The standard deduction increased significantly in 2018, making it harder to benefit from itemizing. But for some taxpayers, itemizing still makes sense. Understanding when to itemize can save you money on taxes. This guide explains when itemizing makes sense and how to maximize your deductions.
Standard Deduction vs. Itemized Deductions
The Choice
You must choose:
- Standard deduction (set amount, no documentation needed)
- Itemized deductions (actual expenses, must document)
Rule: Use whichever is higher.
You can't do both: Must choose one.
Standard Deduction Benefits
Standard deduction:
- Simple (no documentation)
- Guaranteed amount
- No need to track expenses
2026 amounts: $15,400 (single), $30,800 (married), $23,100 (head of household)
Itemized Deduction Benefits
Itemized deductions:
- Can be higher than standard (if you have large deductions)
- Must document expenses
- More complex
Use if: Itemized > standard deduction.
2026 Standard Deduction Amounts
Standard Deduction by Filing Status
2026 standard deductions:
- Single: $15,400
- Married filing jointly: $30,800
- Married filing separately: $15,400
- Head of household: $23,100
These are significant: Harder to exceed with itemized deductions.
Additional Standard Deduction
For age 65+ or blind:
- Additional $1,550 (single) or $1,250 (married)
- Can add to standard deduction
This makes: Itemizing even harder for seniors.
What Can You Itemize?
Qualifying Itemized Deductions
You can itemize:
- State and local taxes (SALT) - capped at $10,000
- Mortgage interest (on up to $750,000 of debt)
- Charitable contributions (up to 60% of AGI)
- Medical expenses (above 7.5% of AGI)
- Casualty and theft losses (limited)
- Other miscellaneous deductions (very limited)
Must exceed standard: To benefit from itemizing.
State and Local Taxes (SALT)
SALT deduction:
- State income taxes
- Local income taxes
- Property taxes
- Capped at $10,000 (since 2018)
This affects: High earners in high-tax states.
Mortgage Interest
Mortgage interest:
- Deductible if itemize
- On up to $750,000 of debt (for loans after 2017)
- On up to $1,000,000 of debt (for loans before 2018)
This is significant: For homeowners with mortgages.
Charitable Contributions
Charitable contributions:
- Deductible if itemize
- Up to 60% of AGI (for cash)
- Up to 30% of AGI (for appreciated property)
This is significant: For generous donors.
Medical Expenses
Medical expenses:
- Deductible if itemize
- Above 7.5% of AGI (high threshold)
- Includes: Medical care, prescriptions, insurance premiums, etc.
This is hard to reach: 7.5% of AGI is high threshold.
When Itemizing Makes Sense
The Math
Itemize if:
- Total itemized deductions > standard deduction
- Simple rule: Use whichever is higher
Example:
- Standard: $15,400 (single)
- Itemized: $18,000
- Itemize (saves ~$650 in tax, if in 24% bracket)
Common Situations
Itemizing often makes sense if:
- You have large mortgage (significant interest)
- You live in high-tax state (high SALT)
- You're generous with charity (large contributions)
- You have high medical expenses (above 7.5% of AGI)
- Combination of above
High earners: More likely to benefit from itemizing.
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Strategies to Maximize Itemized Deductions
Strategy 1: Bunch Deductions
Bunch deductions into one year:
- Make multiple years' charitable contributions in one year
- Pay property taxes early (if allowed)
- Exceed standard deduction that year
- Take standard deduction other years
This maximizes: Tax benefit of deductions.
Strategy 2: Time Deductions
Time deductions strategically:
- Pay deductible expenses in higher-income year
- Defer to lower-income year if beneficial
- Optimize tax situation
But: Usually limited control.
Strategy 3: Maximize Qualifying Deductions
Maximize each category:
- Mortgage interest (if you have mortgage)
- Charitable contributions (if you give)
- SALT (up to $10,000 cap)
- Medical expenses (if above 7.5% of AGI)
This helps: Exceed standard deduction.
