The choice between the standard deduction and itemizing is one of the most important tax decisions you'll make. With 2026's higher standard deduction, fewer people itemize, but it's still worth checking. Here's how to decide which is better for you.
The 2026 Standard Deduction
The Amounts
2026 Standard Deduction:
- Single: $15,400
- Married Filing Jointly: $30,800
- Married Filing Separately: $15,400
- Head of Household: $23,100
Additional for Age 65+ or Blind:
- Single: +$1,550 each
- Married: +$1,250 each
How It Works
Automatic:
- You get this amount automatically
- No need to prove expenses
- No receipts needed
- Why: Simplifies tax filing for most people
Value: Deduction × Your Tax Bracket
Example: $15,400 standard deduction at 22% bracket
- Saves: $15,400 × 22% = $3,388
What Are Itemized Deductions?
Definition
Itemized Deductions = Specific expenses you can deduct instead of taking the standard deduction
What They Include:
- State and local taxes (SALT)
- Mortgage interest
- Charitable contributions
- Medical expenses
- Other itemized deductions
How It Works:
- Add up all itemized deductions
- Compare to standard deduction
- Take whichever is higher
The Trade-Off
If You Itemize:
- ✅ Can deduct more (if itemized > standard)
- ❌ Must have receipts and proof
- ❌ More complex
- ❌ Can't take standard deduction
If You Take Standard:
- ✅ Simple, no receipts needed
- ✅ Guaranteed amount
- ❌ Can't deduct itemized expenses
- ❌ May miss savings if itemized would be higher
How to Decide: Standard vs. Itemized
The Simple Rule
Take Whichever Is Higher:
- If itemized deductions > standard deduction: Itemize
- If standard deduction > itemized deductions: Take standard
Example:
- Standard: $15,400
- Itemized: $20,000
- Itemize (saves more)
Example:
- Standard: $15,400
- Itemized: $12,000
- Take standard (saves more)
The Math
Calculate Both:
- Add up all itemized deductions
- Compare to standard deduction
- Take whichever is higher
- Why: Maximize your deduction
Common Itemized Deductions
State and Local Taxes (SALT)
What's Included:
- State income taxes
- Local income taxes
- Property taxes
- Sales taxes (if you choose this instead of income taxes)
Limit: Capped at $10,000 total
Example:
- State income tax: $8,000
- Property tax: $5,000
- Deductible: $10,000 (capped, not $13,000)
Impact: Major limitation for high-tax states
Mortgage Interest
What's Deductible:
- Interest on mortgage debt
- Up to $750,000 of debt (for loans after Dec 15, 2017)
- Up to $1,000,000 of debt (for loans before Dec 15, 2017 - grandfathered)
Example:
- $300,000 mortgage, 4% rate
- Interest: ~$12,000/year
- Fully deductible (if itemizing)
Limit: Interest on up to $750,000 debt (new loans)
Charitable Contributions
What's Deductible:
- Cash contributions: Up to 60% of AGI
- Non-cash contributions: Up to 30% of AGI
- Carryforward: 5 years for excess
Example:
- $5,000 cash contribution
- Fully deductible (if itemizing and under limits)
Requirements: Must have receipt for $250+
Medical Expenses
What's Deductible:
- Medical expenses above 7.5% of AGI
- Doctor visits, prescriptions, medical equipment, etc.
