What Are Itemized Deductions?

Core Definition

Itemized deductions are specific, IRS-permitted personal expenses that an individual taxpayer lists line by line on Schedule A of Form 1040 to reduce their taxable income. Instead of taking a flat standard deduction, a taxpayer who itemizes adds up qualifying expenses across five main categories β€” medical costs, state and local taxes, home mortgage interest, charitable contributions, and certain casualty losses β€” and deducts that total from adjusted gross income (AGI). The taxpayer claims whichever amount is larger: the sum of itemized deductions or the standard deduction. Not both.

Here is the thing students often misread in their coursework: itemized deductions are not just “expenses you can deduct.” They are a specific set of expenses defined by the Internal Revenue Code, each with its own eligibility rules, dollar limits, phase-outs, and documentation requirements. Knowing a deduction exists is only half the work. The other half is knowing what qualifies, what doesn’t, how the limit is calculated, and what changed after the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 rewrote much of the landscape.

For most assignments in an individual taxation or federal income tax course, the question isn’t whether itemized deductions exist β€” it’s whether the taxpayer in your fact pattern should use them, how much they can actually claim after limits apply, and what the net tax effect is. This guide is built around those exact problems.

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Filed on Schedule A

Itemized deductions are reported on Schedule A, which attaches to Form 1040. Each category has its own line.

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Compared to Standard Deduction

The taxpayer takes the higher of itemized deductions or the standard deduction. They’re mutually exclusive.

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Reduce Taxable Income

Deductions reduce the taxable income base, which reduces the amount of tax owed β€” not the tax itself directly.

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TCJA Changed the Rules

The 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act capped SALT, suspended most miscellaneous deductions, and nearly doubled the standard deduction.

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Above-the-Line vs. Below-the-Line Deductions

Itemized deductions are below-the-line deductions β€” they reduce adjusted gross income (AGI), not gross income. Above-the-line deductions (like student loan interest or contributions to a traditional IRA) reduce gross income to arrive at AGI. AGI matters because several itemized deduction limits β€” especially medical expenses β€” are calculated as a percentage of AGI. Get the sequence right: gross income β†’ subtract above-the-line deductions β†’ AGI β†’ subtract the greater of itemized or standard deductions β†’ taxable income.


Standard Deduction vs. Itemizing: How to Decide

This is the first question on any Schedule A problem: should this taxpayer itemize? The math is blunt β€” if your total eligible itemized deductions exceed the standard deduction for your filing status, itemize. If they don’t, take the standard deduction and move on. But knowing the thresholds matters.

Filing Status2024 Standard Deduction2025 Standard Deduction
Single$14,600$15,000
Married Filing Jointly (MFJ)$29,200$30,000
Married Filing Separately (MFS)$14,600$15,000
Head of Household (HOH)$21,900$22,500
Qualifying Surviving Spouse$29,200$30,000

Here is what that actually means for your assignments. After the TCJA roughly doubled the standard deduction in 2018, far fewer taxpayers benefit from itemizing. According to the IRS Statistics of Income data, only about 10% of individual filers now itemize β€” down from roughly 30% before 2018. Your fact patterns in coursework will often be designed to make the itemizing decision non-obvious. Know the threshold cold before you do anything else.

Standard vs. Itemized: Worked Decision Example

Tax Accounting / Schedule A

Fact pattern: James, single, has the following deductible amounts: $4,200 in qualifying medical expenses above the AGI floor, $10,000 in SALT (at the cap), $8,400 in mortgage interest, and $1,500 in charitable contributions. Total itemized deductions: $24,100.

Total itemized deductions: $4,200 + $10,000 + $8,400 + $1,500 = $24,100
Standard deduction (single, 2024): $14,600
Decision: Itemize β€” James saves an additional $9,500 in taxable income by itemizing over taking the standard deduction.

The mechanics are always the same. Add up every eligible deduction after applying limits. Compare to the standard deduction. Take the larger number. In an exam problem, watch for deductions that look like they qualify but don’t β€” personal credit card interest, commuting costs, political contributions. These are traps.

