Advertising
Tax season has a way of making even the most organized people feel like they’re leaving money behind. In fact, for millions of Americans, itemized deductions represent one of the most powerful — and most overlooked — tools for legally reducing what they owe to the IRS each year.
Every filing season, taxpayers face a fundamental choice: take the standard deduction or itemize their expenses. Ultimately, that decision can mean the difference between a modest refund and a significantly larger one, depending on your financial situation.
With that in mind, what follows covers the core categories of deductions you can itemize, who benefits most from this strategy, how recent tax law changes affect your options, and practical steps to make sure you’re not leaving real money on the table.
Advertising

Standard Deduction vs. Itemized Deductions: Understanding the Choice
Before diving into specific deduction categories, it helps to understand the decision you’re actually making. Basically, when you file your federal taxes, the IRS lets you reduce your taxable income in one of two ways.
The first option is the standard deduction — a flat amount that reduces your income automatically, no receipts required. Specifically, for tax year 2025 (filed in 2026), the standard deduction sits at approximately $15,000 for single filers and $30,000 for married couples filing jointly.
The second option is itemizing — listing out specific qualifying expenses and deducting the actual total. Of course, this only makes sense if your combined eligible expenses exceed the standard deduction for your filing status.
Advertising
Who Typically Benefits From Itemizing
To be clear, not everyone comes out ahead by itemizing, but certain financial profiles make it much more likely to pay off. Knowing where you fall can save you hours of unnecessary paperwork — or reveal savings you didn’t know existed.
Taxpayers who tend to benefit most from itemizing include:
- Homeowners carrying significant mortgage interest payments
- Residents of high-tax states like California, New York, or New Jersey
- People who make substantial charitable contributions throughout the year
- Individuals with high out-of-pocket medical or dental expenses
- Those who experienced losses from a federally declared disaster
In that case, if none of these describe your situation, the standard deduction likely wins. Even so, running the numbers every year is worth doing — life circumstances change, and so do tax laws.
The Main Categories of Itemized Deductions
The IRS recognizes several specific expense types that qualify for itemization. Crucially, each category comes with its own rules, limits, and documentation requirements, so understanding each one individually matters.
State and Local Taxes (SALT)
First up, the SALT deduction allows you to deduct state income taxes (or sales taxes, if you live in a state without income tax) plus property taxes. However, under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) of 2017, this deduction is capped at $10,000 per year for most filers ($5,000 for married filing separately).
For high earners in states like New York or California, this cap can feel painfully restrictive. Before 2018, there was no federal limit on SALT deductions, and many taxpayers in high-tax states deducted far more. As a result, the current cap remains one of the most debated tax provisions in Washington.
Mortgage Interest Deduction
Additionally, homeowners can deduct interest paid on mortgage loans up to $750,000 — for mortgages originated after December 15, 2017. If your mortgage predates that cutoff, you may still qualify under the older $1 million limit.
For many middle-class homeowners, especially those in the early years of a mortgage when interest payments are highest, this deduction alone can push total itemized deductions above the standard threshold.
For instance, a homeowner with a $600,000 mortgage at a 7% interest rate could be paying well over $40,000 in interest during the first year — far exceeding what the standard deduction offers.
Charitable Contributions
Cash donations to qualifying nonprofit organizations are deductible up to 60% of your adjusted gross income (AGI). On the other hand, donations of property or appreciated assets, like stocks, fall under a 30% AGI limit instead.
Documentation is critical here. To illustrate, any single contribution of $250 or more requires a written acknowledgment from the receiving organization. For smaller cash donations, keeping bank statements or receipts is essential. In the end, without proper records, the IRS can disallow the deduction entirely.
Medical and Dental Expenses
Similarly, medical deductions come with a meaningful hurdle: only expenses that exceed 7.5% of your AGI are actually deductible. So if your AGI is $80,000, the first $6,000 in medical costs doesn’t count — only what goes beyond that threshold is eligible.
Qualifying expenses include health insurance premiums paid out of pocket, prescription costs, dental procedures, long-term care costs, and certain medical devices. For this reason, for retirees or individuals managing chronic conditions, this category can add up to a substantial deduction.
Casualty and Theft Losses
Finally, under current law, casualty and theft losses are only deductible if they result from a federally declared disaster. Personal losses from theft, accidents, or non-declared natural events generally do not qualify. This is a significant departure from older tax rules and affects homeowners in disaster-prone regions the most.
