{"database": "openregs", "table": "crs_reports", "rows": [["IN12686", "The 2/37ths Limitation on Itemized Deductions", "2026-04-30T04:00:00Z", "2026-05-02T05:53:32Z", "Active", "Posts", "Nicholas E. Buffie", "Itemized Deductions, Individual Tax, Tax Reform", "In July 2025, as part of the FY2025 reconciliation law (P.L. 119-21), Congress enacted a new limitation on itemized tax deductions for high-income taxpayers. This Insight describes itemized tax deductions, explains how the new limitation works, and analyzes the limitation\u2019s effects.\nItemized Deductions: Background and Distributional Impact\nWhen Americans file their income tax returns, they may use deductions to exempt certain amounts of income from taxation. For example, a taxpayer with $100,000 of income who claims deductions totaling $20,000 will have a taxable income of $80,000.\nThere are four broad types of deductions: (1) above-the-line deductions; (2) the standard deduction; (3) itemized deductions; and (4) \u201cother\u201d deductions. Above-the-line deductions and \u201cother\u201d deductions may be claimed by all taxpayers, though taxpayers must claim either the standard deduction or itemized deductions. The standard deduction allows taxpayers to reduce their taxable incomes by certain amounts\u2014$16,100 for single filers, $24,150 for head-of-household filers, and $32,200 for married couples in 2026 (amounts are adjusted annually for inflation). Itemized deductions are claimed for certain expenses paid by the taxpayer. As shown in Table 1, three particular expenses\u2014charitable contributions, mortgage interest, and state and local tax (SALT) payments\u2014constitute about three-quarters of all itemized deduction amounts.\nTable 1. Taxpayer Use of Itemized Deductions, Tax Year 2023 (Filing Year 2024)\nTaxpayer Incomes\nShare with Itemized Deductions\nAverage Itemized Deductions\nShare of All Itemized Deductions Claimed\n\n\n\n\nCharitable Contributions Deduction\nMortgage Interest Deduction\nState and Local Tax Deduction\nAll Other Itemized Deductions\n\nBelow $50,000\n2%\n$32,262\n11%\n21%\n15%\n54%\n\n$50,000 to $100,000\n9%\n$28,852\n16%\n29%\n23%\n31%\n\n$100,000 to $500,000\n21%\n$37,717\n23%\n34%\n24%\n19%\n\n$500,000 to $1 Million\n52%\n$64,654\n35%\n27%\n15%\n23%\n\n$1 Million to $5 Million\n66%\n$142,579\n50%\n11%\n7%\n33%\n\n$5 Million or More\n83%\n$1,361,925\n68%\n1%\n1%\n31%\n\nAll Tax Returns\n9%\n$45,732\n31%\n25%\n18%\n27%\n\nSource: IRS Statistics of Income Tables 1.2, 1.4, and 2.1, accessed April 20, 2026, at https://www.irs.gov/statistics/soi-tax-stats-individual-statistical-tables-by-size-of-adjusted-gross-income. \nNotes: The income concept used to rank taxpayers by income is adjusted gross income, or AGI. Average itemized deductions are per taxpayer claiming itemized deductions. Shares of all itemized deductions claimed may not sum to 100% for some income groups due to rounding. \nItemized deductions disproportionately benefit high-income taxpayers for two reasons: (1) most low- and middle-income taxpayers claim the standard deduction because they do not have high itemizable expenses; and (2) high-income taxpayers are taxed at higher marginal rates than other taxpayers, so they can reduce their tax payments more for each dollar deducted. The Tax Policy Center estimates that 43% of the tax savings from itemized deductions accrue to the top 1% of the income distribution, and 87% accrue to the top 20%.\nThe 2/37ths Limitation\nThe FY2025 reconciliation law enacted a new \u201c2/37ths\u201d limitation on itemized deductions. Under this limitation, which takes effect in 2026, taxpayers\u2019 total itemized deductions are reduced by 2/37ths of the lesser of\nthe total value of all itemized deductions claimed; or\nthe amount by which the sum of taxable income and all itemized deductions exceeds the income threshold at which the top 37% marginal tax bracket begins.\nFor 2026, the 37% bracket begins at $640,600 of taxable income for unmarried individuals and $768,700 for married couples filing a joint return.\nThis limitation effectively works such that\ntaxpayers with combined taxable income and itemized deductions below the top bracket are not affected;\ntaxpayers with taxable income below the top bracket, but with combined taxable income and itemized deductions above the bracket, have their itemized deductions reduced by 2/37ths of (Taxable Income + Itemized Deductions \u2013 Top Bracket Income Threshold); and\ntaxpayers with taxable incomes above the threshold for the top bracket have their itemized deductions reduced by 2/37ths.\nFor example, a married couple with $1 million of taxable income and $100,000 of itemized deductions\u2014therefore fitting criterion #3 above\u2014would have their itemized deductions reduced by 2/37ths of $100,000, or $5,405. With a marginal tax rate of 37%, the couple would pay an additional $2,000 of income taxes.\nThe effect of this limitation is that taxpayers in the top bracket (37%) now receive the same benefits from itemized deductions as taxpayers in the second-highest bracket (35%). For taxpayers in the second-highest bracket, itemized deductions reduce tax payments by 35% \u00d7 (Amount Deducted). For taxpayers in the top bracket, itemized deductions reduce tax payments by 37% \u00d7 (35/37) \u00d7 (Amount Deducted), which simplifies to 35% \u00d7 (Amount Deducted). \nThe 2/37ths limitation is imposed after limitations to specific itemized deductions have already been applied. The most important application of this rule is to the SALT deduction.