Why servers qualify (and what counts)
The 2026 "No Tax on Tips" deduction (IRC §224) applies to occupations that customarily and regularly received tips on or before December 31, 2024. Food and beverage service — servers, bartenders, bussers, hosts, baristas, and food delivery — is squarely on the IRS list. To claim it you need a valid Social Security number, and if you're married you must file jointly.
What counts as a qualified tip
- Cash tips you report.
- Credit/debit card tips paid out on your check.
- Your share of a tip pool or tip-out.
What does NOT count
- Mandatory service charges — the auto-gratuity added to large parties is a wage, not a tip.
- Tips above the $25,000 annual cap (the deduction stops there).
The part nobody tells servers
"No tax on tips" is a headline, not the whole story. The deduction lowers your federal income tax — it does not remove the Social Security and Medicare (FICA) taken out of every paycheck, and many states don't follow the federal rule, so your state tax may not change. Still, for most servers it's a real, sizable cut. Run your own number above, then see how it stacks with other 2026 breaks in the Total Tax Change calculator.
Server FAQ
Do servers qualify for No Tax on Tips?
Yes — food and beverage service is on the IRS tipped-occupation list. You need a valid SSN, and married workers must file jointly.
Do tip-outs and pooled tips count?
Your share of pooled tips and card/cash tips count. Mandatory service charges (auto-grat) do not.
Do I still pay Social Security on tips?
Yes. The deduction cuts federal income tax only; FICA still applies.
What if I made more than $25,000 in tips?
You can deduct up to $25,000; tips above that aren't deductible. High earners also face an income phase-out above $150,000.
Disclaimer: Educational estimate based on IRC §224 and IRS guidance as of June 2026. Not tax advice. FedCalc is independent and not affiliated with the U.S. government or IRS.