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Married Filing Separately: A Trap in Assignments

If one spouse itemizes on a Married Filing Separately return, the other spouse must also itemize β€” even if their itemized deductions are zero. This comes up in exam fact patterns specifically to test whether you know the rule. A spouse who can’t beat their standard deduction on MFS is forced into a worse position by the other spouse’s choice to itemize. Always flag the filing status before proceeding with any Schedule A problem.


The Five Main Categories on Schedule A

Schedule A has five primary deduction categories after the TCJA. Miscellaneous itemized deductions subject to the 2% AGI floor β€” which used to include unreimbursed employee expenses, investment advisory fees, and tax preparation costs β€” are suspended through 2025. What’s left is a tighter, more defined list. Here is the overview.

🩺 Medical Expenses exceeding 7.5% of AGI
πŸ›οΈ SALT State/local taxes, capped at $10,000
🏠 Mortgage Interest on up to $750K of acquisition debt
❀️ Charitable Cash and property gifts to qualifying orgs
πŸŒͺ️ Casualty Losses in federally declared disaster areas only

Each category has its own calculation logic, its own documentation rules, and its own limitations. Work through them in order on Schedule A β€” the IRS form is laid out this way for a reason, and following the sequence on assignments helps you avoid skipping a floor or applying a cap to the wrong line.


Medical and Dental Expenses

7.5%

The AGI Floor β€” The Key Concept Here

Only expenses exceeding 7.5% of AGI are deductible. Everything below the floor is dead money.

This is the most calculation-intensive deduction on Schedule A for most students. The mechanic: multiply AGI by 0.075. That product is your floor. Only medical expenses above that floor are deductible. If a taxpayer has $8,000 in medical expenses and an AGI of $80,000, the floor is $6,000 (7.5% Γ— $80,000). The deductible amount is $2,000 β€” not $8,000. Students who skip the floor and just deduct the gross expense amount make the single most common medical deduction error on tax exams.

What Qualifies as a Medical Expense

The IRS defines deductible medical expenses broadly as amounts paid for the “diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease.” But the list of what qualifies β€” and what doesn’t β€” is more specific than that definition suggests.

Qualifying Medical Expenses

  • Doctor, dentist, and specialist visits
  • Prescription medications
  • Hospital stays and surgery costs
  • Vision care, glasses, and contacts
  • Mental health treatment (therapy, psychiatrist)
  • Hearing aids and batteries
  • Long-term care insurance premiums (age-based limits)
  • Transportation costs to receive medical care
  • Qualified medical equipment (wheelchairs, CPAP)
  • Health insurance premiums paid with after-tax dollars

Non-Qualifying Medical Expenses

  • Cosmetic surgery (unless medically necessary)
  • Over-the-counter drugs (without a prescription)
  • Gym memberships or fitness programs
  • Teeth whitening or non-corrective dental
  • Funeral and burial costs
  • Vitamins and supplements (general health only)
  • Health insurance premiums paid pre-tax via employer
  • Expenses reimbursed by HSA, FSA, or insurance
  • Maternity clothes
  • Nicotine patches or gum (without prescription)
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Assignment Tip: Always Net Out Reimbursements First

In a coursework fact pattern, medical expenses almost always come with a detail about insurance reimbursements. You must subtract any reimbursement from total medical expenses before applying the 7.5% AGI floor. The deductible amount is based on net out-of-pocket expenses β€” not gross medical bills. This is a two-step calculation: net expenses first, then apply the floor. Skipping either step costs points.


State and Local Taxes (SALT)

$10K

The SALT Cap β€” Introduced by TCJA, Still in Effect

State and local taxes are deductible up to a combined $10,000 per return ($5,000 MFS) β€” not per tax type.

The SALT deduction was one of the biggest TCJA changes and shows up constantly in coursework. Before 2018, taxpayers could deduct all their state and local taxes with no cap. Now the limit is $10,000 combined across state income taxes (or sales taxes if elected), local income taxes, and real property taxes. This hurts taxpayers in high-tax states β€” someone in California or New York paying $15,000 in state income taxes and $8,000 in property taxes hits the cap hard and can only deduct $10,000 total regardless of how much they actually paid.

