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Authored by RSM US LLP
Provisions titled “No tax on tips” and “No tax on overtime” are part of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which the U.S. House of Representatives passed on May 22. The proposals create new individual income tax deductions for qualified tips and overtime pay. Employers will need to consider wage eligibility, reporting requirements and implications for payroll administration.
Proposals to reduce taxes on tips and overtime, which passed the U.S. House of Representatives on May 22 as part of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, would affect employers’ reporting requirements and could necessitate updated payroll systems. The proposals would take effect retroactively, starting at the beginning of 2025 and expiring at the end of 2028.
Although the proposals are subject to change as the Senate considers the legislation, employers that understand the House-approved proposals can consider the implications related to wage eligibility, reporting requirements and payroll administration.
The tips proposal, titled “No tax on tips,” is not limited to tips received solely by employees (nonemployees can also receive the benefit), but it does present unique considerations for employers.
It would allow certain taxpayers to deduct cash tips, including those received by check or credit card, from their income. Eligible taxpayers would generally be those earning below the IRS’s threshold for “highly compensated employees” ($160,000 for 2025) working in customarily tipped occupations, as identified by the Secretary of the Treasury.
Taxpayers—both itemizers and those taking the standard deduction—would deduct tips on their own individual federal income tax returns, resulting in tipped income being exempt from federal income tax. Social Security and Medicare taxes would still apply.
What would this mean for employers?
Under the House-approved proposal, employers would be required to separately identify total tips reported by employees on Form W-2. Employers already report most tips separately on their employment tax information return (typically Form 941, Employer Quarterly Federal Tax Return Lines 5b (Social Security tips)).
The overtime proposal, titled “No tax on overtime,” is limited to overtime wages paid by employers since only employers can pay overtime. The proposal would allow certain employees who, similar to those described above, are not highly compensated employees, to take a deduction for overtime wages paid pursuant to the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (FLSA) and reported on Form W-2.
Similar to the tips proposal, employees would be permitted to deduct overtime wage payments from their income on their individual federal income tax return, thereby exempting them from federal income tax. Social Security and Medicare taxes would still apply.
Currently, overtime pay is not identified separately from regular wages on Form 941 or Form W-2. Similar to tips, the new law would require separate reporting on Form W-2 of total overtime wages paid.
What would this mean for employers?
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This article was written by Amber Salotto, Anne Bushman, Karen Field , Catherine Davis and originally appeared on 2025-06-02. Reprinted with permission from RSM US LLP.
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