Tips are a significant source of income for many workers, especially in service industries. But tips are taxable income and must be reported to the IRS. This guide explains how tips are taxed, reporting requirements, and how to properly handle tip income.
Are Tips Taxable?
Yes, Tips Are Taxable Income
Tips are taxable income:
- Subject to federal income tax
- Subject to Social Security tax (6.2%)
- Subject to Medicare tax (1.45%)
- Subject to state income tax (in most states)
There is no exclusion: Tips are treated the same as regular wages.
Types of Tips
Tips include:
- Cash tips
- Credit card tips
- Tips added to bill
- Tips shared (tip pooling)
- Non-cash tips (gift cards, etc.)
All are taxable: Regardless of how received.
How Tips Are Taxed
Tax Treatment
Tips are taxed as ordinary income:
- Same tax rates as regular wages (10-37% brackets)
- Added to your other income
- No special exclusion or deduction
Example:
- Regular wages: $30,000
- Tips: $10,000
- Total income: $40,000
- Taxed on $40,000
FICA Taxes on Tips
Tips are subject to FICA taxes:
- Social Security: 6.2% (on first $168,600 in 2026)
- Medicare: 1.45% (on all tips, no cap)
- Additional Medicare: 0.9% (on tips above $200,000 single / $250,000 married)
This is important: Tips count toward Social Security wage base.
Tip Reporting Requirements
Daily Tip Reporting
You must report tips to employer:
- Report cash tips of $20+ per month
- Report by 10th of following month
- Use Form 4070 (Employee's Report of Tips to Employer)
Why: So employer can withhold taxes.
Annual Tip Reporting
You must report all tips on tax return:
- All tips received (cash and credit card)
- Report on Form 1040
- Even if not reported to employer
Important: You must report all tips, even if employer doesn't know about them.
Form 4070
Employee's Report of Tips to Employer:
- Report cash tips monthly
- Report by 10th of following month
- Keep copy for your records
This helps: Employer withhold correct amount of taxes.
Withholding on Tips
How Withholding Works
Employer withholds taxes on tips:
- Based on tips you report
- Withholds income tax
- Withholds FICA taxes (Social Security and Medicare)
If you don't report tips: Employer can't withhold, you'll owe at tax time.
Estimated Tax Payments
If tips aren't subject to withholding:
- May need to make estimated tax payments
- Quarterly payments (April, June, September, January)
- Use Form 1040-ES
Avoid penalties: Make estimated payments if needed.
Under-Reporting Tips
If you don't report all tips:
- Employer can't withhold on unreported tips
- You'll owe tax at tax time
- May face penalties for under-reporting
Best practice: Report all tips to employer.
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Cash Tips vs. Credit Card Tips
Credit Card Tips
Credit card tips:
- Automatically reported to employer
- Subject to withholding
- Easier to track
Benefit: Automatically included in your income, withholding handled.
Cash Tips
Cash tips:
- You must report to employer
- If $20+ per month, must report
- Subject to withholding (if reported)
Challenge: Easy to forget or under-report.
The Under-Reporting Problem
Many workers under-report cash tips:
- Don't report all cash tips
- Employer can't withhold
- Owe tax at tax time
- May face penalties
Risk: IRS can estimate tips based on industry averages, charge penalties.
Common Tips Tax Scenarios
Scenario 1: Server with Tips
Situation: Server, $20,000 wages, $15,000 tips
Tax impact:
- Total income: $35,000
- Taxed on $35,000
- FICA on tips: ~$1,148 (Social Security and Medicare)
Withholding: On wages and reported tips.
Scenario 2: Under-Reporting Tips
Situation: Server, $20,000 wages, $15,000 tips (but only reports $5,000)
Tax impact:
- Reports: $25,000 income
- Actually earns: $35,000
- Owes tax on: $10,000 unreported tips
- Plus penalties: For under-reporting
Risk: IRS can estimate and charge penalties.
Scenario 3: High Tips Earner
Situation: Server, $30,000 wages, $50,000 tips
Tax impact:
- Total income: $80,000
- Taxed on $80,000
- FICA on tips: ~$3,825 (Social Security and Medicare)
- May be in higher bracket
Plan: Ensure adequate withholding or make estimated payments.
Mistakes to Avoid
Mistake 1: Not Reporting All Tips
Problem: Don't report all cash tips, under-report income, face penalties.
Fix: Report all tips to employer, report all tips on tax return.
Mistake 2: Thinking Tips Are Tax-Free
Problem: Think tips are tax-free, don't report, face large tax bill.
Fix: Understand that tips are taxable income, must be reported.
Mistake 3: Not Reporting to Employer
Problem: Don't report tips to employer, no withholding, large tax bill at tax time.
Fix: Report tips to employer monthly (if $20+), so employer can withhold.
Mistake 4: Not Making Estimated Payments
Problem: Tips not subject to withholding, don't make estimated payments, face penalties.
Fix: Make estimated tax payments if tips aren't subject to withholding.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are Tips Taxable?
Yes: Tips are taxable income, subject to federal income tax, Social Security tax, and Medicare tax.
Do I Have to Report Tips to My Employer?
Yes: You must report cash tips of $20+ per month to your employer by the 10th of the following month.
What If I Don't Report All My Tips?
Risk: IRS can estimate tips based on industry averages, charge penalties for under-reporting. You'll also owe tax on unreported tips.
Are Credit Card Tips Automatically Reported?
Yes: Credit card tips are automatically reported to your employer, so they're included in your income and subject to withholding.
Can I Deduct Anything Related to Tips?
No: Since 2018, employees cannot deduct unreimbursed business expenses. Tips themselves are income, not expenses.
Bottom Line: Master Tips Taxes
Tips are taxable income and must be reported to the IRS, but understanding the rules helps you stay compliant.
Key Takeaways:
- Tips are taxable—subject to income tax and FICA taxes
- Report all tips—to employer and on tax return
- Withholding matters—report tips to employer so they can withhold
- Under-reporting is risky—IRS can estimate and charge penalties
- Plan for taxes—ensure adequate withholding or make estimated payments
Action Steps:
- Report: All tips to employer (monthly if $20+)
- Report: All tips on tax return
- Ensure: Adequate withholding or make estimated payments
- Keep: Records of all tips received
- Don't under-report: Report all tips to avoid penalties
Remember: Tips are taxable income. Report them properly, ensure adequate withholding, and you can stay compliant while maximizing your income.
Next Steps:
- Report all tips to employer monthly
- Report all tips on tax return
- Ensure adequate withholding or make estimated payments
- Keep records of all tips
- Read our guide: "Restaurant Workers Tax Guide"
- Consider consulting tax professional if you have significant tip income
Don't risk penalties by under-reporting tips. Understand the rules, report all tips, and stay compliant.