The Three SALT Components

The $10,000 cap applies to the combined total of any combination of these three items:

SALT ComponentRuleKey Limitation
State and Local Income Taxes Deduct taxes paid or withheld during the tax year Must choose between income taxes OR sales taxes β€” not both
State and Local Sales Taxes Elected in lieu of income taxes; use IRS optional tables or actual receipts Election is all-or-nothing; beneficial mainly in no-income-tax states
Real Property Taxes Taxes on real estate based on assessed value Personal-use property only; investment property taxes go on Schedule E
Personal Property Taxes Annual taxes based on vehicle value (e.g., car registration) Must be ad valorem (based on value), not a flat fee
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What Does NOT Count as a Deductible Tax

  • Federal income taxes β€” these are never deductible
  • Social Security and Medicare (FICA) taxes paid by an employee
  • State taxes on income that is exempt from federal tax
  • Special assessments for local improvements (sidewalks, sewers)
  • Transfer taxes on property sales β€” these are added to the property’s basis, not deducted

The income tax vs. sales tax election is a one-or-the-other choice. You cannot take $6,000 in state income taxes and add $4,000 in sales taxes to maximize the cap. Pick one category and apply the $10,000 limit to whatever combination you’re eligible for.

β€” Schedule A, Line 5 instructions, IRS Form 1040

Home Mortgage Interest

$750K

Acquisition Debt Limit β€” Post-TCJA

Interest on up to $750,000 of qualified acquisition debt is deductible. Loans before Dec. 15, 2017 are grandfathered at $1 million.

The mortgage interest deduction is straightforward in concept: you pay interest on a loan secured by your primary or secondary home, you can deduct it. What gets complicated in practice β€” and what courses specifically test β€” are the debt limits, the distinction between acquisition debt and home equity debt, and the grandfathering rules. A taxpayer who took out a $900,000 mortgage in 2019 can only deduct the interest on $750,000 of that balance. The proportion of deductible interest to total interest is $750K Γ· $900K, or 83.3% of the total interest paid. You prorate when the balance exceeds the cap.

Acquisition Debt vs. Home Equity Debt

This distinction matters on exams. Acquisition debt is borrowed money used to buy, build, or substantially improve a qualified residence. Home equity debt is money borrowed against the equity in the home for any other purpose. After the TCJA, home equity loan interest is only deductible if the proceeds were used to buy, build, or improve the home β€” making it effectively acquisition debt. If someone took out a $50,000 home equity line and used it for a vacation, that interest is not deductible under current law.

Mortgage Interest Proration: Worked Example

Schedule A / Line 8

Fact pattern: Sarah purchased her home in 2022 with a $900,000 mortgage. The average balance during 2024 was $870,000. She paid $38,000 in mortgage interest during the year. What is her deductible mortgage interest?

Step 1 β€” Determine the applicable limit: $750,000 (post-TCJA, loan originated in 2022)
Step 2 β€” Calculate the deductible proportion: $750,000 Γ· $870,000 = 86.2%
Step 3 β€” Apply proportion to interest paid: $38,000 Γ— 86.2% = $32,759
Deductible mortgage interest: $32,759

The remaining $5,241 in interest is non-deductible. No carryover, no alternative β€” it’s simply lost as a deduction. This proration step is almost always in exam problems when the mortgage exceeds $750,000, and students who ignore it overstate the deduction significantly.

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Points Paid on a Mortgage

Points paid on a mortgage to purchase a primary residence are generally deductible in full in the year paid, provided they meet IRS criteria (they represent prepaid interest on the loan, are computed as a percentage of the loan, and the loan is for the purchase or improvement of the taxpayer’s principal home). Points paid on refinances must be deducted ratably over the life of the loan β€” not in full in year one. This distinction shows up in assignments. Check whether the mortgage is a purchase loan or a refi before deciding how to treat points.


