Info Gulp

What Is a Tax Deduction?


Last Updated:
Info Gulp employs strict editorial principles to provide accurate, clear and actionable information. Learn more about our Editorial Policy.

    Highlights

  • Tax deductions lower your taxable income, reducing the taxes you owe, and you can choose between the standard deduction or itemizing based on which is higher
Table of Contents

What Is a Tax Deduction?

Let me explain what a tax deduction really is. It's an amount you subtract from your taxable income, which directly lowers the taxes you owe. You have a choice: take the standard deduction, which is a fixed amount, or itemize your deductions on Schedule A of your tax return.

If your itemized expenses add up to more than the standard deduction for your filing status, you should itemize. Common itemized deductions include mortgage interest, charitable donations, unreimbursed medical expenses, and state and local taxes.

Key Takeaways

Remember, tax deductions come off your taxable income, cutting your tax bill. You pick either the standard deduction or itemize on Schedule A of Form 1040 or 1040-SR. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act nearly doubled the standard deduction and enhanced some deductions, but it also cut or limited many itemized ones, like mortgage interest. If you itemize, keep those receipts to back up your claims.

Understanding Tax Deductions

As an individual, you can go with the standard deduction, which got a big boost from the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, or itemize. For 2024, singles get $14,600, married filing jointly $29,200, and so on—check the amounts for 2025 too, as they increase slightly. If you're 65 or older or blind, you get an extra deduction on top.

You can't do both standard and itemized in the same year—that's a hard rule.

Standard Deduction for the 2024 and 2025 Tax Years

  • Single: $14,600 (2024), $15,000 (2025)
  • Married Filing Separately: $14,600 (2024), $15,000 (2025)
  • Heads of Household: $21,900 (2024), $22,500 (2025)
  • Married Filing Jointly: $29,200 (2024), $30,000 (2025)
  • Surviving Spouses: $29,200 (2024), $30,000 (2025)

Common Tax Deductions

Here are some deductions you can claim: up to $2,500 in student loan interest, mortgage interest on up to $750,000 of debt (or $1 million if bought before late 2017), retirement contributions to IRAs or 401(k)s, up to $10,000 in state and local taxes, HSA contributions, medical expenses over 7.5% of AGI, self-employment costs like home office and health insurance, charitable gifts, investment losses, and gambling losses.

Most go on Schedule A, but some need other forms, like Schedule D for investments. Your 401(k) contributions show up automatically on your paycheck.

Deductions Impacted by TCJA

The 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act changed things—it eliminated or capped deductions like home equity loan interest unless for home improvements, mortgage interest over $750,000, unreimbursed work expenses, state taxes over $10,000 for couples, professional dues, moving costs except for military, casualty losses outside disasters, personal exemptions, tax prep fees, alimony, and miscellaneous items. These changes last until 2025.

Tax Deductions for the Self-Employed

If you're self-employed—and more than 16 million Americans are—you keep some deductions that others lost. Figure out what's business versus personal. Key ones include half your Medicare and Social Security taxes, home office, health insurance premiums, and retirement contributions to SEP IRAs, SIMPLE IRAs, or solo 401(k)s. These retirement deductions are above-the-line, so they work even with the standard deduction.

Small Business Tax Deductions

Businesses deduct expenses from profits to lower taxes. Track everything: advertising, bad debts, books, travel, charitable gifts, education, equipment, insurance, legal fees, licenses, loan interest, pass-through deduction, repairs, startup costs, taxes, and vehicle expenses. Rules are tricky, especially separating business from personal use.

Tax Deductions vs. Tax Credits

Deductions cut your taxable income, while credits subtract directly from your tax bill—some are even refundable. Credits are usually worth more than deductions since they reduce taxes dollar for dollar.

Example of a Tax Deduction

Take Sarah, a single filer with $50,000 income. Her itemized expenses: $8,000 mortgage interest, $3,000 state taxes, $1,200 charity, $2,500 medical over threshold, $800 business expenses—total $15,500. For 2024, standard is $14,600, so she itemizes to save more.

Standard Deductions vs. Itemized Deductions

Choose whichever lowers your income more. The TCJA made standard deductions bigger, so many skip itemizing. If you itemize, keep receipts and use Schedule A; standard is just plugging in the number on your 1040.

State Tax Deductions

Most states mirror federal forms but have their own rates and deductions. Some don't allow itemizing if you take federal standard. Check your state's rules for extras, like age-based exemptions.

Limits on Tax Deductions

Deductions have caps, like mortgage interest up to $750,000 debt, medical over 7.5% AGI. Capital losses can be deducted up to $3,000 yearly, with carryforward for more.

The Bottom Line

Tax deductions let you subtract from income to owe less tax. Pick standard or itemize based on what cuts your bill most.

Other articles for you

What Is the Quantity Theory of Money?
What Is the Quantity Theory of Money?

The quantity theory of money explains how changes in money supply directly influence price levels and inflation.

What Is House Poor?
What Is House Poor?

House poor describes spending too much income on housing, leaving little for other needs.

What Is a Negative Confirmation?
What Is a Negative Confirmation?

Negative confirmation is a communication method where recipients only respond if there's an issue, used to streamline responses in business and finance.

What Is a Bear Spread?
What Is a Bear Spread?

A bear spread is an options trading strategy for profiting from a moderate decline in an asset's price while limiting losses.

What Is the GI Bill?
What Is the GI Bill?

The GI Bill provides education and training benefits to U.S

What Is a Bank Holding Company?
What Is a Bank Holding Company?

A bank holding company is a corporation that owns and controls banks without providing banking services itself.

What Is an Accounting Standard?
What Is an Accounting Standard?

Accounting standards provide a consistent framework for recording and reporting financial transactions to ensure transparency and comparability.

Understanding Marginal Cost
Understanding Marginal Cost

Marginal cost is the additional expense incurred by producing one more unit of a product, essential for business decisions on production and pricing.

What Is an Unpaid Dividend?
What Is an Unpaid Dividend?

An unpaid dividend is a dividend owed to shareholders but not yet distributed due to the timing between its announcement and actual payment.

What Is Financial Technology (Fintech)?
What Is Financial Technology (Fintech)?

Fintech revolutionizes financial services through technology, impacting banking, investments, and payments for businesses and consumers.

Follow Us

Share



by using this website you agree to our Cookies Policy

Copyright © Info Gulp 2025