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No Tax on Tips 2026: Who Qualifies & How to Claim the $25,000 Deduction

No Tax on Overtime
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Written by Dev Kothari, CPA — US Accounting Specialist Qualified Chartered Accountant (ICAI) • 15+ years US accounting & payroll compliance • KMK Ventures
📢 Latest Update — May 2026

IRS FAQ guidance confirmed (IR-2026-10): The IRS has published official Q&A guidance confirming eligibility rules, MAGI calculation under Notice 2025-69, and Schedule 1-A filing requirements. Starting with tax year 2026 W-2s (issued early 2027), employers must report qualified overtime compensation in Box 12 using new code TT. For 2025, employers could use Box 14 or a separate statement. See the IRS official Q&A (IR-2026-10) for full guidance. According to the U.S. Treasury, more than 15.5 million of the 63.5 million returns filed by early March 2026 have claimed this deduction — making it the most-claimed of all recent tax cuts.

Did the no tax on overtime bill pass? Yes — the No Tax on Overtime bill passed and is already in effect. President Trump signed it on July 4, 2025 as part of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA). It applies retroactively from January 1, 2025. Eligible hourly workers can deduct up to $12,500 in qualified overtime compensation ($25,000 for joint filers) on their federal return.

Despite its popular name, the no tax on overtime bill introduces a deduction, not a blanket exemption. Overtime is still taxable income and still subject to withholding, Social Security, and Medicare taxes. But for millions of hourly workers — in manufacturing, healthcare, construction, logistics, retail, and more — the effective federal income tax burden on qualifying overtime premium pay can drop significantly, or be eliminated entirely for those who qualify. This guide explains exactly who qualifies, how to calculate your deduction, what employers must do, and the step-by-step process to claim it. The deduction applies for no tax on overtime 2025 through 2028 tax filings.

$12,500
Max deduction per return for single filers (2025–2028)
15.5M+
Returns claiming the deduction by March 2026 (U.S. Treasury)
10%+
Larger average refunds in 2026 vs. 2025 (U.S. Treasury / IRS data)

No tax on overtime: key facts at a glance

  • Deduct up to $12,500 in qualified overtime pay per return (single) or $25,000 (married filing jointly)
  • Applies to tax years 2025 through 2028 (expires after 2028 unless extended by Congress)
  • Only the FLSA premium portion qualifies — the “half” in time-and-a-half, not the full overtime wage
  • Income phaseout starts at $150,000 MAGI (single) and $300,000 MAGI (married filing jointly)
  • Overtime income must still be fully reported and withheld throughout the year
  • FICA taxes still apply — Social Security and Medicare taxes on overtime are unchanged
  • State income taxes are generally not affected — this is a federal-only deduction
  • Married filing separately filers are not eligible
  • For 2025: employers may report in Box 14 or a separate statement. Starting 2026: mandatory Box 12 code TT
  • Claimed on Schedule 1-A (Form 1040) — available whether you take the standard deduction or itemize

What is the One Big Beautiful Bill Act and how does it relate to overtime?

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), signed into federal law on July 4, 2025, is a wide-ranging tax and spending package. For workers who put in extra hours, its most impactful provision is the No Tax on Overtime deduction — which creates a federal income tax deduction of up to $12,500 (single) or $25,000 (joint) on qualifying overtime compensation earned between 2025 and 2028.

One Big Beautiful Bill Act — overtime deduction at a glance

Official name: One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), also known as the Working Families Tax Cut Act — Public Law 119-21

Signed into law: July 4, 2025

Overtime provision: Section 70202 — deduct up to $12,500 (single) / $25,000 (joint) in qualified overtime compensation

IRS guidance: Notice 2025-69 (MAGI calculation), IR-2026-10 (FAQ guidance on eligibility and filing)

Who benefits most: Non-exempt hourly workers in manufacturing, healthcare, construction, logistics, food service, retail, and transportation

Duration: Tax years 2025 through 2028. Congress must act to extend it beyond that.

