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IRS Alert: 6 Mistakes That Could Inflate Your Tax Bill

February 8, 2026 · Taxes
Close-up of hands using a calculator and tablet to compare tax deduction numbers.
Crunching numbers with a calculator and tablet to ensure you don’t overlook the valuable new OBBBA standard deduction.

Mistake 2: Missing the New “OBBBA” Standard Deduction

Inflation and new legislation have pushed the standard deduction significantly higher for the 2025 tax year. This is a critical number because it determines whether you should itemize (list out your mortgage interest, charity, and state taxes) or just take the flat rate.

For most taxpayers, the standard deduction is now so high that itemizing no longer makes financial sense. Taking the lower itemized amount by accident is literally throwing money away.

An infographic comparing a large 'Standard Deduction' block to smaller 'Itemized Expenses' blocks, showing the height difference.
This chart compares the fixed standard deduction against variable itemized expenses like mortgage interest and donations.

2025 Standard Deduction Amounts (Filing in 2026)

Filing Status Standard Deduction
Single / Married Filing Separately $15,750
Married Filing Jointly $31,500
Head of Household $23,625

Note for Seniors: If you were 65 or older by the end of 2025, you get an even bigger break. Single filers add $2,050 to the amounts above, and married couples add $1,650 per qualifying person.

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