Charitable Contribution Deductions

60%

AGI Limit for Cash Contributions to Public Charities

Charitable deductions are capped as a percentage of AGI, ranging from 20% to 60% depending on the type of contribution and the recipient organization.

Charitable contributions to qualifying organizations are deductible on Schedule A, but the deduction has ceilings based on your AGI and the type of gift. Cash contributions to public charities (like the Red Cross, a church, or a university) are capped at 60% of AGI. Cash contributions to private foundations are capped at 30% of AGI. Appreciated capital gain property donated to a public charity is capped at 30% of AGI. The unused portion of a charitable deduction that exceeds the limit carries forward for up to five years β€” you don’t permanently lose it, but you can’t use it all in year one.

Cash vs. Property Contributions

Cash is simple: you deduct what you gave, subject to the AGI limit. Property gets more nuanced. Donated property is generally deducted at its fair market value (FMV) at the date of contribution β€” not its cost basis. But there are rules:

Type of Property DonatedDeduction AmountAGI Limit
Cash (to public charity)Amount paid60% of AGI
Long-term capital gain property (to public charity)Fair market value30% of AGI
Ordinary income property (e.g., inventory)Adjusted basis (not FMV)50% of AGI
Short-term capital gain propertyAdjusted basis (not FMV)50% of AGI
Cash or property (to private foundation)Amount paid or FMV30% (cash) / 20% (property)
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Documentation Rules That Show Up in Exam Scenarios

  • Cash under $250: A bank record or receipt is sufficient
  • Cash $250 or more: A written acknowledgment from the organization is required β€” no acknowledgment means no deduction
  • Non-cash under $250: A receipt showing name of org, date, location, and description of property
  • Non-cash $250–$500: Qualified written acknowledgment required
  • Non-cash over $500: Must file Form 8283 with the return
  • Non-cash over $5,000: Qualified appraisal required (except for publicly traded securities)

Assignment problems often test whether the recipient organization qualifies. A donation to a qualified charitable organization under IRC Β§170 is deductible. Gifts to political organizations, foreign organizations (with limited exceptions), individuals, social clubs, and most homeowners associations are not. When your fact pattern names an organization, the question of whether it qualifies is usually intentional.


Casualty and Theft Losses

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Federally Declared Disasters Only β€” Post-TCJA

Personal casualty and theft losses are only deductible if they occur in a federally declared disaster area. That’s a significant post-TCJA restriction.

Before 2018, any sudden and unexpected loss from fire, theft, storm, flood, or similar casualty was potentially deductible. After the TCJA, personal-use property casualty and theft losses are only deductible if they are attributable to a federally declared disaster. Your car getting stolen, your roof destroyed by a non-declared storm, your personal belongings lost in a fire β€” none of these produce a deductible loss for tax years 2018 through 2025 unless a federal disaster declaration covers the event. For coursework purposes, if the fact pattern doesn’t mention a federal disaster declaration, assume the casualty loss is not deductible.

How to Calculate a Casualty Loss Deduction

When a casualty loss is deductible, the calculation follows a specific sequence β€” and this sequence is heavily tested:

1

Determine the Amount of the Loss

The loss is the lesser of: (a) the decrease in fair market value of the property as a result of the casualty, or (b) the adjusted basis of the property. Do not just use the repair cost or the replacement cost β€” use the lesser of decrease in FMV or adjusted basis. If something is completely destroyed, the loss is the adjusted basis.

2

Subtract Any Insurance Reimbursement

Insurance or other reimbursements received reduce the deductible loss dollar for dollar. A taxpayer who receives full insurance compensation has no deductible casualty loss β€” even if the event occurred in a federally declared disaster area. Net out all reimbursements before proceeding.

3

Apply the $100 Per-Event Floor

After subtracting insurance reimbursements, subtract $100 from the loss on each casualty event. This is per event, not per year β€” if you had three separate qualifying casualty events, you subtract $100 from each one. This floor is the first limitation after the insurance offset.

