Skip to content
← Back to Blog
Dec 3, 2025 · 4 min read ·Updated Jun 30, 2026

5 Big 2025 Tax Changes That Could Lower Your Bill

5 Big 2025 Tax Changes That Could Lower Your Bill

Congress made some of the biggest individual tax changes we have seen in years, starting with the 2025 tax year. Thanks to the new budget law, several new deductions and limits kick in for 2025 to 2028, and the standard deduction gets a bigger bump than usual.

Here are the key changes most individuals and families should know about.

1. Higher Standard Deduction for 2025

The standard deduction is getting more than just the usual inflation tweak for 2025. The law added an extra increase on top of inflation. For tax year 2025 the standard deduction is $31,500 for married filing jointly and qualifying surviving spouses, $15,750 for single and married filing separately, and $23,625 for head of household.

What this means: if you usually take the standard deduction (and most people do), you will be able to shield a bit more of your income from federal tax in 2025 without doing anything extra. Who benefits most: wage earners with modest itemized deductions, and retirees who do not have large itemized deductions but still have Social Security, pension, or IRA income.

2. New Extra Deduction for Taxpayers Age 65+

On top of the standard deduction and the existing extra amount for age 65+, there is now a new senior deduction starting in 2025. For tax years 2025 to 2028, taxpayers 65 or older can claim an additional $6,000 deduction each. A married couple where both spouses are 65+ can claim up to $12,000 total. This is available whether you itemize or take the standard deduction.

There are income limits: it starts phasing out around $75,000 of income for singles and $150,000 for joint filers, and fully phases out around $175,000 (single) and $250,000 (joint).

Planning angle: if you or your parents are 65+ in 2025 and under those income thresholds, this is a meaningful additional deduction layered on top of the higher standard deduction.

3. No Tax on Tips: New Tip Income Deduction

One of the most publicized changes is the new tip deduction for workers in traditionally tipped jobs. For tax years 2025 to 2028, workers in eligible tipped occupations (servers, bartenders, hairdressers, certain hospitality roles, and similar) can deduct up to $25,000 of qualified tips per year from federal taxable income. The deduction is available whether or not you itemize. It phases out at higher incomes, roughly starting around $150,000 for single filers and $300,000 for married filing jointly.

Important: this is an income deduction, not literally no reporting. Tips still need to be tracked and reported, and payroll taxes can still apply. Certain specified service trades or businesses may be excluded, so you cannot assume every tipped job qualifies.

4. New Deduction for Overtime Pay

For tax years 2025 to 2028, employees may deduct the overtime premium portion of their pay (the extra half-time) up to $12,500 for single filers and $25,000 for married filing jointly. It is an above-the-line type deduction, so you do not have to itemize. Like the tips deduction, it comes with income phaseouts at higher AGI levels and is not available to married filing separately.

Working through this yourself? Get a flat-fee answer for your specific situation.Schedule a free consult

Practical takeaway: if you regularly work a lot of overtime, 2025 to 2028 could be a window where that extra time not only boosts your paycheck but also lowers your taxable income. Documentation from your employer will matter here.

5. New Car Loan Interest Deduction

For tax years 2025 to 2028, you can deduct up to $10,000 per year in interest paid on a qualifying auto loan. The vehicle must be new (not used or leased), be a passenger vehicle under 14,000 pounds, have final assembly in the United States, and be bought for personal use. The deduction begins to phase out for singles around $100,000 of income and married filing jointly around $200,000. You can claim this whether you itemize or take the standard deduction.

Planning angle: if you were already planning to purchase a new, U.S.-assembled vehicle and finance it, timing that purchase into 2025 to 2028 might create a deduction you otherwise would not have had. This is not a reason by itself to buy a car you do not need.

6. Higher SALT Cap for Itemizers

Starting in 2025, the SALT cap increases from $10,000 to $40,000 per return (with a lower amount for married filing separately). The higher cap generally applies to taxpayers with adjusted gross income at or below about $500,000. Above that, the cap is reduced back toward the old $10,000 level. The $40,000 cap is temporary and is designed to run through the late 2020s.

Who benefits: higher-income homeowners in states with high property and income taxes who itemize, and households on the edge of itemizing who may now benefit from grouping deductions into the 2025 to 2028 window.

What to do now

These changes create a lot of planning opportunities, but they also come with fine print: income thresholds, phaseouts, and occupation or vehicle requirements. Check your 2025 withholding if you are a tipped worker, overtime worker, or planning a new car purchase. If you will be 65 or older in 2025, run projections with the new senior deduction. If you own property in a higher-tax area, 2025 may be a year where itemizing becomes attractive again. And document everything, since the IRS is still rolling out guidance and forms for these deductions.

This post is for general information only and is not legal or tax advice. The rules above are federal; state tax laws may differ. Before making big decisions, talk with a qualified tax professional who can look at your specific situation.

Jason Brett, CPA

Jason Brett, CPA

Licensed Florida CPA · MBA

Jason runs a modern, flat-fee CPA firm in Pembroke Pines, Florida, serving small businesses, international and multi-state filers, and complex individual returns. He works with clients directly, nationwide and globally, through a secure virtual practice.

More about Jason →
★★★★★5.0 · 8 Google reviews

Have a question about your situation?

Schedule a free intro consultation and we will work through your specific numbers together.

Schedule a Free Consultation

Flat-fee pricing, quoted before any work begins · No surprise invoices · Work directly with Jason.

Explore Our Services

Keep Reading