🇺🇸 No Tax on Tips — Federal

No Tax on Tips: Federal Qualified Tips Deduction Guide (2025–2028)

⚠️Informational only — not legal or tax advice.

Tax professional consultation is available through the IRS Directory of Federal Tax Return Preparers at irs.gov/taxpros. The IRS may be contacted directly at 1-800-829-1040.

All information sourced from official .gov websites. Last verified: March 2026.

How to claim no tax on tips on Schedule 1-A Form 1040 — step-by-step filing guide 2025 tax year no tax on tips schedule 1a how to claim 2026

Table of Contents

No Tax on Tips — Key Facts

Federal Tip Income Deduction — Key Details (2025–2028)
Detail Information
Law One Big Beautiful Bill Act (P.L. 119-21), Section 70201
IRC Section Section 224 (new)
Effective Tax years 2025 through 2028
What is deductible Qualified voluntary tips in IRS-listed tipped occupations
Maximum deduction $25,000 per return
Income phaseout begins $150,000 MAGI (single) / $300,000 MAGI (joint)
Phaseout rate $100 reduction per $1,000 of MAGI above threshold
Who qualifies Employees and self-employed workers in Treasury-listed tipped occupations with valid SSN
Who does NOT qualify Non-listed occupations; Married Filing Separately filers; mandatory service charge recipients
Eligible occupations IRS.gov/TippedOccupations
IRS Form Schedule 1-A (Form 1040), Part II
Still taxed Social Security, Medicare (FICA), and state/local taxes (unless state conforms)
Claim with standard deduction? Yes — available whether itemizing or claiming standard deduction

What Is the "No Tax on Tips" Deduction?

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), enacted as Public Law 119-21 and signed on July 4, 2025, established a new federal income tax deduction for qualified tips under Internal Revenue Code Section 224. The provision applies retroactively from January 1, 2025, and is scheduled to expire after the 2028 tax year.

Under the law, workers in occupations identified by the Treasury Department as customarily and regularly receiving tips may deduct up to $25,000 in qualified voluntary tips from their federal taxable income. According to the IRS, this deduction is available whether the taxpayer claims the standard deduction or itemizes.

Critical clarification: The “no tax on tips” designation describes a deduction from federal taxable income — it does not constitute a total tax exemption. According to IRS guidance (Notice 2025-69), the following taxes remain due on tip income regardless of the deduction:

  • Social Security tax (6.2% employee share, on wages up to $176,100 for 2025)
  • Medicare tax (1.45% employee share, no wage cap)
  • State and local income taxes (unless the worker’s state has independently conformed to the federal deduction — see Section 6 below)

Tips must be reported to qualify. Workers must continue to report tips to their employers and on their tax returns. The deduction applies only to voluntary tips — mandatory service charges do not qualify.

According to Treasury and IRS estimates, more than 10 million tax returns report tip income annually. The deduction is expected to affect approximately 6 million workers who regularly report tipped wages.

Sources:

Who Qualifies for the Tips Deduction?

Occupation Requirement

According to IRS proposed regulations published September 22, 2025, workers must be employed in an occupation that “customarily and regularly received tips on or before December 31, 2024” as identified by the Treasury Department.

The IRS published a list of 68 qualifying occupations assigned Treasury Tipped Occupation Codes (TTOC). The official list is maintained at IRS.gov/TippedOccupations. The occupations are grouped across eight industry categories:

Industry Categories — Examples of Qualifying Tipped Occupations
Industry Category Examples of Qualifying Occupations
Food & Beverage Service Servers, bartenders, sommeliers, baristas, counter workers, bussers, barbacks, dishwashers, cooks, host/hostess, food delivery drivers
Entertainment & Events Casino dealers, gaming floor workers, event staff
Hospitality Hotel bellhops, housekeepers, valets, concierge, room service attendants, boat hoppers
Home Services Plumbers, electricians, HVAC installers, landscapers (occupations added beyond traditional DOL tipped categories)
Personal Care Nail technicians, estheticians, massage therapists, spa workers
Personal Appearance Hairdressers, hairstylists, barbers, cosmetologists
Recreation Golf caddies, fishing guides, water taxi operators
Transportation Taxi drivers, rideshare drivers, airport shuttle drivers

The complete list with TTOC codes is available at IRS.gov/TippedOccupations.

