2026 Federal & California Tax Update

Standard and Itemized Deductions Explained

Beginning in 2026, significant changes will affect both standard deductions and itemized deductions, particularly for higher-income taxpayers. While standard deduction amounts are increasing, a limitation on itemized deductions is being reinstated at the federal level.

For business owners, healthcare professionals, creators, and high-net-worth individuals, understanding these changes is essential for proactive tax planning.

Federal Standard Deduction Increases (2026)

The standard deduction continues to rise in 2026.

Federal Standard Deduction Comparison

Filing Status

2025

2026 (Final)

Married Filing Jointly / Qualifying Widow(er) $30,000 $32,200
Head of Household $22,500 $24,150
Single $15,000 $16,100
Married Filing Separately $15,000 $16,100

For many taxpayers — especially W-2 employees or retirees — the higher standard deduction may eliminate the need to itemize.

However, for higher-income individuals with large mortgage interest, SALT, or charitable deductions, itemizing may still be beneficial — but subject to new limits.

Additional Standard Deduction (Elderly and/or Blind – 2026)

These amounts are added on top of the regular standard deduction.

Unmarried Taxpayers

Status

2026 Amount

Elderly OR Blind $2,050
Elderly AND Blind $4,100

Married Taxpayers (Per Person)

Status

2026 Amount

Elderly OR Blind $1,650
Elderly AND Blind $3,300

These additional deductions remain available even if enhanced senior deductions are claimed.

California Nonconformity

California does not conform to the federal additional standard deduction rules.

Topic Federal Treatment

California Treatment

Additional deduction for elderly/blind Allowed Not allowed
Alternative benefit N/A Additional exemption credit
Standard deduction amounts Higher Separate CA amounts apply

This means California taxpayers must calculate federal and state deductions separately — a common source of confusion.

At Velin & Associates, Inc., we regularly see taxpayers incorrectly assume California mirrors federal rules — which can lead to overpayment or notices.

2026 Federal Itemized Deduction Limitation Returns (IRC §68)

Starting in 2026, an overall limitation on itemized deductions is reinstated.

The reduction equals:

2/37 of the lesser of:

This limitation applies after other restrictions (like SALT and charitable AGI limits).

Example: High-Income Taxpayer (2026)

Assume:

Item

Amount

Taxable Income $950,000
Itemized Deductions (after SALT limits) $105,000
37% Bracket Threshold $640,600

Step Calculation

Step

Result

Income + deductions $1,055,000
Excess over threshold $414,400
Lesser of excess or deductions $105,000
Reduction (2/37 ≈ 5.41%) $5,681 deduction lost

Even though the taxpayer had $105,000 of valid itemized deductions, $5,681 is phased out due to income level.

For CPA for Doctors, CPA for Dental Practice owners, CPA for High Net Worth Individuals, this becomes a meaningful planning issue.

California Itemized Deduction Phaseout

California uses a completely different formula.

California reduces itemized deductions by the lesser of:

California Reduction Rule

6% of excess federal AGI over CA threshold
80% of allowable itemized deductions

This operates independently from federal law.

For high-income Los Angeles taxpayers, this often results in a double limitation — one federal and one state.

Who Is Most Impacted?

These changes primarily affect:

Taxpayer Type

Impact Level

High Net Worth Individuals High
Medical Practice Owners High
Dental Business Owners High
Business owners with large SALT payments High
Real estate investors Moderate–High
W-2 earners using standard deduction Low

Strategic Planning Opportunities for 2026

For taxpayers nearing the 37% bracket, planning becomes critical.

Potential strategies include:

Strategy

Benefit

Maximize 401(k), SEP-IRA, Profit Sharing Reduces taxable income
Health Savings Accounts Pre-tax reduction
Income deferral Stay below threshold
Accelerate deductions Control timing
Municipal bond investments Lower taxable income
Shift expenses to Schedule C or E Avoid itemized phaseout

For business owners — including CPA for Shopify Store, CPA for Commerce, CPA for Creators, CPA for Amazon Business clients — structuring income properly may preserve thousands in deductions.

Standard vs. Itemized: 2026 Overview

Factor

Standard Deduction

Itemized Deduction

Simplicity High Moderate
Phaseout risk None Yes (37% bracket)
Best for Moderate income Large deductions
High-income impact Stable Reduced benefit

Final Takeaways

For many taxpayers in Los Angeles, 2025 year-end planning will determine how much of their deductions survive in 2026.

For more information about our tax planning services, contact us today: visit our website.

Velin & Associates, Inc

8159 Santa Monica Blvd STE 198/200 West Hollywood, CA 90046
323-902-1000
dmitriy@losangelescpa.org

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Our firm provides the information in this e-newsletter for general guidance only, and does not constitute the provision of legal advice, tax advice, accounting services, investment advice, or professional consulting of any kind. The information provided herein should not be used as a substitute for consultation with professional tax, accounting, legal, or other competent advisers. Before making any decision or taking any action, you should consult a professional adviser who has been provided with all pertinent facts relevant to your particular situation. Tax articles in this e-newsletter are not intended to be used, and cannot be used by any taxpayer, for the purpose of avoiding accuracy-related penalties that may be imposed on the taxpayer. The information is provided "as is," with no assurance or guarantee of completeness, accuracy, or timeliness of the information, and without warranty of any kind, express or implied, including but not limited to warranties of performance, merchantability, and fitness for a particular purpose.

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