Donald Trump, our once and possibly future President, has been speaking about his idea to eliminate taxes on tips. He got the idea from a very intelligent waitress in a restaurant in one of the Trump buildings.

The idea is part of the Republican Party platform for 2024.

“Republicans will make permanent the provisions of the Trump Tax Cuts and Jobs Act that doubled the standard deduction, expanded the Child Tax Credit, and spurred Economic Growth for all Americans. We will eliminate Taxes on Tips for millions of Restaurant and Hospitality Workers, and pursue additional Tax Cuts”.

Of course the platform statement does not get into the nitty gritty details. There are two proposed bills to amend the Internal Revenue Code to be make tips more or less tax free. There is the “No Tax on Tips Act” introduced in the Senate by Ted Cruz (Senate bill) and the “Tax Free Tips Act of 2024” by Thomas Massie and Matt Gaetz in the House of Representatives (House bill).

Two Bills

As I read them. the two bills would have profoundly different results.

For illustrative purposes I have made up a restaurant server. Their name is Robin Waitstaff and they are among the group of servers who don’t make a lot more than minimum wage. Robin is a single parent with three kids. They get by in part because of the child support that their ex Terry irregularly provides. In 2023 Robin worked 2,000 hours for $4,260 in wages and $30,000 in tips which works out to $17.13 per hour. There is $2,621 in Social Security Medicare tax withheld from their pay. The employer has to match that, but there is a credit given to the employer to the extent of the match that is over minimum wage.

Then we come to income tax. Robin’s income tax of $1,348 on line 16 of Form 1040 is reduced to zero by the Child Tax Credit. But that’s not all. There is the Earned Income Credit of $1,963 and the additional child tax credit of $4,652 making a “refund: of $6,615. So on net considering the withholding for Social Security Medicare tax and the refund on Form 1040, IRS is paying Robin $3,994.

The Senate Bill creates an above the line income tax deduction for cash tips reported to the employer. This will be a significant benefit to higher earners or those without dependents, but it will not change Robin’s bottom line at all.

The House Bill is different. It amends Section 102 to define tips as gifts. It eliminates Social Security Medicare tax on tips and unemployment tax. It is a great deal for Robin’s employer, but kind of disastrous for Robin. They save $2,295 in Social Security Medicare tax, but their 1040 “refund” is reduced by $4,897 because earned income is so much lower. The savings in Social Security Medicare is not a pure savings as it may have an effect on future benefits. For people with very low lifetime earnings (average indexed monthly earnings below $1,174), the return on additional amounts paid into Social Security is actually quite good.

It is worth noting that both bills and all the rules currently existing apply to tips to employees. There are a lot of people who receive tips who are not employees. Among them are many of the entertainers in “gentlemen’s clubs” and meal delivery drivers. Nether of the bills apply to them.

Is Robin The Norm?

There seems to be a lot of information on how much tipped employees make. Some of it must be true, but I am not able to discern what. This report titled Short Changed states

“While the national median individual income in the United States is $40,480, tipped restaurant workers median individual income is just 37 percent of the national median income, at only $15,198.9,10 High earning tipped restaurant workers are nearly nonexistent, and over 95 percent of these workers earn less than $53,000 a year.”

A former waiter that I consulted encouraged me to go to Reddit for some information. The discussion under “How much do servers make in tips?” provides anecdotal evidence that things might not be quite so grim for tipped employees, There are comments like:

“I once took a promotion to salaried management at $55k/year and it was a pay cut for more hours. I wouldn’t wait tables for $23k a year unless it was 2 shifts a week maximum.”

Regardless the argument in favor of the proposal seems pretty weak. Proposed legislation does little or nothing for or actually harms low paid servers. And when it comes to higher earning servers I have a hard time seeing why someone who makes $80,000 per year serving in a high end restaurant, assuming they are not non-existent, should be exempt from income tax on most of their income as opposed to people in all sorts of other disparate jobs earning that sort of money. Of course I feel the same way about clergy having exempt housing allowances in the hundreds of thousands.

About The Earned Income Credit

The idea that an income exclusion can end up hurting someone is counter-intuitive, but it is a real thing. An exemption that nobody I know of objects to is Section 112 – Certain combat zone compensation of members of the Armed Forces. Without digging too far into the fine points all or most of the compensation that service members earn in any month in which they serve in a combat zone or are in hospital as a result of wounds, injury or disease as a result of service in the combat zone is excluded from gross income. The exclusion for officers is limited to what the highest paid enlisted member earns, which is more than what most officers make.

It seems like it came as a bit of a shock in the early stages of the War On Terror, when junior enlisted service members found they came out behind when they were deployed. That was because they had qualified for the earned income credit, but when they qualified for the combat pay exclusion, they no longer had earned income. The 2004 Working Families Act added an election that allows combat pay to be included in the earned income computation. The 2008 Heroes Act made the election permanent.

Warren Buffett is a great proponent of the Earned Income Credit as an antidote to the extreme inequality that a successful free market economy is bound to create.

I frequently do an “Other Coverage” section on my posts, but I wouldn’t know where to start on this topic. I will note though that I have not found another article where somebody ran numbers on the effect of the various legislative proposals. Reilly’s Sixth Law of Tax Planning – Don’t Do The Math In Your Head.

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