- Why: Only expenses above threshold
Example:
- AGI: $60,000
- 7.5% threshold: $4,500
- Medical expenses: $8,000
- Deductible: $3,500 ($8,000 - $4,500)
High Threshold: Hard to reach for most people
Other Itemized Deductions
Casualty and Theft Losses:
- Only for federally declared disasters
- Must exceed 10% of AGI (after $100 per event)
Investment Interest:
- Interest on loans to buy investments
- Limited to investment income
Other Miscellaneous:
- Limited other deductions
- Most eliminated by TCJA
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Real Examples
Example 1: Homeowner, High-Tax State
Situation: Married, $150,000 income, own home, California
Itemized Deductions:
- SALT: $10,000 (capped)
- Mortgage interest: $18,000
- Charitable: $5,000
- Total: $33,000
Standard Deduction: $30,800
Decision: Itemize ($33,000 > $30,800) Savings: $33,000 × 22% = $7,260 (vs. $6,776 standard)
Example 2: Renter, Low Deductions
Situation: Single, $60,000 income, rent apartment
Itemized Deductions:
- SALT: $3,000 (state tax)
- Charitable: $2,000
- Total: $5,000
Standard Deduction: $15,400
Decision: Take standard ($15,400 > $5,000) Savings: $15,400 × 22% = $3,388 (vs. $1,100 itemized)
Example 3: Homeowner, Moderate Deductions
Situation: Married, $100,000 income, own home, moderate-tax state
Itemized Deductions:
- SALT: $6,000
- Mortgage interest: $12,000
- Charitable: $3,000
- Total: $21,000
Standard Deduction: $30,800
Decision: Take standard ($30,800 > $21,000) Savings: $30,800 × 22% = $6,776 (vs. $4,620 itemized)
Example 4: High Income, High Deductions
Situation: Married, $300,000 income, own expensive home, high-tax state
Itemized Deductions:
- SALT: $10,000 (capped)
- Mortgage interest: $25,000
- Charitable: $15,000
- Total: $50,000
Standard Deduction: $30,800
Decision: Itemize ($50,000 > $30,800) Savings: $50,000 × 24% = $12,000 (vs. $7,392 standard)
When Itemizing Makes Sense
You Should Itemize If
1. You Own a Home:
- Mortgage interest is significant
- Property taxes are significant
- Why: Major deductions
2. You Live in High-Tax State:
- High state income taxes
- High property taxes
- Why: SALT deduction (even if capped)
3. You Give Charitably:
- Significant charitable contributions
- $5,000+ annually
- Why: Adds to itemized total
4. You Have High Medical Expenses:
- Medical expenses above 7.5% of AGI
- Significant amount
- Why: Can be large deduction
5. Your Itemized > Standard:
- Total itemized exceeds standard
- Why: Saves more money
Typical Itemizer Profile
Characteristics:
- Own home (with mortgage)
- Live in high-tax state
- Give charitably
- Higher income
- Result: Itemized deductions exceed standard
When Standard Is Better
You Should Take Standard If
1. You Don't Own a Home:
- No mortgage interest
- No property taxes (as owner)
- Why: Major deductions missing
2. You Rent:
- No homeownership deductions
- Why: Standard is usually better
3. Your Itemized < Standard:
- Total itemized less than standard
- Why: Standard saves more
4. You Prefer Simplicity:
- Don't want to keep receipts
- Don't want complexity
- Why: Standard is simpler
5. You Have Low Deductions:
- Small charitable contributions
- Low state taxes
- Why: Standard is usually better
Typical Standard Deduction User
Characteristics:
- Rent or small mortgage
- Low-tax state
- Small charitable giving
- Standard deduction exceeds itemized
- Result: Standard is better
Bunching Strategy
What Is Bunching?
Bunching = Paying 2 years of expenses in one year to itemize
How It Works:
- Year 1: Pay 2 years of charitable, itemize
- Year 2: Pay $0 charitable, take standard
- Why: Maximize itemized deduction value
When Bunching Helps
If You're Close to Standard:
- Itemized just below standard
- Bunching pushes you over
- Why: Itemize one year, standard next
Example:
- Standard: $15,400
- Normal itemized: $14,000 (just below)
- Bunch: Pay 2 years charitable ($4,000)
- Year 1 itemized: $18,000 (itemize, save more)
- Year 2 itemized: $10,000 (standard, save more)
- Total savings over 2 years: More than alternating
When Bunching Doesn't Help
If Standard Is Much Higher:
- Itemized far below standard
- Bunching doesn't help
- Why: Still below standard
Example:
- Standard: $15,400
- Itemized: $8,000
- Even with bunching: $12,000
- Still below standard: Bunching doesn't help
If You Can Already Itemize:
- Itemized already exceeds standard
- Bunching may not help much
- Why: Already itemizing
Bottom Line
Standard deduction vs. itemizing in 2026:
- 2026 standard deduction: $15,400 (single) / $30,800 (married)
- Itemize if higher: Compare total itemized to standard
- Most people take standard: Higher standard deduction means fewer itemizers
- Homeowners more likely to itemize: Mortgage interest and property taxes help
- Calculate both: See which saves more
Key Takeaways:
- 2026 standard deduction: $15,400 (single) / $30,800 (married)
- Itemize if itemized > standard: Take whichever is higher
- Most people take standard: Higher standard means fewer itemizers
- Homeowners more likely to itemize: Mortgage interest helps
- Calculate both options: See which saves more money
- Bunching strategy: May help if close to standard
- Keep receipts: If itemizing, need proof
Action Steps:
- Know your 2026 standard deduction amount
- Add up all itemized deductions (SALT, mortgage, charitable, medical)
- Compare itemized total to standard deduction
- Take whichever is higher (saves more money)
- Consider bunching strategy if close to standard
- Keep receipts if itemizing (proof required)
- Review annually (situation may change)
Remember: The choice is simple—take whichever deduction is higher. With 2026's higher standard deduction ($15,400 single, $30,800 married), fewer people itemize than in the past. But if you're a homeowner in a high-tax state with significant charitable giving, itemizing may still save you money. Calculate both options and take the one that saves more.