Who Does NOT Qualify

The following workers are ineligible for the tips deduction:

  • Workers in occupations not on the IRS list — Including those in health professions, performing arts, athletics, and legal/financial services
  • Specified Service Trade or Business (SSTB) workers — The OBBBA includes a provision to deny the deduction to workers employed by an SSTB under IRC Section 199A. However, per IRS Notice 2025-69, the IRS is providing transition relief on SSTB determinations for tax year 2025 — most workers in qualifying occupations may rely on the deduction during 2025 regardless of SSTB status
  • Married Filing Separately filers — Not eligible
  • Workers without valid Social Security number — Required
  • Recipients of mandatory service charges only — Automatic gratuities or mandatory service charges distributed to employees do not constitute “qualified tips” even when passed through to workers

Employee vs. Self-Employed Workers

Both employees and self-employed workers in qualifying occupations may claim the tips deduction, subject to different documentation requirements:

  • Employees: Qualified tips are reported on W-2 Box 7 (Social Security tips), Form 4070, or as documented through employer records
  • Self-employed/independent contractors: Tips reported on Form 1099-NEC, Form 1099-MISC, Form 1099-K, or other documentation. According to IRS Notice 2025-69, the deduction for self-employed workers cannot exceed net income from that trade or business
Qualified vs. Non-Qualified Tips
Type of Tip/Gratuity Qualifies? Basis
Voluntary cash tip from customer ✅ Yes Voluntary; qualifying occupation
Credit card tip paid voluntarily by customer ✅ Yes Voluntary cash equivalent
Gift card tip from customer ✅ Yes Cash equivalent per IRS regulations
Mobile payment tip (e.g., Venmo, Apple Pay) ✅ Yes Cash equivalent per IRS regulations
Tip received through tip pool from qualifying tips ✅ Yes Voluntary tips shared among workers
Mandatory 18% automatic service charge ❌ No Not voluntary
Mandatory service charge distributed to staff ❌ No Not voluntary regardless of distribution
Tips from non-qualifying occupation ❌ No Occupation not on IRS list
Tips from health professional services ❌ No Health professions not listed
Tips from performing arts work ❌ No Performing arts not listed
Digital assets (cryptocurrency) as tips ❌ No Excluded by IRS regulations
Unreported tips (Form 4137) ✅ Yes Per Notice 2025-69, reconciled unreported tips qualify

How Much Can Be Deducted?

Maximum Deduction

According to Schedule 1-A instructions and IRS newsroom guidance:

  • Per return maximum: $25,000 (not per spouse — this is a per-return cap)
  • Minimum: The deduction cannot exceed actual qualified tips received
  • Self-employed: The deduction is additionally limited to net income from the qualifying trade or business

Income Phaseout

The deduction phases out for higher-income filers:

  • Phaseout begins at $150,000 MAGI (single) / $300,000 MAGI (joint)
  • Reduction rate: $100 per $1,000 of MAGI above the threshold
  • Phaseout complete: approximately $400,000 MAGI (single) / $550,000 MAGI (joint)
Calculation Examples
Scenario Tips received MAGI Calculation Deduction
Server, single $18,000 $45,000 Below cap, below phaseout $18,000
Server, single $30,000 $45,000 Capped at $25,000 max $25,000
Bartender, single $20,000 $160,000 $160K − $150K = $10K over → 10 × $100 = $1,000 reduction $19,000
Hairstylist, married joint $15,000 $280,000 $280K − $300K = below threshold $15,000
Casino dealer, married joint $40,000 $310,000 Capped at $25,000; $10K over → 10 × $100 = $1,000 reduction $24,000
Server, single $18,000 $400,000 Fully phased out at high income $0

IRS illustration from Notice 2025-69: Ann is a restaurant server. Her 2025 Form W-2 shows $18,000 in Box 7 (Social Security tips). Deductible qualified tips: $18,000 (full amount, under cap, income below phaseout threshold).

Sources:

How to Claim — Step by Step

Tax Year 2025 (Transition Year)

The IRS designated 2025 as a transition year for tip reporting. According to IRS Notice 2025-62, employers are not required to separately report qualified tips on 2025 W-2 or 1099 forms and face no penalties for non-reporting.

Workers may determine their qualified tips for tax year 2025 using the following methods, per IRS Notice 2025-69:

Method A — Employer reports cash tips in W-2 Box 14: If the employer voluntarily reports qualified tips in Box 14 of Form W-2, the worker may use that reported amount.