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Apply the 10% of AGI Floor

Add up all your net casualty and theft losses (after the $100 per-event reductions). Then subtract 10% of your AGI from the combined total. Only the amount exceeding this threshold is deductible. Similar to medical expenses, this AGI-based floor can eliminate most or all of the deduction for taxpayers with high incomes.


TCJA Changes Every Tax Student Needs to Know

The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 was the most significant overhaul of the individual tax code in three decades. If you’re in a tax course now, your textbook and professor will reference it constantly. Here is what it did to itemized deductions specifically β€” not an exhaustive TCJA summary, just the parts that affect Schedule A problems.

Deduction AreaPre-TCJA RulePost-TCJA Rule (2018–2025)
Standard Deduction $6,350 single / $12,700 MFJ (2017) Roughly doubled; 2024: $14,600 single / $29,200 MFJ
SALT Deduction Unlimited β€” deduct all state/local taxes paid Capped at $10,000 combined ($5,000 MFS)
Mortgage Interest Acquisition debt up to $1 million; home equity debt up to $100,000 Acquisition debt up to $750,000 (new loans); home equity interest only if used to buy/build/improve home
Casualty/Theft Losses All sudden, unexpected personal-use property losses (with floors) Only losses in federally declared disaster areas
Misc. Deductions (2% floor) Unreimbursed employee expenses, investment fees, tax prep fees, etc. Suspended entirely through 2025
Overall Pease Limitation Phased out total itemized deductions for high earners Repealed by TCJA β€” no longer applies
Moving Expense Deduction Deductible above-the-line for job-related moves Suspended for most taxpayers (military exempted)
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The Sunset Issue: TCJA Provisions Expire After 2025

Most TCJA individual tax provisions are scheduled to expire at the end of 2025 without Congressional action. That means the rules could revert to pre-TCJA law β€” higher SALT deductions, lower standard deductions, reappearance of the 2% miscellaneous floor, return of the Pease limitation. As of May 2026, legislative developments regarding extension are ongoing. Your course will likely flag this uncertainty. When writing assignments, note which law year applies to your fact pattern and apply those specific rules β€” don’t assume the current rules are permanent.


How to Approach Itemized Deduction Problems in Coursework

Itemized deduction problems in tax accounting courses follow a predictable logic. The exam scenario gives you a fact pattern loaded with income items, expenses, and personal details β€” and your job is to sort through all of it, identify which items are deductible, apply the correct limits, and determine the taxpayer’s total Schedule A deduction. Here is how to work through it without missing steps.

1

Identify Filing Status First

Filing status determines the standard deduction threshold, the SALT cap for MFS, and whether both spouses must itemize if one does. Don’t proceed until you’ve locked in the filing status. Single, MFJ, MFS, HOH, and qualifying surviving spouse all produce different results on Schedule A problems.

2

Calculate AGI Before Schedule A

AGI isn’t given in most exam problems β€” you derive it from gross income minus above-the-line deductions. Then you need AGI for the medical expense floor (7.5%), the casualty loss floor (10%), and charitable contribution ceilings. Get AGI right before you touch Schedule A. A wrong AGI contaminates every calculation downstream.

3

Work Each Schedule A Category Independently

Don’t try to hold everything in your head at once. Work through medical first (calculate floor, net reimbursements, determine deductible amount), then SALT (apply $10,000 cap), then mortgage interest (check if debt exceeds limit, prorate if necessary), then charitable (check AGI limit, check property type, confirm organization qualifies), then casualty losses if any (federal disaster only, $100 floor, 10% AGI floor). Each one is a separate mini-calculation. Keep them separate until you aggregate.

4

Scan the Fact Pattern for Traps

Tax professors build traps into fact patterns deliberately. Look for: insurance reimbursements that reduce medical or casualty deductions, political donations disguised as charitable contributions, home equity loan interest used for non-qualifying purposes, car registration fees that are flat-rate (not ad valorem) and thus don’t qualify as SALT, and mortgage balances that exceed $750,000. These are not mistakes in the problem β€” they are tests.

