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Individual Taxes (Form 1040)

How the 2025 Standard Deduction Can Put More Money in Your Pocket

February 22, 2026

The standard deduction may be higher in 2025

For the 2025 tax year, your standard deduction can be significantly higher than in prior years, especially if you are age 65 or older or are blind. Below is a clear walkthrough you can use as an educational blog post for readers planning their 2025 taxes.

2025 Standard Deduction Basics

For 2025, the standard deduction is larger than it was in 2024, and it continues to be the default choice for most taxpayers who do not itemize deductions. The exact amount depends on your filing status.

2025 standard deduction by filing status

Filing status2025 standard deduction
Single$15,750
Married Filing Separately$15,750
Married Filing Jointly$31,500
Qualifying Surviving Spouse$31,500
Head of Household$23,625 dollars

The above amounts are the base amount and can be increased if you or your spouse are 65 or older or blind.

Extra Standard Deduction for Age 65 or Blind

If you are age 65 or older, blind, or both, you may be entitled to an additional standard deduction amount on top of the base figure for your filing status. This long‑standing rule continues in 2025, but the dollar amounts are higher due to inflation adjustments.

What this means for You:

The add‑on is calculated per qualifying person (you and, if applicable, your spouse). The 2025 add‑on amounts are:

  • For Single or Head of Household:
    • $2,000 if you are 65 or older or blind.
    • $4,000 if you are both 65 or older and blind.
  • For Married Filing Jointly, Married Filing Separately, or Qualifying Surviving Spouse (per spouse):
    • $1,600 for each spouse who is 65 or older or blind.
    • $3,200 for each spouse who is both 65 or older and blind.

New Enhanced Deduction for Seniors:

  • The 2025 tax year introduces a new temporary enhanced deduction often described as a “senior bonus” for those 65 and older. An additional $6,000 dollars per qualifying person age 65 or older can be added to the standard deduction, on top of both the base amount and the regular age/blind add‑on, however, this amount is subject to an income phase‑out, so higher‑income seniors may see this extra benefit being reduced or eliminated.

Let’s walk through a couple of examples for greater clarity:

Example 1: Single filer, age 65 or older (not blind) and the senior enhancement is not phased out.

Their 2025 standard deduction would be:

  • Base standard deduction (Single): $15,750.
  • Age 65 or older add‑on: $2,000.
  • Senior enhancement (65+): $6,000.

Total potential standard deduction: $23,750 (15,750 + 2,000 + 6,000).

Example 2: Married Couple Filing Jointly both 65 or older

Consider a married couple, both age 67, filing jointly, neither blind, and under the phase‑out thresholds.

Their 2025 standard deduction could look like this:

  • Base standard deduction (Married Filing Jointly): $31,500
  • Age 65 or older add‑on: $1,600 dollars per spouse, so $3,200 combined
  • Senior enhancement: $6,000 dollars per spouse, so $12,000 combined.

Total potential standard deduction: $46,700 ($31,500 + $3,200 + $12,000).

Key Highlights for 2025 Tax Filers

For 2025, the standard deduction provides a robust tax reduction for those who are 65 or older with income below the phase out provisions based upon AGI.

Where can I get more information or help?

  • IRS Publication 501 – Standard Deduction: https://www.irs.gov/publications/p501
  • IRS Form 1040-SR (Senior-Friendly Form): https://www.irs.gov/forms-pubs/about-form-1040-sr
  • Social Security Administration – Understanding Taxation of Benefits: https://www.ssa.gov/benefits/retirement/planner/taxes.html
  • Taxpayer Advocate Service – Free Help: https://www.taxpayeradvocate.irs.gov

Filed Under: Accounting and Bookkeeping, Accounting and Bookkeeping Services in New York, Individual Taxes (Form 1040)

One Big Beautiful Bill on Tax Credits for Individuals

February 9, 2026

A tax credit directly reduces the income tax a person owes, dollar‑for‑dollar. For example, if a taxpayer qualifies for a $1,000 credit, their tax bill can be reduced by $1,000, regardless of their tax bracket. Some credits are refundable, meaning if the credit exceeds the tax owed, the taxpayer may receive the difference as a refund. Others are non-refundable or partially refundable, which affects whether unused credit can generate cash back or only reduce tax to zero.

Core nonrefundable tax credit

IRS Issue Number Tax Tip 2026‑10 groups several key nonrefundable credits that many individuals may be able to use on their 2025 returns:

  • Child Tax Credit (CTC)
    The Child Tax Credit helps families with qualifying children under age 17 at the end of the tax year who meet relationship, residency, support, and be a U.S. citizen, U.S. National or a U.S. resident alien. For 2025, the maximum credit is up to $2,200 per qualifying child. The credit phases out at higher income levels based on long‑standing CTC phase‑out thresholds, so higher‑income clients may receive a reduced benefit.
  • Child and Dependent Care Credit
    This credit helps taxpayers paid qualified expenses for the care of a qualifying individual to enable you (and your spouse, if filing a joint return) to work or actively look for work. A qualifying person generally is a dependent under the age of 13, a disabled spouse or dependent of any age who is incapable of self-care and who lives with you for more than half of the year.  Taxpayers must have earned income (with some exceptions for a disabled or student spouse) and must provide the eligible care provider information (name, address, EIN or social security number) on their return.
  • Saver’s Credit
    The Saver’s Credit rewards eligible taxpayers for contributing to retirement plans like IRAs, 401(k)s, and certain other qualified plans. The maximum credit is $1,000 ($2,000 if married filing jointly).  The exact size of the Saver’s Credit depends on how much you contribute and your income level, as represented by your adjusted gross income (AGI) and filing status. For those married filing jointly the credit is phased out with an AGI of more than $79,000 and for single filers with an AGI of more than $39,500.

Refundable tax credits

Refundable credits are particularly valuable because they can create or increase a refund even when tax liability is low or zero:

  • Premium Tax Credit
    The Premium Tax Credit helps eligible individuals and families who purchase health coverage through the Health Insurance Marketplace pay their premiums. The credit amount is based on household income relative to the federal poverty line, family size, and the cost of benchmark plans in the taxpayer’s area. If you receive the benefit of advance payments of the premium tax credit to help pay your insurance premiums, you will be required to file Form 8962, Premium Tax Credit (PTC), with your tax return for the year of coverage. Use the information from Form 1095-A, Health Insurance Marketplace Statement, to complete the Form 8962 and reconcile your advance payments of the premium tax credit with the premium tax credit you are allowed on your tax return.
  • Adoption Tax Credit
    The Adoption Tax Credit helps offset qualified adoption expenses, such as adoption fees, court costs, attorney fees, and certain travel expenses. The credit is available to taxpayers who finalized an adoption in 2025 or started the adoption process before 2025. The maximum amount, for 2025, is $17,280 per eligible child. The refundable amount is up to $5,000 per qualifying child. However, any nonrefundable amount carried forward can’t be used to calculate a refundable portion for future tax years.
  • American Opportunity Tax Credit (AOTC)
    The AOTC provides tax relief for qualified higher‑education expenses during the first four years of post‑secondary education for eligible students. The credit amount is up to $2,500 per year and up to $1,000 is refundable.

Documentation, compliance, and avoiding scams

Tax Tip 2026‑10 underscores that taxpayers must retain documentation to prove eligibility for any credit they claim, including proof of child relationships and residency, care expenses, tuition payments, retirement contributions, health coverage, and fuel usage. Good record‑keeping not only supports accurate returns but also streamlines responses if the IRS requests verification.

Filed Under: Individual Taxes (Form 1040) Tagged With: Individual Taxes

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