Method B — Use W-2 Box 7 (Social Security Tips): Workers may use the amount shown in Box 7 of Form W-2 as the basis for qualified tips.

Method C — Use Forms 4070 (Tips Reported to Employer): Workers who reported tips to employers on monthly Forms 4070 may use those reported amounts.

Method D — Add unreported tips from Form 4137: Tips reported as unreported income on Form 4137, Line 4 may be added to the qualified tips calculation regardless of which primary method is used.

Self-employed workers: Tips received through third-party settlement organizations and reported on Form 1099-K may be used, with the worker identifying the tip portion from their own records.

Tax Year 2026 and Beyond

Beginning with the 2026 tax year, employers face new mandatory reporting requirements:

  • W-2 Box 14a — Reports qualified tips
  • W-2 Box 14b — Reports Treasury Tipped Occupation Code (TTOC) identifying the worker’s qualifying occupation
  • Form 1099-NEC — Updated for independent contractors receiving qualified tips
  • Updated Form W-4 — New withholding worksheet for anticipated tip deductions

Filing Steps — Schedule 1-A (Form 1040)

According to IRS Schedule 1-A instructions:

  1. Confirm occupation is on the IRS tipped occupations list at IRS.gov/TippedOccupations
  2. Determine MAGI (Form 1040 Line 11 plus applicable adjustments)
  3. Calculate total qualified tips using available documentation
  4. Complete Schedule 1-A, Part I (MAGI information)
  5. Complete Schedule 1-A, Part II (qualified tips section)
  6. Apply phaseout reduction if MAGI exceeds threshold
  7. Transfer the final deduction amount to Form 1040, Line 13b
  8. Attach Schedule 1-A to the return

The deduction reduces AGI before the standard or itemized deduction is applied, and is available to filers using either method.

Documentation to Retain

The IRS recommends retaining supporting documentation for a minimum of 3 years:

  • W-2 Box 7 and Box 14 (for 2025) / Box 14a and 14b (for 2026+)
  • Forms 4070 (monthly tip reports to employer)
  • Form 4137 (unreported tips reconciliation)
  • Daily tip logs or point-of-sale records
  • Form 1099-K or 1099-NEC (for self-employed workers)

Sources:

State-by-State Impact — Do States Conform? {#state-impact-tips}

Federal vs. State Tax Treatment

The tips deduction established by the OBBBA applies exclusively to federal income taxes. State income taxes on tips remain due unless the worker’s state has independently conformed to the federal deduction.

States Linked to the Federal Tips Deduction

According to ITEP analysis (December 2025), eight states are currently linked to the tipped income deduction through their tax code conformity structure. These states stand to lose a combined $336 million in state tax revenue in 2026:

Colorado, Idaho, Iowa, Michigan, Montana, North Dakota, Oregon, South Carolina

Note: Colorado linked to the tips deduction but actively decoupled from the overtime deduction — the two deductions are tracked separately at the state level.

States That Have Actively Conformed

Michigan is the only state that affirmatively and actively chose to conform to both the tips and overtime deductions. The cost to Michigan from the tips deduction is estimated at $105 million in 2026.

State pages: Michigan Employment Law | Michigan Income Tax | Michigan Minimum Wage

States That Have Decoupled

  • Maine — Governor Janet Mills issued instructions to the state’s tax assessor directing non-conformity with both the tips and overtime deductions. State pages: Maine Income Tax | Maine Minimum Wage
  • District of Columbia — The DC Council passed legislation (B26-0457) confirming decoupling from both deductions. State pages: DC Income Tax | DC Minimum Wage
State Conformity Summary Table — Tips Deduction
State Conforms to Federal Tips Deduction? Status State Resources
Colorado ✅ Yes (automatic) Linked by default — did NOT decouple from tips Income Tax | Minimum Wage
District of Columbia ❌ No Actively decoupled via B26-0457 Income Tax | Minimum Wage
Idaho ✅ Yes (automatic) Linked by default via rolling conformity Income Tax | Minimum Wage
Iowa ✅ Yes (automatic) Linked by default via rolling conformity Income Tax | Minimum Wage
Maine ❌ No Governor order directing non-conformity Income Tax | Minimum Wage
Michigan ✅ Yes (active) Affirmatively adopted by state legislature Income Tax | Minimum Wage
Montana ✅ Yes (automatic) Linked by default via rolling conformity Income Tax | Minimum Wage
North Dakota ✅ Yes (automatic) Linked by default via rolling conformity Income Tax | Minimum Wage
Oregon ✅ Yes (automatic) Linked by default via rolling conformity Income Tax | Minimum Wage
South Carolina ✅ Yes (automatic) Linked by default via rolling conformity Income Tax | Minimum Wage
All other states Verify with state agency Varies — check state tax authority Income Tax by State

For workers in states without income taxes (Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, Wyoming), the federal deduction impacts federal taxes only.