Also in the OBBBA: A separate No Tax on Tips provision — eligible tipped workers can deduct up to $25,000 in qualified tip income. See the IRS guidance on qualified overtime compensation for a full overview.

How does no tax on overtime work — and how will it work going forward?

The no tax on overtime deduction is an adjustment that reduces your taxable income after your Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) is calculated. It does not change your AGI itself, but it reduces the income on which your federal income tax rate is applied. This can lower your effective tax rate, reduce your overall tax liability, and potentially improve eligibility for other income-based deductions and credits.

Crucially, you can claim this deduction whether you take the standard deduction or itemize — you do not need to choose between them. The standard deduction for 2025 is $15,750 for single filers and $31,500 for married couples filing jointly. The overtime deduction is applied in addition to whichever deduction method you choose, further reducing your taxable income below the standard or itemized amount.

Importantly, this deduction does not affect your AGI — it is a “below-the-line” deduction. That means it will not affect eligibility for AGI-based tax credits or contribution limits for accounts like Roth IRAs.

What is qualified overtime compensation (QOC)?

Not all overtime pay is created equal under the new law. The deduction applies specifically to qualified overtime compensation (QOC) — which is defined as the premium portion of overtime pay that is required by the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA).

Under the FLSA, non-exempt employees who work more than 40 hours in a workweek must be paid at least 1.5 times their regular rate of pay. The QOC is only the extra 0.5x premium — the “half” in time-and-a-half — not the full 1.5x overtime wage.

✎ Example: Calculating qualified overtime compensation

Regular hourly rate: $20/hour

FLSA overtime rate (time-and-a-half): $30/hour

QOC (the deductible premium): $30 − $20 = $10/hour

If you worked 200 overtime hours in 2025, your total QOC = 200 × $10 = $2,000 — fully deductible since it is under the $12,500 cap.

If you worked 1,500 overtime hours: 1,500 × $10 = $15,000 — your deduction is capped at $12,500. The remaining $2,500 is taxed as ordinary income.

Key rule: Only FLSA-mandated overtime qualifies. Extra pay under a company policy, union contract, or state law that goes beyond FLSA requirements does not count as QOC unless it also meets the FLSA definition. The IRS confirmed in official FAQ guidance (IR-2026-10) that workers ineligible for overtime under the FLSA do not receive QOC simply because some other agreement pays extra for extra hours.

Is overtime pay taxed under the new law?

Yes. Overtime remains fully taxable income. You must have your employer withhold federal income tax, Social Security, and Medicare from overtime pay throughout the year, exactly as before. What changes is that eligible workers can then deduct up to $12,500 of the QOC premium when calculating final federal income tax owed on their annual return.

Your paycheck will not automatically reflect the deduction — the tax savings are realized when you file your return. However, you can update your Form W-4 with your employer to reduce withholding throughout the year so you receive more take-home pay now, rather than waiting for a larger refund at filing time. The IRS Tax Withholding Estimator has been updated to reflect OBBBA changes.

Do Social Security and Medicare taxes still apply to overtime?

⚠️ Important: FICA taxes on overtime are unchanged

The no tax on overtime deduction applies only to federal income tax. Social Security (6.2%) and Medicare (1.45%) taxes — collectively called FICA taxes — still apply to all overtime income, including the QOC premium portion, regardless of this deduction. Your employer continues to withhold and remit FICA taxes on overtime pay as before.

State income taxes are also unaffected. States have not automatically adopted the federal overtime deduction — most states that conform to federal AGI will not provide the same benefit, since this is a below-the-line deduction that does not reduce AGI. Residents of states with no income tax (such as Florida, Texas, and Nevada) are unaffected by state overtime tax regardless.

Who qualifies for the no tax on overtime deduction?

Eligibility has three main requirements: employment type, FLSA overtime status, and income limits.

1. Employment type

You must be a W-2 employee who receives overtime wages reported on Form W-2, Form 1099-NEC, Form 1099-MISC, or another IRS-approved statement. Most true independent contractors and self-employed workers do not qualify because their work arrangements typically do not fall under FLSA overtime requirements. The IRS noted in FAQ guidance that some workers who receive a 1099 may qualify in limited circumstances — but this is the exception, not the rule.

