If you live in a high-tax state, you have probably hit the SALT cap and felt like your deductions stopped working. If you are unsure what still counts in 2026, you are not alone. This guide explains the SALT deduction limit in plain English, with clear examples and planning tips that actually matter.
Summary The SALT deduction lets you deduct certain state and local taxes if you itemize, but the total is capped. You can choose state income taxes or sales taxes, plus property taxes, yet the total cannot exceed the cap. Planning helps, but aggressive workarounds usually do not.
Table of Contents
- Quick Answer: What Is the SALT Deduction in 2026?
- The SALT Map: A Simple Decision Framework
- What Counts as SALT (and What Does Not)
- The SALT Cap Explained Simply
- Income Tax vs Sales Tax: Which Should You Choose?
- Property Taxes Inside SALT
- Itemize or Take the Standard Deduction
- Planning Tips That Still Work
- Examples for Common Scenarios
- Common Mistakes and Audit Flags
- FAQs
- Updated for 2026: What to Watch
- Change Log
Quick Answer: What Is the SALT Deduction in 2026?
The SALT deduction allows you to deduct certain state and local taxes on your federal return if you itemize. Those taxes include:
- State income taxes or state sales taxes (choose one)
- Property taxes on real estate
Your total SALT deduction is capped. If your taxes exceed the cap, the excess provides no federal tax benefit.
The SALT Map: A Simple Decision Framework
Use this map before you calculate anything:
S = Select income tax or sales tax
A = Add property taxes
L = Limit by the cap
T = Total must beat standard deduction
Caption: If your SALT total does not beat the standard deduction, the deduction provides no benefit.
This four-step map saves time and prevents the biggest mistake: assuming SALT automatically reduces your federal taxes.
What Counts as SALT (and What Does Not)
Counts
- State income taxes withheld on your W-2
- Estimated state income tax payments
- State or local sales taxes (if you choose sales tax instead of income tax)
- Property taxes on real estate you own
Does Not Count
- Federal taxes
- HOA dues or condo fees
- Transfer taxes or recording fees at closing
- Special assessments for improvements (sidewalks, water lines)
- Penalties or interest on late tax payments
If a charge is for a specific benefit, it usually does not qualify as a SALT deduction.
The SALT Cap Explained Simply
The SALT cap limits the total amount of state and local taxes you can deduct on Schedule A. Once you hit the cap, additional state income tax or property tax payments do not reduce your federal taxable income.
Practical effects:
- High-income homeowners often hit the cap with property taxes alone.
- Residents of high-tax states see the biggest deduction reduction.
- The cap applies to your total, not per tax type.
For details on property taxes inside SALT, see Property Taxes and Deductions.
Income Tax vs Sales Tax: Which Should You Choose?
You must choose one of these, not both.
Choose income tax if:
- You have a regular W-2 job with state income tax withheld
- You make estimated payments
- Your state income tax is higher than your estimated sales tax
Choose sales tax if:
- You live in a state without income tax
- You made large purchases (cars, boats) that drive sales tax higher
- Your state income tax is minimal
Tax software usually compares these automatically, but you can estimate sales tax using the IRS tables and add major purchase receipts.
Property Taxes Inside SALT
Property taxes are often the largest SALT component for homeowners. To qualify, they must be:
- Based on assessed value (ad valorem)
- Paid by you
- Not a special assessment for improvements
If you have a rental property, property taxes for that property usually belong on Schedule E, not Schedule A. Mixed-use properties can require allocation.
Itemize or Take the Standard Deduction
SALT deductions appear on Schedule A, which means you must itemize.
Quick test:
If SALT + mortgage interest + other itemized deductions do not exceed the standard deduction, itemizing provides no benefit.
For how mortgage interest can shift this decision, see Mortgage Interest Deduction in 2026.
Planning Tips That Still Work
These strategies are legal, practical, and realistic.
1. Bunch deductible expenses.
If you are close to the standard deduction, bunch charitable donations into one year to make itemizing worthwhile.
2. Coordinate major purchases.
If you can choose sales tax instead of income tax, time large purchases to increase your sales tax total.
3. Understand escrow timing.
You deduct property taxes when paid to the taxing authority, not when deposited into escrow.
4. Avoid SALT workarounds that the IRS rejects.
Some states tried entity-level SALT workarounds. Those can apply for certain pass-through businesses, but not for most W-2 homeowners. If you are a business owner, ask your CPA about the PTET rules in your state.
5. Keep clean documentation.
Save W-2s, state tax returns, property tax bills, and payment confirmations. SALT deductions are common audit targets.
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Examples for Common Scenarios
Example 1: Standard Homeowner in a High-Tax State
Casey pays $12,000 in property taxes and $10,000 in state income taxes.
- Total SALT = $22,000
- SALT cap applies
- Result: Casey deducts only up to the cap, not the full $22,000.
Example 2: No-Income-Tax State with Big Purchase
Javier lives in a state with no income tax and buys a car with high sales tax.
- Sales tax estimate + car purchase tax exceeds what income tax would have been
- Result: Javier chooses sales tax and deducts that amount within the cap.
Example 3: Below Standard Deduction
Priya pays $6,000 in property taxes and $3,000 in state income tax.
- SALT total = $9,000
- Other deductions are small
- Result: Priya takes the standard deduction and gets no SALT benefit.
Common Mistakes and Audit Flags
- Deducting both income tax and sales tax
- Claiming HOA dues as property taxes
- Deducting special assessments for improvements
- Deducting escrow deposits instead of actual tax payments
- Itemizing when the standard deduction is higher
FAQs
Is the SALT deduction still available in 2026?
Yes, but it is capped and only available if you itemize.
Can I deduct property taxes above the SALT cap?
No. Once you hit the cap, additional state or local taxes do not reduce your federal taxable income.
If I own a rental property, does it count toward SALT?
Rental property taxes are generally deducted on Schedule E, not as part of SALT on Schedule A.
Can I pay next year taxes early to increase my deduction?
Sometimes. If you are below the cap and itemizing, prepaying can help. If you are already at the cap, it does not increase your federal deduction.
Updated for 2026: What to Watch
SALT rules can change, especially around cap amounts and pass-through business rules. For 2026:
- Watch for legislation that changes the cap
- Check IRS guidance on PTET deductions for business owners
- Track state-specific credits or relief programs
Change Log
- 2026-02-08: Initial 2026 edition with examples and planning tips.
Sources: IRS Schedule A instructions, IRS guidance on state and local tax deductions, state tax agency publications.