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Married? Here Is What Doubles and What Does Not

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The four new deductions treat couples four different ways. This trips up almost everyone.

You would expect every cap to simply double for a married couple. The law did not do that. Each deduction has its own marriage math, so here they are one by one.

Tips: the cap does not double

The tips deduction is capped at $25,000 per return. Not per person. A married couple where both work for tips shares one $25,000 cap between them. Two servers who each earn $20,000 in tips can deduct $25,000 total, not $40,000. The phase out starts at $300,000 of joint income.

Overtime: the cap does double

The overtime deduction is $12,500 for a single filer and $25,000 for a couple filing jointly. If you both work heavy overtime, you get the full doubled cap. The phase out starts at $300,000 joint.

Car loan interest: same cap, higher phase out

The car loan deduction stays at $10,000 of interest per return whether you are single or married. What changes is the income limit. Singles start losing the deduction above $100,000, couples above $200,000. If you own two qualifying cars, the interest from both counts toward the same $10,000.

Senior deduction: truly per person

This one is the cleanest. Each spouse who is 65 or older gets $6,000. Both 65, that is $12,000. One of you is 63, only the older spouse's $6,000 applies. The phase out begins at $150,000 for couples.

The filing separately trap

Married filing separately kills the tips and overtime deductions completely. Neither spouse can claim them at all. If one of you earns tips or overtime and you have been filing separately for student loan or other reasons, run the numbers both ways this year, because separate filing now has a real price.

Run your household's numbers

Every calculator on this site has a married filing jointly option with the right caps and phase outs built in. Start with the one that fits your biggest income source: tips, overtime, car loan, or senior.

Frequently asked questions

What tax deductions do married couples get in 2026?

Married couples filing jointly get the $32,200 standard deduction plus the new Schedule 1-A deductions: up to $25,000 for tips (shared cap, does not double), up to $25,000 for overtime (doubled from $12,500), up to $10,000 for car loan interest (same cap), and up to $12,000 for the senior deduction if both spouses are 65 or older. The new SALT cap of $40,400 also applies if you itemize.

Do married couples get more back in taxes?

Usually yes, because the standard deduction doubles to $32,200 and most bracket thresholds are wider for joint filers. The overtime deduction cap also doubles to $25,000 and the senior deduction doubles to $12,000 if both spouses are 65 or older. The one exception is the tips deduction, which stays at $25,000 per return and does not double.

What happens to the new deductions if we file separately?

Married filing separately kills the tips and overtime deductions completely. Neither spouse can claim either one. The car loan interest deduction and the senior deduction are still available when filing separately, but other benefits like education credits and the student loan interest deduction also disappear.

Caps and phase outs from the 2025 law for tax years 2025 through 2028. This is general information, not tax advice. Couples with student loans on income driven plans should weigh filing status effects on loan payments too.