2. FLSA non-exempt status

You must be a non-exempt employee under the FLSA — meaning you are eligible for overtime when you work more than 40 hours in a workweek. Salaried exempt employees (such as executives, administrators, and professionals who meet the FLSA salary and duties tests) do not receive FLSA-mandated overtime and therefore do not qualify for this deduction, even if their employer voluntarily pays them extra for extra hours. Note that some salaried workers earning under $684/week are considered non-exempt and may qualify.

3. Income limits (MAGI phaseout)

The deduction is reduced for higher earners and eliminated entirely above certain income levels.

📈 No tax on overtime phaseout thresholds

Single filers: Phaseout begins at $150,000 MAGI. Reduced by $100 for each $1,000 of MAGI above $150,000. Fully phased out at $275,000 MAGI.

Married filing jointly: Phaseout begins at $300,000 MAGI. Reduced by $100 per $1,000 over $300,000. Fully phased out at $550,000 MAGI.

Head of household: Phaseout begins at $150,000 MAGI (same as single filer threshold). Fully phased out at $275,000 MAGI.

Married filing separately: Not eligible. The deduction is unavailable to taxpayers who are married but file separate returns.

MAGI definition: Per IRS Notice 2025-69, MAGI for this purpose equals adjusted gross income (AGI) increased by certain excluded foreign or territorial income under IRC sections 911, 931, and 933. For most domestic workers, MAGI equals AGI.

✎ Phaseout calculation example

Elena is single with $10,000 of QOC. Her MAGI is $170,000 — $20,000 above the $150,000 threshold.

Reduction: $20,000 ÷ $1,000 × $100 = $2,000 reduction

Elena’s allowed deduction: $10,000 − $2,000 = $8,000

Marcus and Dana are married filing jointly with combined QOC of $25,000. Their MAGI is $350,000 — $50,000 above $300,000.

Reduction: $50,000 ÷ $1,000 × $100 = $5,000 reduction

Their allowed deduction: $25,000 − $5,000 = $20,000

2025 and 2026 federal income tax brackets

The overtime deduction reduces your taxable income, which determines your effective tax rate. Here are the brackets for both years covered by this deduction.

Tax RateSingle Filers (2025)Married Filing Jointly (2025)Head of Household (2025)
10%$0 – $11,925$0 – $23,850$0 – $17,000
12%$11,926 – $48,475$23,851 – $96,950$17,001 – $64,850
22%$48,476 – $103,350$96,951 – $206,700$64,851 – $103,350
24%$103,351 – $197,300$206,701 – $394,600$103,351 – $197,300
32%$197,301 – $250,525$394,601 – $501,050$197,301 – $250,500
35%$250,526 – $626,350$501,051 – $751,600$250,501 – $626,350
37%$626,351+$751,601+$626,351+
Tax RateSingle Filers (2026)Married Filing Jointly (2026)Head of Household (2026)
10%$0 – $12,400$0 – $24,800$0 – $17,700
12%$12,401 – $50,400$24,801 – $100,800$17,701 – $67,450
22%$50,401 – $105,700$100,801 – $211,400$67,451 – $105,700
24%$105,701 – $201,775$211,401 – $403,550$105,701 – $201,750
32%$201,776 – $256,700$403,551 – $513,400$201,751 – $256,200
35%$256,701 – $640,600$513,401 – $768,700$256,201 – $640,600
37%$640,601+$768,701+$640,601+

Calculate your overtime deduction savings

Use this free calculator to estimate your potential federal income tax savings from the No Tax on Overtime deduction. Enter your details below:

🧮 No Tax on Overtime Savings Calculator

Qualified Overtime Compensation (QOC)
Phaseout reduction
Allowed deduction amount
Estimated federal income tax bracket
🆕 Estimated federal tax savings

How to claim the no tax on overtime deduction: step-by-step

⚠ Before you start: For 2025 returns, gather your W-2 (check Box 14 or employer statement for QOC). For 2026 returns, look for Box 12 code TT. Download Schedule 1-A (Form 1040)from IRS.gov and the IRS Notice 2025-69 MAGI methodology if your income is near the phaseout thresholds.

