Do you take the itemized deduction on your tax return?
- Latoya J. Jessamy
- Oct 14
- 2 min read

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) includes several permanent changes that directly affect taxpayers who take the itemized deduction. Some provisions take away opportunities, while others preserve valuable tax breaks.
Here’s what you need to know:
Permanent repeal of miscellaneous itemized deductions
The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) suspended miscellaneous itemized deductions for 2018-2025.
But the OBBBA makes that suspension permanent!
This means you can no longer deduct unreimbursed employee business expenses, investment expenses, or other items previously subject to the 2 percent AGI floor. If you incur employee business expenses, the solution is straightforward: have your corporation reimburse you so the expense gets properly deducted.
Itemized Deductions That Remain
Many important deductions remain available. You may still claim:
Mortgage interest deduction.
State and local taxes (SALT);
Charitable contributions;
Medical expenses, including health insurance premiums, and
Personal casualty and theft losses.
These deductions continue to appear on Schedule A of Form 1040, subject to existing limits.
New Limits for High-Income Taxpayers
Starting in 2026, high-income taxpayers in the 37 percent bracket will face a new reduction in their itemized deductions. The OBBBA caps the benefit of itemized deductions at no more than 35 percent of their value.
For example:
If your taxable income barely crosses into the 37 percent bracket, your deductions will be reduced modestly.
If you have significant income, your deductions may be reduced or even eliminated.
In short, the higher your income is above the 37 percent threshold, the greater the haircut on your itemized deductions.
Planning Strategies
To protect your deductions, use these strategies:
Avoid unreimbursed employee expenses by arranging corporate reimbursements.
Monitor your taxable income to minimize the risk of exceeding the 37 percent bracket. For 2025, this threshold starts at $626,350 for single filers and $751,600 for joint filers (adjusted annually for inflation).
Takeaway
The OBBBA reshapes itemized deductions for the long term. While some opportunities have disappeared, key deductions remain, and planning strategies still exist to maximize your tax benefit. By structuring expenses properly and managing taxable income effectively, you can continue to benefit under the new rules.
