Notice: This page requires JavaScript to function properly.
Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings or update your browser.
Impara Standard vs Itemized Deductions | How Taxes Actually Work
Taxes for People Who Hate Taxes

Standard vs Itemized Deductions

Scorri per mostrare il menu

The First Big Choice on Your Tax Return

Every year, the government lets you lower your taxable income through deductions. Basically: "Some of your income doesn't count. We won't tax it."

You get one of two paths:

  • Standard deduction — a flat amount based on your filing status. No questions asked. No receipts;
  • Itemized deduction — add up specific qualifying expenses (mortgage interest, donations, etc.) and deduct that total.

You take whichever is bigger. That's the whole decision.

The Standard Deduction (2026)

  • Single → $16,100;
  • Married filing jointly → $32,200;
  • Head of household → $24,150.

No paperwork. No tracking. It just shows up.

Why Most People Now Take The Standard

In 2017, Congress roughly doubled the standard deduction. In 2025, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) raised the base amounts again — and made the higher levels permanent. Suddenly, itemizing only made sense if your real expenses were bigger than that doubled number.

Today, about 9 out of 10 filers take the standard.

Itemize only when your qualifying expenses clearly beat the standard. Otherwise — take the easy path.

question mark

Drag each expense into the right category. Which of these can potentially be claimed as itemized deductions, and which can't be deducted at all?

Can Be Itemized

+

Trascina le carte qui

Not Deductible

+

Trascina le carte qui

Clicca o trascina gli elementi e riempi gli spazi

Tutto è chiaro?

Come possiamo migliorarlo?

Grazie per i tuoi commenti!

Sezione 1. Capitolo 3

Chieda ad AI

expand

Chieda ad AI

ChatGPT

Chieda pure quello che desidera o provi una delle domande suggerite per iniziare la nostra conversazione

Sezione 1. Capitolo 3
some-alt