The overtime deduction is claimed on Schedule 1-A (Form 1040) — a new form created specifically for OBBBA deductions (overtime, tips, and the senior deduction). Here is the process:

1
Determine your total qualified overtime compensation (QOC) For 2025: Check Box 14 of your W-2 or any separate statement from your employer. If your employer did not provide a separate figure, calculate it yourself using pay stubs: identify all overtime hours worked beyond 40 in each workweek and multiply by your regular hourly rate × 0.5 to find the premium portion.
2
For 2026 and later: find Box 12 code TT on your W-2 Starting with 2026 W-2s (issued in early 2027), employers are required to report your QOC in Box 12 using code TT. Transfer this amount directly to Schedule 1-A. No more manual calculation needed.
3
Calculate your MAGI and apply the phaseout if needed For most workers, MAGI equals your AGI on line 11 of Form 1040. If your MAGI is at or below $150,000 (single/HoH) or $300,000 (joint), no reduction applies. If above, calculate the reduction: ($MAGI − threshold) ÷ $1,000 × $100.
4
Complete Schedule 1-A, Part III Enter your QOC (capped at $12,500 for single/HoH filers; $25,000 for joint filers), apply any phaseout reduction, and enter the final deduction amount on Line 21 of Schedule 1-A.
5
Transfer to Form 1040 The combined total of all Schedule 1-A deductions is reported on Form 1040 below the AGI line. Attach Schedule 1-A to your return when filing. This deduction is available whether you take the standard deduction or itemize.
6
Keep your records Retain all pay stubs, payroll summaries, W-2s, and any employer statements showing your QOC. The IRS may request documentation, particularly for tax year 2025 where W-2 reporting was not standardized.

Employer obligations: W-2 reporting and payroll compliance

This is where the law creates significant new responsibilities for businesses. Employers are not passive bystanders — they are the primary source of the QOC data that employees need to claim the deduction.

📋 2025 vs. 2026 employer reporting requirements

Tax year 2025 (W-2s issued January 2026): Employers were NOT required to update Form W-2. No Box 12 code TT existed yet. The IRS granted transition relief. Employers could provide QOC figures in Box 14, through an online portal, via a separate written statement, or by other secure means.

Tax year 2026 (W-2s issued January 2027): Mandatory separate reporting of QOC in Box 12 using code TT. Related changes include Box 12 code TP for tips and Box 14b for tipped occupation codes. Failure to report correctly can expose employees to difficulty claiming the deduction and expose employers to IRS penalties. Transition relief does NOT carry over to 2026.

Action required now: Payroll systems must be updated before the end of 2026 to segregate FLSA-mandated overtime premium from regular pay, state-law overtime, and contractual overtime.

What counts as FLSA overtime vs. other overtime?

This distinction is critical for accurate W-2 reporting. FLSA-mandated overtime — the extra half-time for hours over 40 in a workweek for non-exempt employees — is the only type that generates QOC. Employers may also pay overtime under:

  • State law (e.g., California’s daily overtime for hours over 8 in a day)
  • Union or collective bargaining agreements (e.g., double time for Sundays)
  • Company policy (e.g., voluntary overtime bonuses)

These additional overtime amounts do not generate QOC and must not be included in Box 12 code TT. Payroll systems need to be recoded to track FLSA overtime separately from all other overtime types.

Does no tax on overtime apply to state income taxes?

State tax conformity: generally no automatic benefit

The no tax on overtime deduction is a federal income tax benefit only. Because the deduction is applied below AGI (it does not reduce your federal AGI), most states that conform to federal AGI will not automatically provide the same deduction on state returns.

States with no income tax (Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, Wyoming): residents are unaffected by state tax on overtime regardless.

All other states: Expect overtime income to remain fully taxable at the state level unless your state legislature passes a specific conforming law. As of May 2026, no major state has enacted a conforming overtime deduction.