Key Deduction Limits at a Glance
Here is a summary of the major itemized deduction categories, their current limits, and what documentation you’ll typically need to support your claim:
| Deduction Category | Current Limit | Key Documentation |
|---|---|---|
| SALT (State & Local Taxes) | $10,000 per year | Tax statements, property tax bills |
| Mortgage Interest | Up to $750,000 loan balance | Form 1098 from lender |
| Charitable Contributions (cash) | Up to 60% of AGI | Receipts, written acknowledgment |
| Medical & Dental Expenses | Amount above 7.5% of AGI | Explanation of benefits, receipts |
| Casualty & Theft Losses | Federally declared disasters only | FEMA declaration, insurance records |
The TCJA Shadow: Why 2026 Is a Critical Tax Year
The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 reshaped itemized deductions dramatically. It nearly doubled the standard deduction and capped SALT at $10,000, which caused the percentage of Americans who itemize to drop sharply — from roughly 30% before the law to well under 15% afterward.
Many of the TCJA’s core provisions were designed to expire after 2025. That means 2026 is a potentially pivotal year. Depending on whether Congress extends, modifies, or lets those provisions lapse, the calculus around itemizing could shift significantly for many households.
Taxpayers who have relied on the standard deduction for the past several years may find it worthwhile to revisit their filing strategy for 2026. Consulting a tax professional before year-end — rather than after — gives you more options.
Practical Strategies to Maximize Your Deductions
The Bunching Strategy
One of the smartest moves for taxpayers hovering near the standard deduction threshold is called bunching deductions.
The idea is simple: instead of spreading deductible expenses across multiple years, you concentrate them into a single tax year to push your total above the standard deduction amount.
For example, if you typically donate $8,000 per year to charity, consider donating $16,000 in one year and nothing the next. In the donation year, you itemize and capture the full benefit.
In the following year, you take the standard deduction. Over two years, you’ve deducted more than if you split the contributions evenly.
The same logic applies to scheduling elective medical procedures or pre-paying property taxes before December 31 — though the SALT cap limits that particular move.
Keep Records Throughout the Year
The biggest mistake taxpayers make isn’t choosing the wrong deduction strategy — it’s failing to document the right one. Save every receipt for medical expenses, gather written acknowledgment letters from charities, and file away your Form 1098 from your mortgage lender as soon as it arrives.
Losing documentation means losing deductions, even if the expense genuinely qualifies. A simple folder — physical or digital — dedicated to tax-year expenses can prevent last-minute scrambling in April.
Donor-Advised Funds for Charitable Giving
A donor-advised fund (DAF) is a charitable account where you contribute assets, receive the deduction immediately, and then direct the funds to specific nonprofits over time.
This tool is particularly effective for the bunching strategy because it lets you front-load charitable deductions in a single year without committing to specific charities right away.
DAFs also work well for donating appreciated stock. You avoid capital gains taxes on the appreciation while deducting the full fair market value — a double benefit that cash donations alone cannot replicate.
You May Also Like
👉 FDIC insurance: Protect Your Savings and Bank Accounts
Making the Right Call for Your Situation
The decision to itemize isn’t one-size-fits-all, and it genuinely depends on your financial picture for each specific tax year. A renter in a low-tax state with modest charitable giving will almost certainly do better with the standard deduction.
Meanwhile, a homeowner in New Jersey who just had major surgery and donated significantly to their church may come out thousands of dollars ahead by itemizing.
Running a side-by-side comparison — total eligible itemized deductions versus the standard deduction — should be the starting point for every filer, not an afterthought.
Most tax software does this automatically, but knowing what to enter requires understanding the categories covered above.
Moreover, consider that your situation can change dramatically from year to year. A home purchase, a large medical event, a significant gift to charity, or a change in state residence can all flip the math entirely.
Taking Control of Your Tax Outcome
Itemized deductions reward preparation. Taxpayers who track expenses year-round, understand the rules specific to each deduction category, and plan strategically — using tools like bunching or donor-advised funds — consistently come out ahead of those who simply accept the standard deduction without questioning it.
The most important takeaway is this: check your numbers every year. Tax law is not static, your life is not static, and the difference between the standard deduction and a well-executed itemized return can be genuinely significant. With 2026 shaping up as a particularly consequential year for federal tax policy, staying informed and proactive has never mattered more for American taxpayers.
Want to learn how to maximize your tax savings through itemized deductions? Check out this comprehensive video that breaks down the key strategies:
Frequently Asked Questions
What can I do if my itemized deductions are close to the standard deduction limit?
How do I ensure my charitable contributions are properly documented?
What should I know about the timeline for the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act provisions?
Can I deduct medical expenses paid for someone else?
Why should I keep records of my expenses throughout the year?