5

Compare Total Itemized Deductions to Standard Deduction

After calculating every deduction category, total them and compare to the applicable standard deduction. Choose the higher amount. Then subtract from AGI to get taxable income. On multi-part problems, this comparison step is often where students lose points β€” they calculate all the deductions correctly but forget to make the final election and just use the itemized total without checking it against the standard deduction.

6

Show Your Work at Every Step

In written assignments and open-answer exams, professors want to see the calculation path β€” not just the final number. If you write “$2,400 medical expense deduction” without showing the AGI floor calculation, you’ll lose partial credit even if the number is right. Label each step with the deduction category, the relevant limit or floor, and the net deductible amount. Clean, labeled work protects your partial credit even when the final answer is off.

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Getting Help With Tax Accounting Assignments

Itemized deduction problems often appear as part of a comprehensive individual tax return problem β€” where you’re calculating gross income, AGI, Schedule A, tax liability, and credits all in one problem set. That’s a lot of interdependent calculations. If you’re working on a return-preparation assignment, a Schedule A standalone problem, or a research paper on individual taxation, Smart Academic Writing’s accounting homework help and finance assignment help specialists work with students on exactly these types of problems. They can also help with quantitative coursework in accounting programs and economics assignments that intersect with tax policy.


Common Mistakes on Itemized Deduction Assignments

These are the errors that show up most often in student work. None of them are complex. Most happen because of rushing or skipping a step.

Mistakes That Cost Points

  • Deducting full medical expenses without applying the 7.5% AGI floor
  • Not subtracting insurance reimbursements from medical or casualty losses
  • Exceeding the $10,000 SALT cap and deducting the full amount paid
  • Deducting home equity loan interest when proceeds were used for non-qualifying purposes
  • Deducting donations to individuals, political organizations, or foreign entities
  • Using FMV (instead of adjusted basis) for ordinary income property donations
  • Applying the pre-TCJA $1 million mortgage limit to loans originated after Dec. 15, 2017
  • Deducting a casualty loss that didn’t occur in a federally declared disaster
  • Forgetting the $100-per-event floor on casualty losses
  • Using itemized deductions when the standard deduction is larger

Habits That Earn Full Credit

  • Always deriving AGI before starting Schedule A calculations
  • Checking filing status before applying standard deduction thresholds
  • Applying each limit and floor in writing, with labeled calculations
  • Netting out reimbursements before any further deduction calculations
  • Confirming charitable organization qualifies before deducting
  • Checking mortgage date and balance before applying $750K vs. $1M limit
  • Noting the federal disaster declaration requirement for casualty losses
  • Comparing total itemized to standard deduction at the end
  • Carrying forward charitable contributions that exceed the AGI limit
  • Noting the law year (pre- or post-TCJA) your problem applies