State income tax conformity status (as of May 2026)

State CategoryStatesOvertime Deduction Status
No state income taxAlaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, WyomingN/A — no state income tax on any wages
Conforms to federal AGIMost remaining states (e.g., NY, CA, IL, OH, PA, GA, NC, VA, AZ, CO)No automatic benefit — below-the-line deduction does not reduce state AGI
Enacted conforming deductionNone as of May 2026

Note: State tax law changes frequently. Consult a state tax professional or your state revenue department for current guidance.

Real-world scenarios: how much can you save?

✎ Scenario 1: Warehouse worker, single filer

Regular rate: $22/hour • Overtime hours in 2025: 400 hours

QOC premium: 400 × $11 (half of $22) = $4,400

MAGI: $55,000 — well below the phaseout threshold

Federal tax saved (at 22% bracket): $4,400 × 22% = $968 refund increase

✎ Scenario 2: Nurse, married filing jointly

Regular rate: $38/hour • Overtime hours in 2025: 600 hours

QOC premium: 600 × $19 = $11,400

Spouse’s QOC: $6,000 • Combined QOC: $17,400

Combined MAGI: $210,000 — below the $300,000 joint threshold

Full $17,400 deduction applies. At the 22% bracket: $3,828 federal tax savings

✎ Scenario 3: Construction foreman, partial phaseout

QOC: $12,500 (at cap) • MAGI: $180,000 (single)

Phaseout: ($180,000 − $150,000) ÷ $1,000 × $100 = $3,000 reduction

Allowed deduction: $12,500 − $3,000 = $9,500

At 24% bracket: $2,280 federal tax savings

Employer payroll compliance checklist for 2026

Businesses that run significant overtime — manufacturing, healthcare, construction, logistics, food processing — face the heaviest compliance burden. Incorrect or missing QOC reporting on 2026 W-2s will directly impair employees’ ability to claim the deduction and exposes the business to IRS scrutiny.

Action ItemDeadlinePriority
Audit payroll coding to separate FLSA overtime from state/contractual overtimeImmediateCritical
Configure payroll system to track and output QOC premium separatelyBefore Jan 1, 2027Critical
Coordinate with payroll provider to implement Box 12 code TT on 2026 W-2sQ3 2026Critical
Update Form W-4 process for employees who want to adjust withholdingNowHigh
Provide 2025 QOC statements to employees who worked overtime in 2025ASAP for 2025 filersHigh
Train HR and payroll staff on FLSA vs. non-FLSA overtime distinctionQ2 2026High
Monitor IRS for final 2026 W-2 form instructions and any updatesOngoingMedium
Review multi-state payroll for any states passing conforming deductionsOngoingMedium

Is your payroll ready for 2026 overtime reporting?

Many businesses are still operating under pre-OBBBA payroll setups. Missing the Box 12 TT requirement on 2026 W-2s means your employees lose the deduction — and your business faces compliance risk. KMK Ventures can audit your payroll coding, configure your reporting systems, and ensure you meet every IRS deadline.

Book a Free Payroll Compliance Review

When does the no tax on overtime start — and end?

The deduction applies retroactively to overtime earned from January 1, 2025. Because the law was signed on July 4, 2025, the IRS designated 2025 as a transition year for employers — allowing flexible reporting methods for 2025 W-2s. The full 2025 year’s QOC is deductible, even though the law only existed for the second half of the year.

The deduction is temporary. Under current law, it expires after December 31, 2028. Congress must pass new legislation to extend it. Workers and employers should plan accordingly and not assume the deduction will remain available beyond 2028.

No tax on overtime and the Trump tax plan 2025

The Trump overtime tax policy — commonly called “no tax on OT” — was a central campaign promise that became law via the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. The OBBBA is the most significant federal tax legislation since the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017. Beyond the overtime and tips deductions, the Trump tax plan 2025 also permanently extended TCJA provisions including the higher standard deduction, lower tax brackets, and increased Child Tax Credit (now $2,200 per qualifying child).

