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Treasury leaks list of occupations qualifying for no taxes on tips

September 2, 2025
in Accounting
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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Treasury leaks list of occupations qualifying for no taxes on tips
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The Treasury Department’s list of 68 jobs that are eligible for tax exemptions on tips has leaked to the media and includes occupations ranging from bartenders and food servers to entertainers, performers and digital content creators.

The proposed list, as first reported by Axios, includes:

1. Beverage & food service

  • Bartenders
  • Wait staff
  • Food servers, non-restaurant
  • Dining room and cafeteria attendants and bartender helpers
  • Chefs and cooks
  • Food preparation workers
  • Fast Food and Counter Workers
  • Dishwashers
  • Host staff, restaurant, lounge, and coffee shop
  • Bakers

2. Entertainment and events

  • Gambling dealers
  • Gambling change persons and booth cashiers
  • Gambling cage workers
  • Gambling and sports book writers and runners
  • Dancers
  • Musicians and singers
  • Disc jockeys (except radio)
  • Entertainers and performers
  • Digital content creators
  • Ushers, lobby attendants and ticket takers
  • Locker room, coatroom and dressing room attendants

3. Hospitality and guest services

  • Baggage porters and bellhops
  • Concierges
  • Hotel, motel and resort desk clerks
  • Maids and housekeeping cleaners

4. Home services

  • Home maintenance and repair workers
  • Home landscaping and groundskeeping workers
  • Home electricians
  • Home plumbers
  • Home heating/air conditioning mechanics and installers
  • Home appliance installers and repairers
  • Home cleaning service workers
  • Locksmiths
  • Roadside assistance workers

5. Personal services

  • Personal care and service workers
  • Private event planners
  • Private event and portrait photographers
  • Private event videographers
  • Event officiants
  • Pet caretakers
  • Tutors
  • Nannies and babysitters

6. Personal appearance and wellness

  • Skincare specialists
  • Massage therapists
  • Barbers, hairdressers, hairstylists and cosmetologists
  • Shampooers
  • Manicurists and pedicurists
  • Eyebrow threading and waxing technicians
  • Makeup artists
  • Exercise trainers and group fitness instructors
  • Tattoo artists and piercers
  • Tailors
  • Shoe and leather workers and repairers

7. Recreation and instruction

  • Golf caddies
  • Self-enrichment teachers
  • Recreational and tour pilots
  • Tour guides and escorts
  • Travel guides
  • Sports and recreation instructors

8. Transportation and delivery

  • Parking and valet attendants
  • Taxi and rideshare drivers and chauffeurs
  • Shuttle drivers
  • Goods delivery people
  • Personal vehicle and equipment cleaners
  • Private and charter bus drivers
  • Water taxi operators and charter boat workers
  • Rickshaw, pedicab, and carriage drivers
  • Home movers

The tax deduction on tips is effective for 2025 through 2028, allowing both employees and self-employed individuals to deduct qualified tips received in occupations that are listed by the IRS as customarily and regularly receiving tips on or before Dec. 31, 2024, and that are reported on a Form W-2, Form 1099, or other specified statement furnished to the individual or reported directly by the individual on Form 4137, according to an IRS fact sheet.

The IRS is required to publish a list of occupations by Oct. 2, 2025, that “customarily and regularly” received tips on or before Dec. 31, 2024. “Qualified tips” are voluntary cash or charged tips received from customers or through tip sharing. The maximum annual deduction is $25,000. For the self-employed, the deduction can’t exceed the individual’s net income (without regard to this deduction) from the trade or business in which the tips were earned. The deduction phases out for taxpayers with modified adjusted gross income over $150,000 (or $300,000 for joint filers).

Credit: Source link

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