07c – Standard Deduction vs. Itemized Deduction โ Which One Should You Choose?
๐งพ Standard Deduction vs. Itemized Deduction โ Which One Should You Choose?
When filing IRS Form 1040, you have two ways to reduce your taxable income:
โ
Standard Deduction
โ
Itemized Deductions (Schedule A)
But you can claim only ONE. So, which is better for you? Letโs break it down:
๐น Standard Deduction
Fixed amount based on your filing status
No receipts or proof required
Quick and simple filing
2024 Standard Deduction (for 2025 filings):
Single / Married Filing Separately: $14,600
Married Filing Jointly: $29,200
Head of Household: $21,900
โ Additional: $1,550 per person (65+ or blind)
๐น Itemized Deductions (Schedule A)
List actual deductible expenses instead of a flat amount
Requires documentation (receipts, bills, Form 1098, donation letters, etc.)
Common categories:
โ
Mortgage interest
โ
State & local taxes (SALT) โ capped at $10,000
โ
Charitable contributions
โ
Medical expenses (over 7.5% of AGI)
โ
Casualty losses (disaster areas)
๐ก Real-Life Example
Case 1: Standard Deduction
John is single with no mortgage, few medical bills, and small donations.
Standard Deduction = $14,600
Itemized total = $6,000 (rent not deductible)
โ
John should take Standard Deduction
Case 2: Itemized Deduction
Sarah & Mike are married filing jointly, own a home, pay high property tax, and donate to charity.
Mortgage interest = $15,000
SALT taxes = $10,000 (limit)
Charitable contributions = $6,000
Total Itemized = $31,000
โ
Sarah & Mike should itemize, since $31,000 > $29,200
โ Rule of Thumb:
Take the option that gives you the bigger deduction. For most taxpayers, the Standard Deduction wins.
