Do you regularly earn overtime pay? If so, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) may help reduce your federal income taxes.
Before 2025, all overtime pay was fully taxable as ordinary income. Starting in 2025 and running through 2028, the OBBBA introduces a temporary deduction for qualified overtime income:
This deduction is available whether or not you itemize.
Qualified overtime income includes only the overtime premium, not your full hourly wage. In general, this is the portion of pay above your regular rate under the Fair Labor Standards Act.
Example:
If your normal rate is $25 per hour and your overtime rate is $37.50, the extra $12.50 per hour is considered qualified overtime income.
Important limitations:
The deduction begins to phase out once modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) exceeds:
The deduction is reduced by $100 for every $1,000 of income above these limits. The phaseout is fully complete at:
Because these thresholds are relatively high, most overtime earners will qualify for the full deduction.
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