Business Lessons from a Solo Trip: Trust Your Systems, Step Away
Of all my excuses for not taking the Upper Peninsula trip, “I can’t afford to be off-grid, I’m a solopreneur”
Starting in 2025, two new deductions will be available to many taxpayers—the Overtime Deduction and the Senior Deduction. Both are designed to give certain workers and retirees a little extra tax relief, but they come with specific rules about who can claim them, how much they’re worth, and how they’re calculated.
Let’s walk through each one, step-by-step.
The Overtime Deduction
What it is
If you’re paid overtime, you can now deduct the overtime premium—that’s the “extra half” in time-and-a-half. For example, if you earn $20/hour, overtime at $30/hour includes a $10/hour premium above your regular rate. That $10 premium is the part that qualifies for the deduction.
Quick Tip: The deduction applies to overtime that’s legally required under federal law (FLSA rules). If you’re exempt from overtime rules or your employer pays a bonus/overtime rate not required by law, that amount may not qualify.
How much you can deduct
When it applies
Tax years 2025 through 2028.
Filing requirements
Note on AGI: This deduction reduces taxable income but does not reduce AGI. That means it won’t affect AGI-based thresholds for other deductions or credits. It also won’t reduce Social Security or Medicare taxes.
Example
Maria makes $30/hour and works 20 overtime hours in 2025 at $45/hour. Her overtime premium is $15/hour ($45-$30). She can deduct $300 (20 x $15), assuming she’s under the income cap.
The Senior Deduction
What it is
If you’re 65 or older by the end of the tax year, you can deduct an extra $6,000. If both spouses on a joint return are 65+, that’s $12,000.
When it applies
Tax years 2025 through 2028.
Phase-out rules
The deduction starts shrinking if your MAGI is over $75,000 ($150,000 for joint filers).
Filing requirements
Note on AGI: Like the Overtime Deduction, the Senior Deduction reduces taxable income but not AGI. It won’t change the way other AGI-based items are calculated, like the taxation of Social Security benefits.
Key Points to Remember
Of all my excuses for not taking the Upper Peninsula trip, “I can’t afford to be off-grid, I’m a solopreneur”
One of my hesitations about the Upper Peninsula trip was the long drive by myself. But once I was on
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Intuit, QuickBooks, and QuickBooks ProAdvisor are registered trademarks of Intuit Inc. Used with permission under the QuickBooks ProAdvisor Agreement.