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IRS Rolls Out New Form To Claim Trump’s Tax Breaks For Seniors, Tips, Overtime, And Car Loans – Financial Freedom Countdown

The Internal Revenue Service has released an early draft of a new form that will make it easier for working Americans to take advantage of tax breaks included in President Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act.

The new two-page form, Schedule 1-A, will allow taxpayers to claim deductions on tips, overtime pay, car loan interest, and enhanced senior benefits beginning with 2025 returns filed next year.

The changes mark a rare expansion of tax relief for ordinary Americans; extending benefits to those who take the standard deduction as well as those who itemize.

Four Key Deductions That Could Lower 2025 Tax Bills

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The draft Schedule 1-A covers four major deductions:

Qualified tip income (up to $25,000 per return)
Overtime pay
Car loan interest for new vehicles assembled in the United States
An enhanced senior deduction for taxpayers 65 and older

These new deductions will apply from 2025 through 2028 unless Congress acts to extend them.

Designed to Help Working Americans

Donald Trump
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The One Big Beautiful Bill was marketed as a middle-class tax overhaul; and these provisions appear to deliver on that promise. Waitstaff, delivery drivers, bartenders, casino dealers, mechanics, and countless others who rely on hourly or tipped income could see meaningful savings.

Trump’s economic team said the goal was simple: to “reward work, not just wealth.” The new deductions, which apply to everyday forms of income and spending, aim to do just that.

Car Loan Interest Deduction Tied to ‘Buy American’ Rules

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One of the most distinctive new breaks is the deduction for car loan interest, but it comes with specific conditions.
To qualify, the vehicle must be new, purchased in 2025, and assembled in the United States. The IRS form includes a field to report the vehicle identification number (VIN) to verify eligibility.

Used cars, refinancing of existing loans, or vehicles built outside the U.S. won’t qualify, reinforcing the bill’s “America First” manufacturing focus.

A Boost for Seniors

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Retirees will also benefit from a new $6,000 enhanced deduction for those age 65 and older.

The amount begins to phase out at $75,000 for single filers and $150,000 for joint filers, meaning most middle-income seniors will qualify for the full break.

Analysts say the provision will especially help retirees on fixed incomes who have seen costs rise over the past few years.

How These Deductions Work — and Why They’re Different

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All four new deductions are classified as below-the-line, meaning they lower taxable income but not adjusted gross income (AGI).

That distinction matters: lowering your AGI can open the door to additional tax credits and benefits, but below-the-line deductions still reduce what you owe.

Tax experts noted that while these deductions don’t reduce AGI, they are “available to everyone, not just those who itemize.”
With roughly 90% of taxpayers taking the standard deduction, that makes the change far-reaching.

What Counts as a ‘Tip’ Under the New Law

IRS Tax Auditor
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The IRS and Treasury have clarified that the “no tax on tips” deduction covers cash tips paid directly, by credit card, or even in stablecoins — cryptocurrencies tied to the U.S. dollar that maintain a fixed value.

Tips given through legal, voluntary transactions qualify; mandatory service charges and gratuities tied to illegal activities do not.

Which Jobs Qualify for the Tip Deduction

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The IRS has listed nearly 70 occupations that “customarily receive tips,” including bartenders, hairstylists, delivery drivers, casino dealers, golf caddies, and more.
The agency is still accepting public comments on that list through October 23, suggesting it could expand further before final guidance is issued.

Who Can Claim the New Tip Deductions — and Who Can’t

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The tip deduction begins to phase out at $150,000 for single filers and $300,000 for joint filers. Higher earners will see smaller or no benefits.

To qualify, taxpayers must include a valid Social Security number and report their tip income accurately on a W-2, 1099, or Form 4137.

The IRS also clarified that tips must be voluntary; automatic service fees, such as an 18% charge added to large parties at restaurants, will not count.

What It Could Mean for Your 2025 Refund

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The new deductions combined with the extension of President Trump’s signature Tax Cuts and Jobs Act legislation could add up to meaningful savings.

Millions of service workers, overtime employees, and seniors stand to benefit in similar ways, as the IRS incorporates the new provisions into next year’s filing season.

More IRS Guidance on the Way

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The IRS is expected to release the official Schedule 1-A instructions later this year, outlining exactly how taxpayers can document and claim these new deductions.

A draft copy of the new Schedule 1-A has been released by the Internal Revenue Service.

Tax professionals advise keeping all receipts, wage statements, and auto loan documents from 2025 to make the process smoother when filing next spring.

While the One Big Beautiful Bill Act drew fierce debate when passed, its latest provisions are beginning to show concrete benefits for the middle class; a sign that Trump’s signature tax overhaul may be reshaping the code in ways that reach far beyond the halls of Congress.

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The ongoing partial government shutdown has ground federal operations to a halt, delaying crucial data releases that millions of Americans rely on. Among the casualties: the September Consumer Price Index (CPI) report, which determines next year’s Social Security cost-of-living adjustment (COLA). Without the inflation data, the Social Security Administration (SSA) can’t calculate the increase millions of retirees and beneficiaries are expecting for 2026.

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Social Security’s “Full Retirement Age” May Get a Rebrand; But Critics Say It Misses the Real Problem

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Most Americans don’t actually know when they qualify for their full Social Security benefits. A recent survey by the Nationwide Retirement Institute found that only 21% of adults could correctly identify the age when they can claim 100% of their earned benefits. The confusion isn’t surprising; the program’s terminology has long been a tangle of jargon and outdated phrases.

Social Security’s “Full Retirement Age” May Get a Rebrand; But Critics Say It Misses the Real Problem

Could You Get a $2,000 Tariff Check? Trump’s Dividend Idea Faces Congress and the Courts

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President Donald Trump said Thursday he is still considering giving Americans up to $2,000 in rebate checks tied to his sweeping tariff agenda. The idea, which he described as a “dividend to the people of America,” would redirect a share of the hundreds of billions of dollars his tariffs have generated since going into effect this spring.

Could You Get a $2,000 Tariff Check? Trump’s Dividend Idea Faces Congress and the Courts

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Starting September 30, 2025, the Trump administration will end the use of paper checks for Social Security benefits, completing the Social Security Transition to Electronic Payments. While more than 99% of seniors are already set up electronically, a small group still receiving paper checks must act now to avoid payment delays. Beneficiaries who haven’t switched yet will need to enroll in direct deposit or request a Direct Express card to keep their monthly benefits arriving on time. This change is part of a broader government effort to reduce fraud, improve efficiency, and save taxpayer dollars.

Trump’s Social Security Upgrade Ends Paper Checks on Sept. 30. What Seniors Must Do Now

Financial Freedom Countdown
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