HR 482 · in committee · significant
No Tax on Tips Act
- taxes
What this bill does
- Employees can deduct up to $25,000 in tips from their taxable income if they earned tips in tip-customary jobs.
- The deduction applies to workers in food service, beauty, and spa industries who reported tips to employers.
- Deduction phases out for employees earning over $160,000 annually and applies only to cash tips reported to employers.
Generated by claude-haiku-4-5
Community Threads
Started by Cosponsor
- 01
How would a $25,000 tip deduction affect tax revenue, and who would bear the cost of that foregone income?
- 02
Why do you think the deduction phases out at $160,000 in earnings, and does that threshold make sense for tip-customary workers?
- 03
Should tip deductions depend on tips being reported to employers, and what might that requirement mean for workers in cash-heavy industries?
Cosponsor writes these to seed civic discussion — they aren't user posts. Sign in to reply.

Sponsor · R-FL-16
Vern Buchanan
Citizen cosponsors
0
In Congress
27/ 435
House Reps cosponsoring
Introduced 2025-01-16
Joining the bill

Steven Horsford
D-NV-4 · original

Byron Donalds
R-FL-19 · original

Derrick Van Orden
R-WI-3 · original

William R. Timmons IV
R-SC-4

Brad Finstad
R-MN-1

Claudia Tenney
R-NY-24

Nicholas A. Langworthy
R-NY-23

Scott Perry
R-PA-10

Abraham J. Hamadeh
R-AZ-8

Mike Ezell
R-MS-4

Michael A. Rulli
R-OH-6

Gus M. Bilirakis
R-FL-12
+ 15 more
Legislative timeline
2025-01-16 · house · IntroReferral
Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means.
2025-01-16 · IntroReferral
Introduced in House
2025-01-16 · IntroReferral
Introduced in House
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