Sources:

Employer Obligations

Tax Year 2025 — Transition Relief

According to IRS Notice 2025-62, employers are not required to separately report qualified tips on 2025 W-2 or 1099 forms. The IRS acknowledged the practical difficulty of retroactive reporting given the law’s July 4, 2025, enactment date and provided penalty relief.

Employers are encouraged (but not required) to assist employees by:

  • Reporting qualified cash tips in W-2 Box 14 for 2025
  • Providing employees with their applicable Treasury Tipped Occupation Code (TTOC) via separate statement
  • Providing a separate statement approximating qualified tips for the full 2025 year
  • Distinguishing qualified voluntary tips from mandatory service charges in any supplemental reporting

Employers must continue existing tip reporting and withholding obligations: FICA taxes (Social Security and Medicare) remain due on all reported tips regardless of the deduction.

Tax Year 2026 and Beyond — Mandatory Reporting

Beginning with tax year 2026, employers have new mandatory reporting requirements under the OBBBA:

  • W-2 Box 14a — Reports the total amount of qualified tips for the year
  • W-2 Box 14b — Reports the Treasury Tipped Occupation Code (TTOC), the three-digit code identifying the worker’s qualifying occupation category
  • Form 1099-NEC — Updated to support separate tip reporting for independent contractors
  • Updated Form W-4 — New worksheet to adjust withholding for anticipated tip deductions

Employers must separately identify voluntary qualified tips from mandatory service charges in payroll records. Mandatory service charges — including automatic gratuities — distributed to staff do not constitute qualified tips and must be tracked separately.

Employer obligations regarding tip reporting, minimum wage rules for tipped employees, and tip pooling remain governed by the Fair Labor Standards Act. The OBBBA deduction does not alter FLSA tip credit rules or tip pool regulations.

Sources:


Frequently Asked Questions — No Tax on Tips

Are tips completely tax-free now?

No. According to the IRS, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act created a federal income tax deduction for up to $25,000 in qualified voluntary tips for workers in IRS-listed occupations. Social Security and Medicare (FICA) taxes continue to apply to all reported tips. State and local income taxes also remain due unless the worker’s state has independently conformed to the federal deduction. Tips must still be reported to the employer and on the worker’s tax return to qualify. IRS — OBBBA Tax Deductions


Which occupations qualify for the tips deduction?

According to the IRS tipped occupations list, 68 occupations across eight industry categories qualify: food and beverage service (servers, bartenders, baristas, dishwashers, cooks, food delivery drivers), entertainment and events, hospitality (bellhops, housekeepers, valets), home services (plumbers, electricians, HVAC workers, landscapers), personal care, personal appearance (hairdressers, barbers, cosmetologists), recreation (caddies, guides), and transportation (taxi drivers, rideshare drivers). Workers in health professions, performing arts, and athletics are not on the list and do not qualify.


How much in tips can I deduct?

The maximum deduction is $25,000 per return. Workers who received less than $25,000 in qualified tips may deduct their actual qualified tip amount. The deduction phases out for filers with MAGI above $150,000 (single) or $300,000 (joint), at a rate of $100 per $1,000 above the threshold. Self-employed workers are additionally limited to net income from the qualifying trade or business. IRS — Schedule 1-A


Do mandatory service charges qualify?

No. According to IRS proposed regulations, qualified tips must be paid voluntarily by the customer. Automatic gratuities, mandatory service charges, and required fees — even when distributed to servers or other staff — do not constitute “qualified tips” for purposes of the deduction. Only amounts the customer elects to pay beyond the required bill qualify.


Can self-employed workers claim the tips deduction?