\nInteraction with the SALT Cap\nPrior to the enactment of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA; P.L. 115-97) in 2017, taxpayers were eligible for an unlimited SALT deduction. The TCJA capped the deduction at $10,000 per tax return from 2018 to 2025. The FY2025 reconciliation law then raised the cap to $40,000 for 2025, set it to grow 1% annually through 2029, and then permanently reverted the cap to $10,000 beginning in 2030.\nFor 2026, the SALT cap is $40,400. Taxpayers in the top 37% bracket have their SALT deduction reduced by 2/37ths, effectively limiting it to $38,216. As a result, the maximum SALT savings per tax return is $14,140.\nThe SALT deduction was used by 98.8% of taxpayers claiming itemized deductions in 2023. Table 2 shows that among those claiming the SALT deduction, high-income taxpayers were disproportionately impacted by the $10,000 cap. The 2/37ths limitation partially blunts the impact of raising the cap, but the increase will still lead to concentrated benefits, particularly among those with annual incomes above $500,000.\nTable 2. The SALT Deduction and SALT Cap in 2023, by Income Level\n\nTax Returns with SALT Deduction\nAmount per Return Claiming SALT\nSALT Dollars Above the Cap per Dollar Deducted\n\n\n\nAverage SALT Deduction Amount\nAverage Additional SALT Above the Cap\n\n\nBelow $50,000\n1,630,212\n$5,016\n$1,124\n$0.22\n\n$50,000 to $100,000\n3,585,124\n$6,784\n$1,271\n$0.19\n\n$100,000 to $500,000\n8,248,386\n$9,009\n$8,113\n$0.90\n\n$500,000 to $1 Million\n921,762\n$9,722\n$39,233\n$4.04\n\n$1 Million to $5 Million\n476,745\n$9,738\n$109,455\n$11.24\n\n$5 Million or More\n66,053\n$9,704\n$743,676\n$76.64\n\nAll Tax Returns\n14,928,282\n$8,109\n$14,119\n$1.74\n\nSource: IRS Statistics of Income Table 2.1, accessed April 20, 2026, at https://www.irs.gov/statistics/soi-tax-stats-individual-statistical-tables-by-size-of-adjusted-gross-income.\nNote: The income concept used to rank taxpayers by income is adjusted gross income, or AGI.\nImpacts of the Limitation\nThe 2/37ths limitation will affect government revenues and the distribution of national after-tax income.\nCRS estimates that the 2/37ths limitation will generate $255 billion in federal revenue over 10 years based on analysis using the Policy Simulation Library\u2019s (PSL\u2019s) Tax-Calculator. Projected annual revenue attributable to the limitation starts at $21.5 billion in FY2026 and rises to $30.7 billion by FY2035. These projections are not official revenue estimates for \u201cscoring\u201d purposes or congressional budgetary rules; the Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT) is Congress\u2019s official revenue estimator, and the estimates presented here may differ from those produced by the JCT. \nThe revenues generated by the limitation are expected to come predominantly from the top 1% of the income distribution. Table 3 shows the projected impacts of the limitation on taxpayers of different income levels for the 2026 tax year. The PSL\u2019s model indicates that no taxpayers in the bottom 95% of the income distribution will be affected, but roughly half (49.3%) of those in the top 1% will pay higher taxes. Table 3 indicates that 50.7% of taxpayers in the top 1% will not be affected, 26.3% will switch from claiming itemized deductions to using the standard deduction, and 23.1% will continue claiming itemized deductions. The average projected tax increase (including those not affected by the limitation) is $0 for the bottom 95% of the income distribution, $21.50 for those between the 95th and 99th percentiles, and $11,067 for the top 1%. For the top 1%, the projected tax increase is equivalent to 0.43% of the group\u2019s adjusted gross income, which is expected to average $2.6 million in 2026.\nTable 3. Distributional Impacts of the 2/37ths Limitation on Itemized Deductions, 2026\nIncome Distribution Percentiles\nAverage Adjusted Gross Income (AGI)\nShare Itemizing\nShare Affected by 2/37ths Limitation\nAverage Tax Increase\n\n\n\nWithout 2/37ths Limitation\nWith 2/37ths Limitation\n\nDollars\nPercent of AGI\n\nBottom 95%\n$58,339\n6.1%\n6.1%\n0.0%\n$0\n0.00%\n\n95th-99th Percentiles\n$402,247\n59.7%\n59.7%\n1.6%\n$22\n0.01%\n\nTop 1%\n$2,565,053\n57.9%\n31.6%\n49.3%\n$11,067\n0.43%\n\nSource: CRS estimates and calculations using the Policy Simulation Library\u2019s Tax-Calculator, accessed April 27, 2026.\nNotes: Estimates include both tax filers and nonfilers for the 2026 tax year. Individuals and couples with negative incomes are included in the analysis but are counted as having $0 incomes. The average tax increase for the 95th-99th percentiles is $21.50, or approximately 0.0053% of AGI.", "https://www.congress.gov/crs_external_products/IN/PDF/IN12686/IN12686.3.pdf", "https://www.congress.gov/crs_external_products/IN/HTML/IN12686.html"]], "columns": ["id", "title", "publish_date", "update_date", "status", "content_type", "authors", "topics", "summary", "pdf_url", "html_url"], "primary_keys": ["id"], "primary_key_values": ["IN12686"], "units": {}, "query_ms": 0.5041799740865827, "source": "Federal Register API & Regulations.gov API", "source_url": "https://www.federalregister.gov/developers/api/v1", "license": "Public Domain (U.S. Government data)", "license_url": "https://www.regulations.gov/faq"}