Strategy 4: Use Donor-Advised Funds
For charitable giving:
- Contribute to donor-advised fund (deductible)
- Distribute to charities over time
- Bunch deductions while spreading giving
This helps: Maximize tax benefit of charitable giving.
Common Itemization Scenarios
Scenario 1: Homeowner with Mortgage
Situation: $400,000 mortgage, $20,000 interest, $8,000 property tax, $5,000 charity
Itemized deductions:
- Mortgage interest: $20,000
- Property tax: $8,000 (part of SALT, capped at $10,000)
- Charitable: $5,000
- Total: $33,000
Compare to standard: $30,800 (married)
- Itemize (saves ~$528 in tax, if in 24% bracket)
Scenario 2: High Earner in High-Tax State
Situation: $15,000 state tax, $8,000 property tax, $12,000 mortgage interest, $10,000 charity
Itemized deductions:
- SALT: $10,000 (capped, actual $23,000)
- Mortgage interest: $12,000
- Charitable: $10,000
- Total: $32,000
Compare to standard: $15,400 (single)
- Itemize (saves ~$3,984 in tax, if in 24% bracket)
Scenario 3: Standard Deduction Better
Situation: $5,000 mortgage interest, $3,000 property tax, $2,000 charity
Itemized deductions:
- Mortgage interest: $5,000
- Property tax: $3,000
- Charitable: $2,000
- Total: $10,000
Compare to standard: $15,400 (single)
- Take standard (better by $5,400)
Mistakes to Avoid
Mistake 1: Itemizing When Standard Is Better
Problem: Itemize when standard deduction is higher, pay more tax.
Fix: Calculate both, use whichever is higher.
Mistake 2: Not Tracking Deductions
Problem: Don't track itemized deductions, can't itemize when beneficial.
Fix: Track all potential itemized deductions throughout year.
Mistake 3: Not Bunching Deductions
Problem: Spread deductions evenly, never exceed standard deduction.
Fix: Bunch deductions into one year to exceed standard deduction.
Mistake 4: Not Understanding SALT Cap
Problem: Think all SALT is deductible, but it's capped at $10,000.
Fix: Understand SALT cap, plan accordingly.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I Itemize or Take Standard Deduction?
Use whichever is higher: Calculate both, use the one that saves more tax.
What Is the Standard Deduction for 2026?
2026 amounts: $15,400 (single), $30,800 (married), $23,100 (head of household).
Can I Itemize Some Years and Take Standard Other Years?
Yes: You can switch each year. Use whichever is higher each year.
What If My Itemized Deductions Are Close to Standard?
If close: May not be worth itemizing (complexity vs. benefit). But if itemized is higher, use it.
How Do I Know If I Should Itemize?
Calculate: Add up all itemized deductions, compare to standard deduction. Use whichever is higher.
Bottom Line: Master Itemization
Itemizing can save money if your deductions exceed the standard deduction, but the higher standard deduction makes it harder to benefit.
Key Takeaways:
- Use whichever is higher—standard deduction or itemized deductions
- Standard is high—$15,400 single, $30,800 married in 2026
- Itemize if beneficial—if deductions exceed standard
- Bunch deductions—to exceed standard deduction
- Track expenses—to know if you can itemize
Action Steps:
- Calculate: Total itemized deductions
- Compare: To standard deduction
- Use: Whichever is higher
- Track: Expenses throughout year
- Consider: Bunching deductions if close
Remember: The standard deduction is high, so itemizing only makes sense if you have significant deductions. Calculate both, use whichever saves more tax.
Next Steps:
- Calculate your itemized deductions
- Compare to standard deduction
- Use whichever is higher
- Track expenses throughout year
- Read our guide: "Tax Strategies for High Earners"
- Learn about: "Tax Mistakes Employees Make"
- Consider consulting tax professional for complex situations
Don't miss out on itemized deductions if they exceed the standard. Calculate both, use whichever saves more tax.