Yes, subject to additional limitations. According to IRS Notice 2025-69, self-employed workers and independent contractors in qualifying tipped occupations may claim the deduction. The deductible amount is limited to the lesser of (a) $25,000, (b) actual qualified tips received, or (c) net income from the qualifying trade or business. Tips reported on Form 1099-K from third-party settlement organizations may be used for 2025.


Do I still pay Social Security and Medicare taxes on tips?

Yes. FICA taxes — Social Security (6.2%) and Medicare (1.45%) — continue to apply to all reported tip income regardless of the income tax deduction. Employees must report tips to their employers monthly (using Form 4070) when total tips exceed $20 per month per employer. Employers withhold and remit FICA on all reported tips. IRS — Tip Income and Taxes


Does my state offer a no tax on tips deduction?

State conformity varies. As of early 2026, eight states are automatically linked to the federal tips deduction: Colorado, Idaho, Iowa, Michigan, Montana, North Dakota, Oregon, and South Carolina. Michigan is the only state to have actively and affirmatively adopted the deduction. Maine and the District of Columbia have actively decoupled from both the tips and overtime deductions. Workers should verify current status with their state’s department of revenue. View state-by-state details above


What if my employer didn’t report tips separately on my W-2?

For tax year 2025, employers are not required to separately report qualified tips on Form W-2 under the transition relief provided by IRS Notice 2025-62. Workers may calculate their qualified tips using W-2 Box 7 (Social Security tips), Forms 4070, Form 4137, or other documentation per IRS Notice 2025-69.


Can I claim both the tips and overtime deduction?

Yes. According to IRS Schedule 1-A instructions, both the qualified tips deduction (Part II) and the qualified overtime deduction (Part III) may be claimed on the same return, subject to each deduction’s individual eligibility requirements. Tips earned during overtime hours are governed by the tips deduction rules (Part II), not the overtime deduction rules (Part III). The two deductions are calculated independently. For more information, see: No Tax on Overtime: Federal Overtime Compensation Deduction (2025–2028)


What is Schedule 1-A?

Schedule 1-A is a new IRS form introduced for tax year 2025. According to the IRS, the form allows taxpayers to calculate and claim deductions for qualified tips (Part II), qualified overtime compensation (Part III), auto loan interest (Part IV), and the enhanced senior deduction. The total from Schedule 1-A is reported on Form 1040, Line 13b and reduces AGI.


What is the income limit for the tips deduction?

The deduction begins to phase out at $150,000 MAGI for single filers and $300,000 MAGI for joint filers. The phaseout reduces the deduction by $100 for each $1,000 of MAGI above the threshold. The deduction is eliminated at approximately $400,000 MAGI (single) and $550,000 MAGI (joint). IRS — Schedule 1-A Instructions


Is the tips deduction permanent?

No. Under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, the qualified tips deduction applies to tax years 2025, 2026, 2027, and 2028 only. The provision is scheduled to expire after the 2028 tax year absent new legislation. Congress retains the authority to extend or make the provision permanent through future legislation. Public Law 119-21 — Congress.gov


Do unreported tips qualify for the deduction?

Yes, under specific conditions. According to IRS Notice 2025-69, tips that were not reported to the employer but are reconciled by the worker on Form 4137 (Social Security and Medicare Tax on Unreported Tip Income), Line 4, may be included in the qualified tips calculation. Workers who did not report all tips during the year may do so at filing time using Form 4137 and include those amounts.


What is the difference between tips and service charges?

According to IRS proposed regulations, qualified tips are amounts the customer voluntarily elects to pay beyond the amount owed. Service charges are amounts imposed by the establishment — such as an automatic 18% gratuity for large parties — that the customer is required to pay. Service charges distributed to employees are wages, not tips, and do not qualify for the tips deduction even if labeled as “gratuity.”


What W-2 changes are coming for 2026 tip reporting?

Beginning with tax year 2026, according to draft IRS guidance: W-2 Box 14a will report the total qualified tips; W-2 Box 14b will report the Treasury Tipped Occupation Code (TTOC) identifying the worker’s eligible occupation. Form 1099-NEC will be updated for independent contractors. A new W-4 worksheet will allow workers to adjust withholding in anticipation of the tips deduction. These changes standardize what was informal in 2025.


Can a rideshare or food delivery driver claim the tips deduction?

According to the IRS tipped occupations list, rideshare drivers and food delivery drivers are included in the qualifying occupations under the Transportation category. Workers classified as independent contractors (not employees) in these occupations may claim the deduction as self-employed workers, limited to qualified tips received and net income from the trade or business.


