signed July 4, 2025), they can extrapolate to the full 2025 year. This safe harbor goes away for 2026, as employers will be required to track and report actual detail.

COMMENT: There is a somewhat similar W-2 reporting issue for qualified tips. The difference between the overtime deduction and the tips deduction is there is (some) existing tip reporting on the W-2. The tax preparer has a place to start. The preparer has no similar starting place for overtime.

Like the tips deduction, this is not an itemized deduction. You can get this deduction whether you itemize or not.

There is an overall limit on the deduction. If you are single, the limit is $12,500. If you are married, the limit is $25,000.

And this overall limit is reduced if you have too much income. Too much starts at $150,000 for singles and $300,000 for marrieds. Beyond that point, you will phase-out at a dime on the dollar.

If you are married, you will need to file a joint return.

You will need to provide your social security number to claim the deduction. Leave it out and the IRS will automatically revise your tax return and send you a bill.

A bonus will not qualify for this deduction. It must be overtime, even if the bonus is in lieu of overtime. Stand-by or on-call pay will not qualify either.

Like tips, the overtime deduction is for federal income tax only. It will not reduce your FICA taxes, and your state will decide whether you have a state equivalent to the federal tax deduction. Some states will; other states will not.

In case you were wondering: you cannot claim the overtime deduction and the tips deduction on the same income. One or the other, folks.

The deduction has a shelf life of four years. It will go away (unless a future Congress extends it) after the 2028 returns to be filed in 2029.

BTW, you can now revise your 2026 federal Form W-4 (telling your employer how much to withhold) to allow for your expected qualified overtime deduction. You did not have this option (directly; one could get there indirectly) for 2025. Why the difference between 2025 and 2026? Just look to November.

And there you have the new overtime deduction.


Tuesday, January 13, 2026

New Vehicle Loan Interest Deduction

 

I have been looking at individual tax changes for 2025 returns as well as changes starting anew in 2026. We may do several posts covering the changes likely to affect the most people.

I will start with one that may affect me: the new vehicle loan interest deduction.

My car has been reliable, but it is getting old. There comes a point with older cars where regular maintenance instead changes to regular repairs. I may or may not be there yet, but I am paying attention. What I know is the next car will not be cheap.

So, what is the tax change?

First, it is a deduction, not a credit. As we have discussed before, a credit is worth more than a deduction (a credit is dollar-for-dollar, whereas a deduction is a dollar-times-the-tax-rate). We will take it, though.

Second, it is not an itemized deduction. This is important, because introducing something as an itemized deduction is as much political sleight-of-hand as a real tax break. How? Easy. Let’s say that you are married, and the sum of your taxes, mortgage interest, and contributions is $25 grand. The tax Code spots you $31,500 just for being married (this amount is called the standard deduction). Which number will you use: the actual ($25,000) or the standard ($31,500)? The standard, of course, because it is the bigger deduction. Now someone can yammer that your mortgage interest is deductible – but is it really? I would argue that it is not, because the $31,500 is available whether you have a mortgage or not. Calling it deductible does allow for political blather, though.

The vehicle loan interest deduction is taken in addition to the itemized/standard deduction. It will show up on line 13b (see below), after the standard deduction/itemized deductions on line 12e. Our married couple will be deducting $31,500 (the standard) plus the allowable new vehicle loan interest.


Third, the deduction is not limited to cars. Technically it applies to “qualified passenger vehicles,” a term that includes the usual suspects (cars, trucks, SUVs, vans, minivans) as well as motorcycles. I am not as clear on campers, although the 14,000-pound limitation might kick-in there.

Fourth, it must be a new vehicle, which the Code refers to as “original use.” Not surprisingly, there is a special rule to exclude dealership demo use.

Fifth, you must have bought the vehicle after 2024. The deduction expires (unless a future Congress extends it) after 2028. Note that I said “bought.” A lease will not work.

Sixth, the deduction is for personal use of the vehicle, and the personal use must exceed 50 percent. While this may sound strict, it is not. Deductions for business use of a vehicle might take place under other areas of the tax Code, so it is possible that you will be deducting some of the interest as a business deduction (say as a proprietor or landlord) and the personal portion under this new deduction. You decide how to chop-up and report the numbers (some business, none business), and you cannot deduct the same interest twice. The behind-the-scenes accounting might be a mess, but you have the concept. There is also a favorable rule concerning personal use: such use is decided when you buy the vehicle. Later changes in use will be disregarded.

Seventh, the deduction is available to individuals, decedent estates, (certain) disregarded entities and nongrantor trusts. An estate is not immediately intuitive (why would a deceased person buy a vehicle?), but it refers to someone passing away after buying a vehicle qualifying for the deduction. A nongrantor trust generally means a trust that files its own tax return. Personal use would be measured by the beneficiary, as a trust cannot drive a car.

Eighth, there are some housecleaning rules. For example, you cannot pay interest to yourself or – more accurately stated – to a related party. The Code wants to see a lien securing the loan on the vehicle. There are also rules on add-ons (think extended warranties), lemon law replacements, subsequent loan refinancings, and no-no rules on negative equity on trade-ins.

Ninth, final assembly must occur in the United States. You may want to check on this before buying the vehicle. I have already checked on my next likely vehicle purchase (a Lexus).

Tenth, the deduction limit is $10 grand. It doesn’t matter if you are married or single, the limit applies per return and is $10 grand. Seems to me that marrieds filing separately got a break here. File jointly and cap at $10 grand. File separately and cap at $20 grand. Such moments are rare in the tax Code.

Eleventh, if you make too much money, the Code will phase-out the deduction you could otherwise claim. Too much begins at $100 grand if you are single or $200 grand if you are married filing jointly. Hit that limit and you phase-out at 20 cents on the dollar (rounded up).

Twelfth, you must include the vehicle VIN on your tax return. Leave it out and the IRS will simply disallow the deduction and send you a bill for the additional tax.

Finally, Congress and the IRS prefer that anything which moves be reported on a Form 1099. The problem here is that the tax bill was signed midway into 2025, meaning that banks and loan companies would have to make retroactive changes for 1099s issued in 2026. In light of this, the 2026 reporting (for tax year 2025) has been relaxed a bit: you may have to go to a website to get the interest amount rather than receiving a formal 1099, for example. Do not worry, though: the normal 1099 reporting will be back in full force in 2027 (for the 2026 tax returns).

My thoughts? I would neither buy or not buy a vehicle because of this deduction, but I am happy to take the deduction if I bought and financed. The $10 grand limit seems high to me, but - to be fair - I avoid borrowing money. I suppose $10 grand might be a backdoor way to allow for two vehicle loans on the same tax return (think married filing jointly). I do know that - unless one is making beaucoup bucks - spending $10 grand on vehicle interest does not immediately appear to be sound household budgeting.

And there you have the new vehicle loan interest deduction.