General Discussion
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lapfog_1
(30,874 posts)you still need to declare the tip income... but you now get a tax deduction for that tip income. However, most people, especially in lower income tax brackets, only fill out the short form and never itemize deductions.
Figarosmom
(5,756 posts)The standard deduction is usually more than it would be if they itemized.
rickford66
(5,861 posts)The higher earners will make out if every payment they receive is considered a tip. Pay the roofer one dollar and tip him 5 grand !
Figarosmom
(5,756 posts)But it's for hedge fund dealers and consultants. Thise that really don't work with their hands and really aren't service jobs.
sl8
(16,451 posts)What will the new bill do?
It will make tip income exempt from federal income taxes. That amount will be subtracted from reported income as an above the line deduction on a tax return. That will reduce how much income tax is owed. The tips will still have to be tracked and reported.
unblock
(55,143 posts)I know a lottttttt of tipped workers who don't report or severely under-report their cash tips.
So in practice, this wouldn't really save them much, if anything.
sl8
(16,451 posts)Last edited Fri May 23, 2025, 08:41 AM - Edit history (4)
The new law does specify "cash tips", but I didn't see where it changed the definition of what constitutes a "cash tip" in the IRS code. The legal definition doesn't necessarily match the common English meaning and currently the IRS considers "cash tips" to include tips made on credit and debit cards.
https://www.irs.gov/businesses/small-businesses-self-employed/tip-recordkeeping-and-reporting
I don't know who the woman in the OP video is - does she have some particular expertise in tax law, or is she just assuming what "cash tips" means to the IRS?
On edit:
The NYT says the exemption does apply to credit card, debit card, etc., tips:
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/21/dining/no-tax-on-tips-bill.html
What counts as a tip?
In the tax code and in this legislation, the term cash tip applies to tips given in bills and coins, on a credit or debit card, or via the businesss electronic payment system. It has not yet been determined whether tips that go directly to a server via a service like Venmo or PayPal would qualify as cash. Service charges, which are legal in some places, are added by the business and do not count as tips.
[...]
Does tipping in cash make a difference?
Not for tax purposes. It does reduce a restaurants credit card processing fees, which are charged as a percentage of the total bill (about 2 percent to 3.5 percent of each transaction, and sometimes a 30-cent swipe fee). But it doesnt leave a paper trail for the employee or employer to track, which can increase the risk of tax fraud. Some cash tips go unreported, which is considered tax evasion, but the scale of the problem has never been determined. As fewer customers pay with cash, it is probably diminishing.
Kiplinger disagrees:
https://www.kiplinger.com/taxes/no-tax-on-tips-bill-approved#:~:text=Here%27s%20a%20quick%20summary.,up%20to%20$160%2C000%20a%20year.
Despite the excitement over this bill, there are some things the Senate bill doesnt cover.
A key note is that this bill only applies to cash tips. Though, for IRS tax purposes, literal cash tips, credit card tips, and tips made through electronic payment methods like apps are traditionally treated the same. Non-cash tips are still considered taxable by the IRS but are not covered under this bill.
Snoopy 7
(655 posts)I guess it's time to revisit history:
In a June 2024 ruling, the Supreme Court clarified that a federal bribery law, 18 U.S.C. § 666, does not criminalize "gratuities" given to state and local officials after an official action, according to the American Bar Association. The court's decision, in Snyder v. United States, focused on distinguishing between bribes, which are payments made before an official act to influence it, and gratuities, which are payments made after the action as a form of thanks or reward. The ruling effectively narrowed the scope of Section 666, which was often used by federal prosecutors to pursue corruption cases against state and local officials.
This means if the bribe comes after the awarded act then it isn't a bribe but a tip therefore, these people are looking to get their "tips" tax free. Who would have thunk it?

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