The no tax on overtime bill is often discussed alongside the no tax on tips provision — both were enacted together under the same legislation. Workers in industries like food service who earn both overtime and tips may be eligible for both deductions simultaneously on Schedule 1-A, potentially eliminating federal income tax on significant portions of their total compensation.

Frequently asked questions about no tax on overtime

Yes. The no tax on overtime provision is enacted federal law — not a proposal or pending legislation. It was signed by President Trump on July 4, 2025 as part of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (Public Law 119-21). It applies retroactively to overtime earned starting January 1, 2025.
The deduction applies to qualified overtime earned from January 1, 2025 onward. Workers will first claim it on their 2025 federal tax return, filed in early 2026. Even though the law passed in July 2025, the full year’s FLSA overtime premium is deductible — retroactively to January 1. The deduction continues through December 31, 2028.
Yes — overtime is still taxable income and subject to regular withholding, Social Security, and Medicare taxes throughout the year. The OBBBA creates a deduction, not an exemption. Eligible workers can deduct up to $12,500 of the FLSA premium portion on their annual federal return, which reduces the tax they owe. The actual tax savings show up when you file, not in your paycheck.
Up to $12,500 of the FLSA overtime premium can be deducted per return (single/HoH filers), and $25,000 for married couples filing jointly. “Tax free” is a slight overstatement — FICA taxes still apply to all overtime, and state income taxes are generally not affected. But for eligible workers within the income limits, the federal income tax on qualifying overtime premiums can be reduced to zero.
Non-exempt hourly employees who receive FLSA-required overtime (time-and-a-half for hours over 40 in a workweek) and whose MAGI is under $150,000 (single/HoH) or $300,000 (joint). Salaried exempt employees do not qualify. Independent contractors generally do not qualify. Married filing separately filers do not qualify. A valid Social Security number is required.
You claim the deduction on Schedule 1-A (Form 1040), Part III. Enter your total qualified overtime compensation (QOC) from your W-2 Box 14 (2025) or Box 12 code TT (2026+), apply the phaseout calculation if your MAGI exceeds the threshold, and enter the allowed deduction on Line 21. The combined Schedule 1-A total transfers to Form 1040. You can claim this deduction whether you take the standard deduction or itemize.
QOC is the premium portion of FLSA-mandated overtime pay — specifically the “half” in time-and-a-half. If you earn $20/hour regularly and $30/hour for overtime, your QOC is $10/hour × overtime hours worked. Only FLSA overtime for hours beyond 40 in a workweek qualifies. Overtime paid under company policy, state law, or a union contract that goes beyond FLSA requirements does not count as QOC.
For 2025 W-2s (issued January 2026): employers were not required to use a new Box 12 code. Look for your QOC in Box 14, a separate employer statement, or an online portal. For 2026 W-2s (issued January 2027): employers are required to report QOC in Box 12 using new code TT. If you don’t see the TT code on your 2026 W-2, contact your employer or payroll department — it is a mandatory requirement.
Yes. FICA taxes — Social Security (6.2%) and Medicare (1.45%) — still apply to all overtime income, including the QOC premium. The no tax on overtime deduction only reduces federal income tax. Your employer continues to withhold and remit FICA taxes on overtime as before. This is one of the most commonly misunderstood aspects of the new law.
No — not automatically. The deduction is federal only. Most states that conform to federal AGI will not automatically follow, because this is a below-the-line deduction that does not reduce AGI. As of May 2026, no major state has enacted a matching overtime deduction. If you live in a state with no income tax (Florida, Texas, Nevada, etc.), state tax does not apply to you regardless. All other state taxpayers should expect overtime to remain fully taxable at the state level.
Yes. If you work in a tipped occupation and also earn FLSA overtime, you may be eligible for both deductions on the same Schedule 1-A. The deductions are separate and additive — up to $12,500 for overtime and up to $25,000 for tips — subject to their respective income phaseouts. Workers in food service, hospitality, or delivery who put in long hours may benefit from both provisions simultaneously.