What if I work in two jobs — one tipped and one non-tipped?

Workers holding multiple positions may only apply the tips deduction to tips received in qualifying tipped occupations listed by the IRS. Tips or compensation from non-qualifying occupations are not eligible. Workers must maintain separate records for each occupation to accurately determine qualified tips. IRS — Notice 2025-69

Tipped Employment Resources by State

The federal tips deduction interacts with state employment law, tipped minimum wage rules, and state income tax conformity. The following table provides access to state-specific resources for all 50 states and the District of Columbia.

State Quick Links — Employment Law, Income Tax, Minimum Wage
State Employment Law Income Tax Minimum Wage
AlabamaEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
AlaskaEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
ArizonaEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
ArkansasEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
CaliforniaEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
ColoradoEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
ConnecticutEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
DelawareEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
District of ColumbiaEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
FloridaEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
GeorgiaEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
HawaiiEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
IdahoEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
IllinoisEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
IndianaEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
IowaEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
KansasEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
KentuckyEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
LouisianaEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
MaineEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
MarylandEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
MassachusettsEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
MichiganEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
MinnesotaEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
MississippiEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
MissouriEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
MontanaEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
NebraskaEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
NevadaEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
New HampshireEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
New JerseyEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
New MexicoEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
New YorkEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
North CarolinaEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
North DakotaEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
OhioEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
OklahomaEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
OregonEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
PennsylvaniaEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
Rhode IslandEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
South CarolinaEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
South DakotaEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
TennesseeEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
TexasEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
UtahEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
VermontEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
VirginiaEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
WashingtonEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
West VirginiaEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
WisconsinEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage
WyomingEmployment LawIncome TaxMinimum Wage

Related Federal Resources

Official Government Sources

Sources and Verification — No Tax on Tips & Overtime
Source URL
IRS — OBBBA Tax Deductions for Working Americans https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/one-big-beautiful-bill-act-tax-deductions-for-working-americans-and-seniors
IRS — Occupations That Customarily and Regularly Received Tips https://www.irs.gov/forms-pubs/occupations-that-customarily-and-regularly-received-tips-on-or-before-december-31-2024
IRS — Treasury and IRS Issue Guidance Listing Tipped Occupations https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/treasury-irs-issue-guidance-listing-occupations-where-workers-customarily-and-regularly-receive-tips-under-the-one-big-beautiful-bill
IRS — Treasury and IRS Provide Guidance for Tips and Overtime (2025) https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/treasury-irs-provide-guidance-for-individuals-who-received-tips-or-overtime-during-tax-year-2025
IRS — How to Take Advantage of No Tax on Tips and Overtime https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/one-big-beautiful-bill-how-to-take-advantage-of-no-tax-on-tips-and-overtime
IRS — Schedule 1-A Published for 2025 https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/irs-published-schedule-taxpayers-will-use-to-claim-deductions-on-no-tax-on-tips-no-tax-on-overtime-no-tax-on-car-loans-no-tax-on-seniors
IRS — Schedule 1-A (Form 1040), 2025 (PDF) https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-prior/f1040s1a--2025.pdf
IRS — Notice 2025-62 (Transition Relief) https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/irs-provides-transition-relief-for-employers-on-reporting-requirements-for-no-tax-on-tips-and-no-tax-on-overtime
IRS — Notice 2025-69 (Tips and Overtime Guidance) https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/treasury-irs-provide-guidance-for-individuals-who-received-tips-or-overtime-during-tax-year-2025
IRS — Tip Recordkeeping and Reporting https://www.irs.gov/businesses/small-businesses-self-employed/tip-recordkeeping-and-reporting
Federal Register — Proposed Regulations on Tipped Occupations https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2025/09/22/2025-18278/occupations-that-customarily-and-regularly-received-tips-definition-of-qualified-tips
DOL — Tipped Employees Under the FLSA (Fact Sheet #15) https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/fact-sheets/15-flsa-tipped-employees
Congress.gov — Public Law 119-21 (OBBBA) https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-congress/house-bill/1

Legal Disclaimer: Nature of This Compilation This document is a compilation of publicly available information from official government sources. It is NOT: Legal advice An interpretation of laws or regulations A substitute for consultation with a licensed attorney A comprehensive treatment of all applicable laws Guaranteed to be complete or current