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FAQs on Itemized Deductions

What are itemized deductions, and how do they differ from the standard deduction?
Itemized deductions are specific, IRS-permitted expenses listed individually on Schedule A of Form 1040. They include medical expenses above 7.5% of AGI, state and local taxes up to $10,000, home mortgage interest on qualifying debt, charitable contributions, and casualty losses in federally declared disasters. The standard deduction is a flat amount based on filing status that requires no itemization. A taxpayer claims whichever is larger β€” not both. For 2024, the standard deduction is $14,600 for single filers and $29,200 for married filing jointly. After the TCJA roughly doubled the standard deduction in 2018, only about 10% of filers now itemize.
How do you calculate the medical expense deduction?
Only medical and dental expenses that exceed 7.5% of your adjusted gross income are deductible. The calculation: (1) total all qualifying out-of-pocket medical expenses, (2) subtract any insurance reimbursements, (3) calculate 7.5% of your AGI, (4) subtract the 7.5% floor from your net medical expenses. Only the amount above the floor is deductible. For example: AGI of $80,000 means a floor of $6,000. If you paid $8,500 in qualifying medical costs and received $500 in reimbursements, your net is $8,000, and your deductible amount is $8,000 βˆ’ $6,000 = $2,000.
What is the SALT deduction cap, and why does it matter?
The SALT (State and Local Tax) deduction is capped at $10,000 per return ($5,000 for married filing separately) under the TCJA. It applies to the combined total of state and local income taxes or sales taxes (you choose one) plus real and personal property taxes. Before 2018, there was no cap. The limitation hits hardest in high-tax states β€” California, New York, New Jersey, Illinois β€” where combined state income taxes and property taxes often far exceed $10,000. For coursework purposes, always apply the $10,000 cap regardless of how much the taxpayer actually paid.
Can you deduct home equity loan interest after the TCJA?
Only if the loan proceeds were used to buy, build, or substantially improve the home that secures the loan. If a taxpayer took out a home equity line of credit and used the money for home renovations, the interest may be deductible as acquisition debt. If the proceeds were used for anything else β€” paying off credit cards, buying a car, funding a vacation β€” the interest is not deductible under current law (2018–2025). This is a common exam trap: the question gives you a home equity loan and buries the purpose of the proceeds in the fact pattern.
What types of charitable contributions are NOT deductible?
Several common gifts are not deductible even though they feel charitable: donations to individuals (no matter the need), contributions to political campaigns or committees, dues or gifts to social clubs, donations to foreign organizations (with narrow exceptions), payments to for-profit schools or hospitals, and the value of services you donate (though unreimbursed out-of-pocket expenses for volunteer work may qualify). Also, any benefit you receive in exchange for a contribution reduces the deductible amount β€” if you donate $500 to a charity gala and receive dinner valued at $150, only $350 is deductible.
Are unreimbursed employee expenses still deductible as itemized deductions?
No β€” not for tax years 2018 through 2025. The TCJA suspended all miscellaneous itemized deductions subject to the 2% of AGI floor, including unreimbursed employee business expenses, investment advisory fees, and tax preparation fees. This was one of the most significant changes for W-2 employees who previously deducted work-related costs. Self-employed individuals can still deduct business expenses on Schedule C. Employees cannot deduct unreimbursed work expenses on Schedule A during the suspension period.
What is the Pease limitation, and does it still apply?
The Pease limitation was a provision that reduced the total itemized deductions for high-income taxpayers by 3% of the amount by which their AGI exceeded a threshold, up to a maximum reduction of 80% of total itemized deductions. The TCJA repealed the Pease limitation for tax years 2018 through 2025. It does not apply during this period. However, if the TCJA sunsets after 2025 without Congressional extension, the Pease limitation would return. For any coursework fact pattern specifying a tax year before 2018 or after a potential 2025 reversion, the Pease limitation is relevant.
Where can I get help with a Schedule A or tax accounting assignment?
Smart Academic Writing offers accounting homework help and finance assignment help from specialists who work through individual tax return problems, Schedule A calculations, and tax research papers. Whether your assignment is a single Schedule A problem or a full comprehensive individual return, support is available. You can also access help with economics coursework and quantitative business courses that run alongside tax programs.

The Short Version: What You Actually Need to Know

Itemized deductions are not hard once you know the structure. There are five Schedule A categories, each with its own rules. Medical has a 7.5% AGI floor. SALT is capped at $10,000. Mortgage interest applies to qualifying debt up to $750,000 for post-2017 loans. Charitable contributions are limited as a percentage of AGI and require qualifying organizations. Casualty losses are only deductible for federally declared disasters, with a $100 floor and a 10% AGI floor on top.

The TCJA changed a lot of this. The doubled standard deduction made itemizing irrelevant for most taxpayers. The SALT cap hit residents of high-tax states hard. Miscellaneous deductions disappeared entirely. These aren’t just trivia β€” they’re the rules that govern every fact pattern your professor can build.

In coursework, the path is always the same: get AGI right first, then work each Schedule A category in sequence, apply every limit and floor, and compare the result to the standard deduction. Show every step. Label everything. The math usually isn’t the hard part β€” the rules are. Know the rules, and the math follows. If you need structured help working through a specific assignment, the accounting specialists at Smart Academic Writing are familiar with these problems and can help you work through them correctly.