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The Overtime & Tip Deduction: What Every Employer Needs to Know

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Credit: Tima Miroshnichenko

Payroll rules rarely change quietly. In 2026, tip and overtime reporting will feel different in every pay cycle. Many employers ask Evans Sternau CPA for guidance when payroll settings collide with new tax rules.

This article breaks down what the 2026 shift means for employers. You will see how “qualified” overtime works, how tipped roles get coded, and what W-2 fields now demand. You will also get a practical checklist to run before year-end pressure hits.

The 2026 OBBBA Landscape: What’s Changed for Payroll?

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) took effect for the 2025 tax year. Headlines used phrases like “No Tax on Tips” and “No Tax on Overtime.” In practice, the benefit functions as deductions claimed on the employee’s return. That distinction drives how you talk to staff and how you set expectations.

OBBBA Tax Law 2026 matters because the transition period ends. In 2025, reporting flexibility helped employers adapt. In 2026, payroll data needs cleaner categories and more consistent tracking. Employees still pay FICA on these wages. Social Security and Medicare withholding stays in place. The deduction reduces federal income tax at filing time, not at the register.

For employers, the big win is control. You can tighten timekeeping, label earnings correctly, and reduce W-2 corrections. That work also cuts “Why did my paycheck not change?” conversations. A clear explanation now saves hours later.

Decoding Qualified Overtime: The Half-Time Premium Rule

“Qualified” overtime has a narrow meaning under the new framework. The deduction applies only to the overtime premium portion. That premium is the extra pay required for time-and-a-half. Many payroll systems call this the FLSA Overtime Premium. It is the “half-time” add-on, not the full overtime hour.

A simple example clears the fog. An employee earns $20 per hour and works one overtime hour. Time-and-a-half pays $30 for that hour. Only the $10 premium can qualify for the deduction. The base $20 stays regular wages. If your payroll exports only a single overtime line, you need a split.

The law also adds guardrails. The annual cap is $12,500 for single filers and $25,000 for joint filers. A phase-out begins once modified adjusted gross income exceeds $150,000, or $300,000 for joint filers. That design limits gamesmanship at higher pay levels. It also reduces pressure to re-label bonuses as overtime.

Not every premium hour will qualify. Voluntary double-time may fall outside the federal definition. Some state rules create daily overtime that does not match the federal structure. Treat those as separate earnings buckets. Keep Qualified Overtime Compensation clean and traceable to time records.

The $25,000 Tip Deduction and Treasury Occupation Codes

The No Tax on Tips Deduction focuses on jobs that customarily receive tips. Employees can deduct up to $25,000 in cash and charge tips. That ceiling applies at filing time, not inside payroll. Your role is to track tips accurately and classify the worker correctly.

Treasury occupation codes now matter for eligibility. The government published a list of eligible tipped roles. It includes many familiar positions, from restaurant staff to certain personal service roles. Employers must map internal job titles to these roles. This is harder than it sounds. One job title can cover tipped shifts and non-tipped duties.

Two categories cause the most confusion: true tips and service charges. The tax treatment differs, and payroll must mirror that difference.

Qualifies (generally treated as tips):

  • Cash tips given directly by customers
  • Card tips processed through point-of-sale systems
  • Tips shared through a documented tip pool, when properly reported

Does not qualify (generally treated as wages):

  • Mandatory service charges added by the business
  • Auto-gratuities for large parties, when customers cannot adjust the amount
  • Fixed “hospitality fees” or similar required add-ons

That split should shape your policies. Require daily tip reporting. Reconcile reported tips to point-of-sale totals. Document tip pooling rules and apply them consistently. When roles change, update the occupation code quickly. Do not wait until December. That habit supports accurate Tipped Occupation Codes 2026 reporting.

Navigating New Reporting: Box 12 Codes TT and TP

The biggest operational change in 2026 is reporting precision. Form W-2 now requires specific box codes tied to qualified amounts. Box 12 uses Code TT for qualified overtime and Code TP for qualified tips. Employers also need to include a tipped occupation code in Box 14b for eligible roles.

This shift pushes payroll teams to validate data feeds early. Time systems must calculate overtime correctly. Payroll must separate the premium portion from base pay. Tip systems must deliver clean totals by employee. A “reasonable estimate” approach no longer fits the 2026 expectations.

The table below can help you assign ownership and locate the right inputs. It also supports a Q1 dry run, which is far easier than a January scramble.

W-2 locationWhat goes there in 2026Primary source inside the businessCommon setup risk
Box 12, Code TTQualified overtime premium totalPayroll earnings codes tied to overtime rulesOver time, not split into base and premium
Box 12, Code TPQualified tips totalPOS tip reports, payroll tip entry, and tip pooling recordsService charges mixed into tips
Box 14bTreasury tipped occupation codeHR job code mapping, position control recordsJob titles not mapped, role changes missed
Regular wages fieldsAll wages, including base overtime and service chargesPayroll wage calculationIncorrect assumptions about “tax-free” treatment

If you use a payroll vendor, confirm which fields the software supports today. Ask how it captures the IRS Form W-2 Code TT requirement. Request a sample W-2 output using current year-to-date data. Then compare it to your internal payroll register. That comparison catches drift early.

Employer Strategy: Retention and Compliance in a New Era

Employers can turn these changes into a retention tool. The deductions can raise after-tax outcomes without raising hourly rates. Staff will ask one question first: “What does this do for me?” A clear answer helps. Tax savings land at filing time. FICA withholding still applies. Federal withholding may still show on each paycheck.

Compliance still comes first. Confirm exempt and non-exempt classifications. Only non-exempt employees receiving FLSA overtime can benefit from the overtime deduction. Misclassification creates risk for wages, taxes, and penalties. Next, separate qualifying federal amounts from other premium pay. Keep a distinct bucket for the federal premium portion. Keep separate buckets for double-time or state-specific premiums.

Use this checklist to keep the work practical and repeatable:

  • Review job classifications and confirm non-exempt status where overtime applies.
  • Create earnings codes that isolate the overtime premium portion from base wages.
  • Validate timekeeping rules and overtime calculations at the pay-rule level.
  • Train managers on tips versus service charges and how each gets recorded.
  • Map tipped roles to Treasury occupation codes and audit changes monthly.
  • Reconcile tip reports to POS totals each pay period, not quarterly.
  • Run a Q1 dry run of W-2 outputs and verify Box 12 codes TT and TP fields.
  • Document exceptions and fixes, then apply them across all locations.

Tax-Free Overtime Rules sound simple on a headline. Payroll reality is more detailed. Clean data, clear buckets, and early testing will keep you compliant and calm through year-end.

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