No. The deduction applies to tax years 2025 through 2028 only. It will expire at the end of 2028 unless Congress passes new legislation to extend it. Workers should plan accordingly and not assume the deduction will continue beyond that date.
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), signed July 4, 2025, included Section 70202, which created the no tax on overtime deduction as a new IRC Section 225. It allows non-exempt FLSA employees to deduct up to $12,500 (single) or $25,000 (joint) of their qualified overtime premium from federal taxable income for tax years 2025–2028. The same legislation also created the no tax on tips deduction, expanded the child tax credit to $2,200, added a $6,000 senior deduction, and permanently extended most TCJA provisions.
For 2025, employers were not required to use standardized Box 12 reporting, so some workers may not receive a clear QOC figure on their W-2. If this happens, calculate your QOC manually using pay stubs: identify each workweek where you exceeded 40 hours, calculate your regular rate, and multiply all qualifying overtime hours by (regular rate × 0.5). Keep all records in case of an IRS inquiry. IRS Notice 2025-69 provides guidance on this calculation method. Starting with 2026 W-2s, employers must provide the figure in Box 12 code TT.
The deduction does not reduce employer payroll costs directly — employers still pay the same overtime wages and remit the same employer FICA taxes. However, the deduction may make overtime more attractive to workers, potentially increasing retention and willingness to work extra hours. The primary cost impact for employers is the new reporting compliance burden — upgrading payroll systems, tracking FLSA vs. non-FLSA overtime separately, and meeting W-2 Box 12 TT requirements by January 2027.
No tax on overtime explained accurately: it is a deduction, not a total exemption. Overtime income is still reported, still subject to FICA payroll taxes, and still withheld from your paycheck as usual. What the law does is allow eligible workers to deduct up to $12,500 ($25,000 joint) of the FLSA overtime premium from their federal taxable income when they file annually. For workers in the 22% bracket, this translates to up to $2,750 in federal income tax savings per year. The term “no tax” refers to the effective zero federal income tax on that premium slice of overtime — not on all overtime income entirely.
Trump’s no tax on overtime was a signature 2024 campaign pledge that became law through the One Big Beautiful Bill Act — the centerpiece of Trump’s tax plan 2025. The OBBBA was signed on July 4, 2025 and represents the most sweeping federal tax overhaul since 2017. The overtime tax bill is one of three new working-class deductions in the package, alongside no tax on tips and a $6,000 senior deduction. For workers who put in long hours, Trump’s no tax on overtime delivers a tangible tax break of up to $2,750–$4,625 per year depending on tax bracket. The deduction runs through 2028; extension beyond that requires further Congressional action.
Here is the latest no tax on overtime update as of May 2026: (1) The law is active and being claimed on 2025 tax returns filed in early 2026 — over 15.5 million returns have already included the deduction. (2) The IRS released official FAQ guidance (IR-2026-10) confirming eligibility rules and the Schedule 1-A process. (3) IRS Notice 2025-69 established the MAGI calculation methodology. (4) Starting with 2026 W-2s (issued in early 2027), employers must separately report qualified overtime compensation in Box 12 using new code TT. (5) The IRS Tax Withholding Estimator has been updated to reflect the OBBBA deductions. No changes to the overtime deduction structure have been proposed by Congress as of this date. Monitor IRS.gov for further updates.

Need help with overtime payroll compliance or claiming your deduction?

Whether you are an employee calculating your QOC for the first time, or a business that needs to overhaul payroll coding before the 2026 W-2 deadline, KMK Ventures has the expertise to help. We combine US accounting knowledge with practical payroll execution so you stay compliant, accurate, and ahead of every IRS deadline.

Talk to a KMK Tax Specialist
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or tax advice. Tax rules are subject to change and individual circumstances vary. Consult a qualified tax professional before making decisions based on this content. All figures are based on IRS guidance and regulations available as of May 4, 2026, including IRS Notice 2025-69, IRS FAQ guidance IR-2026-10, Schedule 1-A instructions (Form 1040), and draft 2026 W-2 instructions (Box 12 code TT). The 2026 W-2 instructions are subject to finalization by the IRS before issuance. Monitor IRS.gov for further updates.