One of the most important tax decisions Americans make each year: take the standard deduction or itemize? In 2026, with higher standard deduction amounts and changed itemization rules, the answer may surprise you.
About 90% of taxpayers now take the standard deduction. But if you are in the 10% who could benefit from itemizing, the savings can be substantial — often $2,000-$5,000 or more.
2026 Standard Deduction Amounts
| Filing Status | Standard Deduction 2026 | Additional (65+ or Blind) |
|---|---|---|
| Single | $15,700 | +$2,050 |
| Married Filing Jointly | $31,400 | +$1,650 per qualifying person |
| Married Filing Separately | $15,700 | +$1,650 |
| Head of Household | $23,650 | +$2,050 |
The standard deduction reduces your taxable income by a fixed amount — no receipts, no documentation, no hassle. That is why most Americans take it.
What Can You Itemize?
Itemized deductions are specific expenses the IRS allows you to subtract from income:
1. State and Local Taxes (SALT) — Up to $10,000
Property taxes, state income taxes, or state sales taxes. The $10,000 SALT cap remains in 2026 — a major limitation for residents of high-tax states (CA, NY, NJ).
2. Mortgage Interest — Up to $750K Loan
Interest on mortgage debt up to $750,000 (or $1M for loans originated before Dec 15, 2017). On a $500K mortgage at 6.5%, that is roughly $32,500 in year-one interest — all deductible if itemizing.
3. Charitable Contributions
Cash donations up to 60% of AGI. Non-cash donations (clothing, furniture) at fair market value. Must have receipts for donations over $250.
4. Medical Expenses — Above 7.5% of AGI
Only medical expenses exceeding 7.5% of your AGI are deductible. If your AGI is $100,000, only expenses above $7,500 count. This typically benefits only those with significant medical costs.
5. Casualty and Theft Losses
Only from federally declared disasters. Must exceed 10% of AGI after subtracting $100 per casualty.
Standard vs Itemized: When Each Wins
| Your Situation | Best Choice | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Renter, no major deductions | Standard | Itemized likely under $15,700 |
| Homeowner with mortgage | Check both | Mortgage interest + SALT may exceed standard |
| High SALT state (CA, NY, NJ) | Usually standard | $10K SALT cap limits itemized benefit |
| Large charitable donations | Check itemizing | Donations can push you over standard |
| Significant medical expenses | Check itemizing | Medical costs above 7.5% AGI add up |
| Multiple deductions combined | Run the numbers | Mortgage + SALT + charity may exceed $31,400 (MFJ) |
The Bunching Strategy
If your itemized deductions are close to the standard deduction, use the bunching strategy:
- Year 1: Accelerate deductions — make 2 years of charitable donations, prepay property taxes if allowed. Itemize this year.
- Year 2: Take the standard deduction. Make no charitable donations.
This alternating pattern can save $2,000-$5,000 over two years compared to taking the standard deduction every year.
Real Example: Married Couple in California
AGI: $200,000. Filing MFJ. Standard deduction: $31,400.
Their potential itemized deductions:
- State income tax: $10,000 (SALT cap)
- Property tax: $8,000 (counts toward SALT cap — already maxed)
- Mortgage interest: $22,000
- Charitable donations: $5,000
Itemized total: $37,000 vs Standard: $31,400. Itemizing saves an additional $5,600 in deductions. At 22% bracket, that is $1,232 in tax savings.
For more tax strategies, see our retirement guide.
🔑 Key Takeaways
- 2026 standard deduction: $15,700 (single), $31,400 (MFJ)
- 90% of taxpayers take the standard deduction — it is simpler and often better
- Consider itemizing if: mortgage interest + SALT + charity + medical exceed standard
- SALT is capped at $10,000 — limits benefit in high-tax states
- Bunching strategy: alternate between itemizing and standard to maximize deductions over 2 years
- Run both calculations every year — your situation may change
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I switch between standard and itemized each year?
Yes. You can choose whichever is higher each tax year. There is no requirement to use the same method consistently.
Is the SALT cap still $10,000 in 2026?
Yes, the $10,000 SALT cap remains in effect for 2026. This is a significant limitation for taxpayers in high-tax states.
Should I take the standard deduction if my itemized is slightly higher?
If itemizing saves only $100-300, the standard deduction may be worth it for simplicity. If the difference is $1,000+, always itemize.
Can I deduct home office expenses?
Only if you are self-employed. W-2 employees cannot deduct home office expenses under current law. The home office deduction is part of itemized deductions for self-employed filers.
