
Mega Doctor News
Texas Border Business / Mega Doctor News
The “One, Big, Beautiful Bill Act” (OBBB), signed into law on July 4, 2025, introduces a new tax break for workers who earn tips. According to the legislation, “for years 2025 through 2028, the Act provides up to $25,000 (per taxpayer) of qualified tip income.”
Tips received by employees in industries such as restaurants, hospitality, salons, and personal services are considered taxable income. Under prior law, all tips had to be reported and were fully taxable at ordinary income rates. The OBBB Act changes this by creating a new deduction that directly reduces taxable income. The statute explains that “the deduction is ‘above-the-line,’ (can be excluded from taxable income regardless of whether the taxpayer itemizes or chooses standard deduction).”
This means that eligible workers can deduct tip income before their adjusted gross income is calculated. Above-the-line deductions are particularly valuable because they lower the taxable income even for taxpayers who do not itemize. For someone who reports $25,000 in tips during the year, the deduction could allow all of those tips to be removed from taxable income, depending on their total income level.
The new deduction is not unlimited. The law sets the maximum amount at “up to $25,000 (per taxpayer).” On a joint return, both spouses may qualify separately, so the combined deduction could potentially be $50,000 if both earn tips. The benefit, however, phases out at higher income levels. The statute specifies that “the deduction is subject to phase-down if taxpayers’ adjusted gross income exceeds $300,000 for joint-filers ($150,000 for singles).” In practice, this means that higher-income households will see the value of the deduction reduced or eliminated.
The deduction is also available to both employees and qualifying self-employed workers who earn tip income. This widens eligibility beyond traditional restaurant and hospitality workers to include independent contractors in fields where tipping is customary.
For example, a single taxpayer earning $40,000 in wages and $15,000 in tips could deduct the full $15,000 under the new law. Their taxable income would be reduced from $55,000 to $40,000 before applying the standard deduction or other credits. A married couple filing jointly with each spouse reporting $20,000 in tips could deduct $40,000 total, substantially lowering their taxable income.
Supporters of the measure argue that it recognizes the unique nature of tip income. Because tips are often unpredictable and vary with hours worked or economic conditions, workers in tip-dependent industries can face unstable earnings. Allowing a deduction provides additional relief and acknowledges that many tipped workers are in lower- or middle-income brackets.
Critics, however, note that the deduction is temporary and only applies to tax years 2025 through 2028. After that, unless Congress extends the provision, tip income will once again be fully taxable with no special deduction. Some also point out that the phase-out at higher incomes creates a sharp cutoff that could reduce fairness for dual-income households.
As the OBBB Act states clearly, “for years 2025 through 2028, the Act provides up to $25,000 (per taxpayer) of qualified tip income,” offering meaningful, though temporary, relief to millions of workers whose livelihoods depend on tips.
See related stories: