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Tax DeductionsDecember 9, 2025Updated: July 11, 202629 min read

QBI Deduction 2026: Maximize Your 20% Pass-Through Tax Deduction

QBI Deduction 2026: Maximize Your 20% Pass-Through Tax Deduction

The qualified business income (QBI) deduction lets owners of pass-through businesses deduct up to 20% of their qualified business income, and it no longer has an expiration date: the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) made it permanent in July 2025. For tax year 2026, you get the full 20% if your taxable income is at or below $201,750 (single or head of household), $201,775 (married filing separately), or $403,500 (married filing jointly). Above those limits, the deduction phases down over $75,000 of additional income ($150,000 for joint filers), a range 50% wider than before 2026.

Key takeaways:

  • The QBI deduction equals 20% of qualified business income, capped at 20% of taxable income minus net capital gain (IRC § 199A)
  • 2026 income limits: $201,750 single/HoH, $201,775 MFS, $403,500 MFJ (Rev. Proc. 2025-32)
  • OBBBA widened the 2026 phase-out ranges to $75,000 single / $150,000 MFJ, up from $50,000 / $100,000
  • New for 2026: a $400 minimum deduction for anyone with at least $1,000 of QBI from a business they materially participate in
  • Claim it on Form 8995 (income at or below the limit) or Form 8995-A (above); the deduction goes on Form 1040, line 13

2026 QBI Income Limits and Phase-Out Thresholds

Filing statusFull 20% deduction (taxable income up to)Phase-out rangeSSTB deduction eliminated above
Single / Head of household$201,750$201,750 – $276,750$276,750
Married filing separately$201,775$201,775 – $276,775$276,775
Married filing jointly$403,500$403,500 – $553,500$553,500

Source: Rev. Proc. 2025-32; phase-out ranges set by OBBBA § 70105. Trusts and estates use the $201,750 threshold.

Three notes on this table:

  • The MFS limit is not half of the MFJ limit. Married filing separately gets $201,775: $25 more than the single threshold, and far more than half of $403,500. That is an inflation-indexing quirk in the statute, not a typo.
  • Above the phase-out range, SSTB owners lose the deduction entirely. Non-SSTB owners keep it, but the W-2 wage and qualified property limits (explained below) apply in full.
  • Filing a 2025 return on extension? Use last year's numbers: $197,300 single / $394,600 MFJ, with the narrower $50,000 / $100,000 phase-out ranges. The rest of this guide covers tax year 2026.

What Changed for 2026 Under OBBBA

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (P.L. 119-21, signed July 4, 2025) made three changes to Section 199A, all effective for tax years beginning after December 31, 2025:

  1. The deduction is permanent. The scheduled December 31, 2025 sunset was repealed, so long-term planning around QBI is now safe.
  2. Wider phase-out ranges. $75,000 for single, head of household, and MFS filers and $150,000 for joint filers, up from $50,000 / $100,000. If you land in the phase-out zone, you keep more of the deduction than under prior law.
  3. A $400 minimum deduction. Taxpayers with at least $1,000 of QBI from one or more active businesses in which they materially participate get a deduction of at least $400. Both figures are inflation-adjusted after 2026.

The rate itself stays at 20%: an earlier House draft of the bill proposed raising it to 23%, but the enacted version kept 20%. SSTB definitions and the W-2 wage and property tests are unchanged.


What Is the QBI Deduction?

The Basics

The Qualified Business Income (QBI) deduction, also known as the Section 199A deduction or "pass-through deduction," allows owners of pass-through businesses to deduct up to 20% of their qualified business income from their taxable income.

Created by: Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (2017, effective 2018) Originally set to expire: December 31, 2025 Updated by OBBBA / H.R. 1 (2025): Made permanent, with a $400 minimum deduction (for taxpayers with $1,000+ of QBI from active businesses) starting in 2026

How it works:

Your business income: $200,000
QBI deduction (20%): $40,000
Your taxable income: $160,000 ($200,000 - $40,000)

Tax savings: $14,000 (at 35% tax rate)

Important: This is a deduction, not a credit. It reduces your taxable income, not your tax bill directly.


Who Qualifies for the QBI Deduction?

Pass-Through Business Owners

You qualify if you own:

  • Sole proprietorship
  • S Corporation
  • Partnership
  • Limited Liability Company (LLC)
  • Limited Partnership (LP)
  • Trust or estate with business income

Income sources that qualify:

  • Schedule C income (sole proprietors)
  • Schedule E income (rental real estate, royalties)
  • Schedule K-1 income (S-Corps, partnerships, LLCs)
  • REIT dividends
  • Publicly traded partnership income

Who Does NOT Qualify

You do NOT qualify if:

  • You're a W-2 employee (no business ownership)
  • Your only income is wages/salary
  • You work for a C Corporation (even if you own it)
  • Your business is a hobby (not a trade or business)

Key distinction:

  • C Corporation owners: No QBI deduction (but corporate tax rate is 21%)
  • Pass-through owners: QBI deduction (but taxed at individual rates up to 37%)

What Is Qualified Business Income (QBI)?

Definition

Qualified Business Income (QBI) is the net amount of income, gain, deduction, and loss from any qualified trade or business.

What counts as QBI:

  • ✅ Net profit from your business
  • ✅ Guaranteed payments to partners (for services)
  • ✅ Income from rental real estate (if substantial services)
  • ✅ Income from royalties
  • ✅ Business income from trusts/estates

What does NOT count as QBI:

  • ❌ W-2 wages (even from your own S-Corp)
  • ❌ Guaranteed payments to partners (capital-based)
  • ❌ Investment income (interest, dividends, capital gains)
  • ❌ Income from outside the U.S.
  • ❌ Reasonable compensation to S-Corp owners

Legal Citation: IRC § 199A(c) - Qualified business income defined

One adjustment trips up Schedule C filers: QBI is not simply your net profit. Treas. Reg. § 1.199A-3(b)(1)(vi) requires subtracting the deductible half of self-employment tax, self-employed health insurance premiums, and self-employed retirement contributions first. For most sole proprietors, QBI lands at roughly 85-93% of the Schedule C line 31 number.

Example: Calculating QBI for Different Business Types

Sole Proprietor:

Schedule C net profit: $200,000
Minus ½ SE tax + SE health insurance: $20,000
QBI: $180,000
QBI deduction: $36,000 (20%)

S Corporation Owner:

Total business income: $250,000
W-2 wages paid to yourself: $100,000
Remaining profit (K-1 distribution): $150,000

QBI: $150,000 (NOT $250,000)
QBI deduction: $30,000 (20% of $150,000)

Note: Your $100,000 W-2 wages are NOT QBI

Partnership Member:

K-1 business income: $200,000
Guaranteed payment for services: $50,000

QBI: $150,000 ($200,000 - $50,000)
QBI deduction: $30,000 (20%)

The Income Thresholds: Simple vs. Complex Rules

Below the Threshold: Simple 20% Deduction

If your taxable income is below the threshold, you automatically qualify for the full 20% QBI deduction—no questions asked, no limitations.

2026 Thresholds:

  • Single / Head of household: $201,750
  • Married filing separately: $201,775
  • Married filing jointly: $403,500

How it works:

Example: Single taxpayer

Taxable income: $150,000
Business income (QBI): $150,000

QBI deduction: $30,000 (20% of $150,000)
Final taxable income: $120,000

✅ No limitations
✅ No SSTB restrictions
✅ No W-2 wage test
✅ Full 20% deduction

Above the Threshold: Limitations Apply

If your income exceeds the QBI threshold for 2026, two major QBI deduction limitations can reduce or eliminate your deduction:

  1. SSTB Limitation - If your business is a Specified Service Trade or Business
  2. W-2 Wages / Qualified Property Test - Limits deduction based on wages paid or property owned

QBI phase-out ranges for 2026:

  • Single / Head of household: $201,750 - $276,750
  • Married filing separately: $201,775 - $276,775
  • Married filing jointly: $403,500 - $553,500

Within the QBI phase-out range, limitations gradually phase in. Above the upper limit, full limitations apply. These ranges are $75,000 and $150,000 wide for 2026; before OBBBA they were only $50,000 and $100,000, so the drop-off used to be much steeper.


Specified Service Trade or Business (SSTB): The Killer

What Is an SSTB?

A Specified Service Trade or Business (SSTB) is a business in certain service fields where the QBI deduction is phased out or eliminated for high-income taxpayers.

Legal Citation: IRC § 199A(d) - Specified service trades or businesses

SSTB Categories

SSTBs include businesses in these fields:

FieldExamples
HealthDoctors, dentists, veterinarians, pharmacists, physical therapists, psychologists
LawAttorneys, paralegals, legal consultants
AccountingCPAs, tax preparers, bookkeepers, auditors
Actuarial scienceActuaries, pension consultants
Performing artsActors, musicians, directors, entertainers
ConsultingManagement consultants, strategy advisors, business consultants
AthleticsProfessional athletes, coaches, team managers
Financial servicesInvestment advisors, financial planners, wealth managers, brokers
Brokerage servicesReal estate agents, insurance brokers, mortgage brokers
TradingSecurities traders, commodities traders (NOT inventory sales)
Investing/investment managementInvestment fund managers, portfolio managers

What is NOT an SSTB:

  • ✅ Engineering
  • ✅ Architecture
  • ✅ Real estate development (non-brokerage)
  • ✅ Equipment rental
  • ✅ Manufacturing
  • ✅ Retail
  • ✅ Restaurants
  • ✅ Software development
  • ✅ E-commerce
  • ✅ Construction

Legal Citation: Treas. Reg. § 1.199A-5(b) - Specified service trades or businesses

SSTB Limitation Rules for 2026

The SSTB definitions for 2026 are unchanged; what changed are the numbers around them — inflation-adjusted thresholds and the wider OBBBA phase-out ranges:

Below threshold income: No SSTB limitation (full 20% deduction)

Within phase-out range: Partial SSTB limitation (prorated reduction)

Above phase-out range:

  • SSTB: QBI deduction completely eliminated (or limited to lesser of W-2/property test)
  • Non-SSTB: QBI deduction limited by W-2 wages / qualified property test

SSTB Example

Scenario 1: Below Threshold (No Limitation)

Taxpayer: Single attorney
Taxable income: $180,000
QBI: $180,000

Status: BELOW $201,750 threshold
QBI deduction: $36,000 (full 20%)
✅ SSTB status doesn't matter

Scenario 2: Within Phase-Out Range (Partial Limitation)

Taxpayer: Single consultant
Taxable income: $220,000
QBI: $220,000

Status: WITHIN phase-out range ($201,750 - $276,750)
Reduction %: ($220,000 - $201,750) / $75,000 = 24.3%

Without limitation: $44,000 (20% of $220K)
With SSTB reduction: ~$33,300 ($44,000 × 75.7%)
✅ Partial deduction

This simplified calculation assumes the W-2 wage test doesn't bind; within the range, that limit phases in too and can reduce the number further. Note how much the wider 2026 range helps: under the old $50,000 range, the same consultant kept only about $24,000.

Scenario 3: Above Phase-Out Range (Full Limitation)

Taxpayer: Single attorney
Taxable income: $280,000
QBI: $280,000
W-2 wages paid to employees: $0

Status: ABOVE $276,750 (top of the phase-out range)
SSTB: Yes (attorney)

QBI deduction: $0
❌ Completely phased out

The W-2 Wages and Qualified Property Tests

When These Tests Apply

The W-2 wages and qualified property tests represent the primary QBI deduction limitation for high-income taxpayers. If your taxable income is above the QBI income limits for 2026 ($201,750 single / $403,500 married filing jointly), these limits begin to phase in; above the top of the phase-out range ($276,750 single / $553,500 MFJ) they apply in full. Once fully phased in, your QBI deduction is limited to the greater of:

Option 1: W-2 Wage Limit

  • 50% of W-2 wages paid by the business

Option 2: W-2 Wages + Property Limit

  • 25% of W-2 wages paid by the business, PLUS
  • 2.5% of the unadjusted basis of qualified property

You choose whichever gives you the larger deduction.

Legal Citation: IRC § 199A(b)(2) - W-2 wages and UBIA of qualified property

W-2 Wages Definition

W-2 wages include:

  • ✅ Total wages paid to W-2 employees (including yourself if you're an S-Corp owner)
  • ✅ Wages subject to federal income tax withholding
  • ✅ Elective deferrals (401(k), 403(b), etc.)
  • ✅ Employer contributions to retirement plans and HSAs

W-2 wages do NOT include:

  • ❌ Independent contractor payments (1099)
  • ❌ Owner distributions from S-Corps or LLCs
  • ❌ Guaranteed payments to partners

Qualified Property Definition

Qualified property includes:

  • ✅ Tangible property subject to depreciation
  • ✅ Held by the business at the end of the year
  • ✅ Used in the production of QBI
  • ✅ Depreciation period hasn't ended

Property value used: Unadjusted basis (original cost, not depreciated value)

Examples of qualified property:

  • Machinery and equipment
  • Computers and office equipment
  • Vehicles
  • Buildings (but not land)
  • Furniture and fixtures
  • Technology and software

What is NOT qualified property:

  • Land (not depreciable)
  • Property held for investment
  • Property not used in the business

W-2 Wages / Property Test Examples

Example 1: Solo Consultant (No W-2 Wages, No Property)

Taxable income: $300,000 (single)
QBI: $300,000
W-2 wages paid: $0
Qualified property: $0

Tentative deduction (20%): $60,000

W-2 wage limit: $0 (50% × $0)
Property limit: $0 (25% × $0 + 2.5% × $0)

QBI deduction: $0 ❌
(Limited to greater of wage or property test)

Result: Despite having $300K in business income, NO QBI deduction because no W-2 wages paid and no qualified property.


Example 2: S-Corp Owner (With W-2 Wages)

Taxable income: $300,000 (single)
Total S-Corp income: $300,000
W-2 wages to yourself: $120,000
K-1 distribution: $180,000
QBI: $180,000 (K-1 only, NOT W-2)

Qualified property: $0

Tentative deduction (20%): $36,000 (20% × $180K)

W-2 wage limit: $60,000 (50% × $120K)
Property limit: $30,000 (25% × $120K)

QBI deduction: $36,000 ✅
(Not limited because W-2 wage test is $60K > $36K)

Example 3: Real Estate Developer (With Property)

Taxable income: $450,000 (single)
QBI: $450,000
W-2 wages paid to employees: $80,000
Qualified property (buildings, equipment): $2,000,000

Tentative deduction (20%): $90,000

W-2 wage limit: $40,000 (50% × $80K)
Property limit: $70,000 (25% × $80K + 2.5% × $2M)
= $20,000 + $50,000

QBI deduction: $70,000 ✅
(Limited by property test, not wage test)

Key insight: Having substantial qualified property ($2M) significantly increases the deduction even though W-2 wages are modest.


Example 4: Manufacturing Business (High W-2 Wages)

Taxable income: $500,000 (single)
QBI: $500,000
W-2 wages paid: $600,000
Qualified property: $1,500,000

Tentative deduction (20%): $100,000

W-2 wage limit: $300,000 (50% × $600K)
Property limit: $187,500 (25% × $600K + 2.5% × $1.5M)
= $150,000 + $37,500

QBI deduction: $100,000 ✅
(Not limited; both tests exceed $100K)

Aggregation: Combining Multiple Businesses

What Is Aggregation?

Aggregation allows you to combine multiple business entities when calculating your QBI deduction. This can help you meet the W-2 wages and qualified property tests.

Legal Citation: Treas. Reg. § 1.199A-4 - Aggregation

Requirements for Aggregation

You can aggregate businesses if:

  1. Same person or group owns 50% or more of each business
  2. Ownership is maintained for the majority of the tax year
  3. None of the businesses is an SSTB (SSTBs cannot be aggregated)
  4. Businesses meet at least TWO of the following:
    • Provide products/services that are the same or customarily offered together
    • Share facilities or business elements
    • Operate in coordination or reliance on each other

Aggregation Example

Scenario: Restaurant Owner With Multiple Entities

Entity 1: Restaurant LLC
- QBI: $200,000
- W-2 wages: $150,000
- Qualified property: $500,000

Entity 2: Equipment Rental LLC (rents equipment to Restaurant)
- QBI: $50,000
- W-2 wages: $0
- Qualified property: $300,000

WITHOUT AGGREGATION:
Restaurant: $40,000 (20% of $200K; wage limit
  $75,000 doesn't bind)
Equipment Rental: $7,500 (tentative $10,000, but
  capped by property limit: 2.5% × $300K = $7,500)
Total: $47,500

WITH AGGREGATION:
Combined QBI: $250,000
Combined W-2 wages: $150,000
Combined property: $800,000

W-2 wage limit: $75,000 (50% × $150K)
Property limit: $57,500 (25% × $150K + 2.5% × $800K)

QBI deduction: $50,000 ✅
(20% of $250K, not limited)

Benefit of aggregation: +$2,500 deduction

The gap widens when the entity without payroll holds little property: if the rental LLC owned $100,000 of equipment instead of $300,000, its stand-alone deduction would be $2,500 and aggregation would add $7,500.


Advanced Strategies to Maximize Your QBI Deduction

Strategy 1: Pay Yourself Reasonable W-2 Wages (S-Corps)

The Problem: S-Corp owners often minimize W-2 wages to reduce payroll taxes, but this hurts the QBI deduction above income thresholds.

The Solution: Increase your W-2 wages (within "reasonable compensation" limits) to create a larger W-2 wage base for the QBI calculation.

Example:

SCENARIO A: Low W-2 Strategy
Total S-Corp income: $400,000
W-2 wages: $60,000
K-1 distribution: $340,000

QBI: $340,000
Tentative deduction: $68,000 (20%)
W-2 wage limit: $30,000 (50% × $60K)

Actual deduction: $30,000 ❌
SCENARIO B: Optimized W-2 Strategy
Total S-Corp income: $400,000
W-2 wages: $140,000
K-1 distribution: $260,000

QBI: $260,000
Tentative deduction: $52,000 (20%)
W-2 wage limit: $70,000 (50% × $140K)

Actual deduction: $52,000 ✅

Net benefit: +$22,000 deduction
Tax savings: $7,700 (at 35% rate)

Trade-off: Higher W-2 wages = higher payroll taxes (15.3% on additional $80K = $12,240), but you gain $22,000 deduction worth $7,700 in tax savings. Net worse.

Better approach: Optimize to the point where W-2 wage limit exceeds 20% of QBI.


Strategy 2: Invest in Qualified Property

The Problem: Service businesses often have little qualified property, limiting the property-based calculation.

The Solution: Invest in depreciable property before year-end to increase your qualified property basis.

Qualifying investments:

  • Office equipment and furniture
  • Computers and technology
  • Vehicles used in the business
  • Machinery and equipment
  • Software
  • Building improvements (if you own the building)

Example:

BEFORE INVESTMENT:
QBI: $300,000
W-2 wages: $50,000
Qualified property: $100,000

W-2 limit: $25,000 (50% × $50K)
Property limit: $15,000 (25% × $50K + 2.5% × $100K)

QBI deduction: $25,000 (limited)
AFTER INVESTMENT ($400K in equipment before Dec 31):
QBI: $300,000
W-2 wages: $50,000
Qualified property: $500,000

W-2 limit: $25,000 (50% × $50K)
Property limit: $25,000 (25% × $50K + 2.5% × $500K)
= $12,500 + $12,500

QBI deduction: $25,000 (matches the wage limit,
not improved yet — need more property)

Better example:

AFTER INVESTMENT ($1,000,000 in equipment):
Property limit: $37,500 (25% × $50K + 2.5% × $1M)
= $12,500 + $25,000

QBI deduction: $37,500 ✅
(+$12,500 additional deduction)

Note: You get depreciation deduction PLUS higher QBI deduction.


Strategy 3: Avoid SSTB Classification

The Problem: SSTB businesses lose the QBI deduction entirely above phase-out income.

The Solution: Structure your business to fall outside SSTB definitions where possible.

Strategies:

A) Separate SSTB and non-SSTB activities:

Example: Law firm with software division

Option 1: Single entity (SSTB)
- Legal services: $400K
- Software sales: $100K
- Total: $500K
- Classification: SSTB (law)
- QBI deduction: $0 (above threshold, SSTB)

Option 2: Separate entities
- Law firm LLC: $400K (SSTB)
- Software LLC: $100K (not SSTB)

Law firm: $0 QBI deduction (SSTB)
Software: $20K QBI deduction (20% × $100K)

Net benefit: +$20,000 deduction

B) Shift to non-SSTB activities:

Example: Consultant shifting to product sales

Consulting (SSTB): $300K
Shift: Create online courses/software products

New model:
Consulting (SSTB): $150K
Product sales (not SSTB): $150K

At $350K income (above threshold):
Consulting: $0 deduction (SSTB, phased out)
Products: $30K deduction (20% × $150K, subject to wage/property test)

Strategy 4: Manage Your Taxable Income

The Problem: Crossing the income threshold starts chipping away at the deduction, and clearing the top of the phase-out range can eliminate it entirely (SSTBs) or cap it at the wage/property limits (everyone else). For high earners, that swing is worth tens of thousands.

The Solution: Use deductions and income timing to stay below thresholds.

Tactics:

A) Accelerate deductions into current year:

  • Make retirement contributions (Solo 401(k): up to $72,000 in 2026 if you're under 50, per IRS Notice 2025-67)
  • Buy equipment using Section 179/bonus depreciation
  • Prepay expenses (if cash method)
  • Take capital losses to offset gains

B) Defer income to next year:

  • Delay year-end invoicing
  • Defer bonuses or K-1 distributions
  • Use installment sales

Example:

BEFORE OPTIMIZATION:
Business profit (QBI): $580,000
Other deductions: $20,000
Taxable income: $560,000 (married filing jointly)

Status: Above $553,500 (top of the 2026 MFJ
phase-out range)
W-2 wages paid: $0, qualified property: $0
QBI deduction: $0
AFTER OPTIMIZATION:
Business profit: $580,000
Additional deductions:
- Solo 401(k) contribution: $72,000
- Equipment purchase (Section 179): $80,000
- HSA contribution (family): $8,750
New deductions total: $160,750

Taxable income: $399,250

Status: BELOW $403,500 threshold ✅
QBI after business-level deductions
(§179 + retirement): ~$428,000
QBI deduction: $79,850
(20% of QBI, capped at 20% of taxable income)

Swing: $0 → $79,850

Two mechanics worth noting in that example. The Section 179 purchase and the retirement contribution reduce QBI as well as taxable income, which is why the deduction is 20% of $428,000 rather than $580,000. And the deduction can never exceed 20% of taxable income minus net capital gain, which is what caps it at $79,850 here.


Strategy 5: Use Trusts for Income Splitting

Advanced strategy for high-income business owners.

The Problem: High-income taxpayers face full SSTB phase-out and W-2/property limitations.

The Solution: Distribute income to multiple trusts or family members in lower tax brackets who qualify for full QBI deduction.

Example:

Parent (SSTB attorney, married filing jointly):
$600,000 income
QBI deduction: $0 (SSTB, above $553,500)

Alternative structure:
Parent: $300,000 (below $403,500 MFJ threshold)
Child 1 trust: $150,000
Child 2 trust: $150,000
(Trusts use the $201,750 threshold)

Parent QBI deduction: $60,000 (20% × $300K)
Trust 1 QBI deduction: $30,000 (20% × $150K)
Trust 2 QBI deduction: $30,000 (20% × $150K)

Total QBI deduction: $120,000
vs. $0 under original structure

Tax savings: $42,000+ (at 35%)

Caution: This strategy requires careful legal structuring and must comply with "kiddie tax" rules and trust taxation. Under IRC § 643(f), the IRS can treat multiple trusts with substantially the same grantor and beneficiaries as a single trust if tax avoidance is a principal purpose. Consult a tax attorney.


Real Estate and the QBI Deduction

Rental Real Estate

Question: Does rental real estate qualify for the QBI deduction?

Answer: It depends on whether the activity rises to the level of a "trade or business."

Safe Harbor (IRS Notice 2019-07):

Rental real estate qualifies as a trade or business if you meet ALL of these requirements:

  1. Maintain separate books and records for each rental property

  2. Perform 250+ hours of rental services per year, including:

    • Advertising
    • Negotiating and executing leases
    • Verifying tenant information
    • Collection of rent
    • Daily operation, maintenance, and repair
    • Managing the property
    • Purchase of materials
    • Supervision of employees and contractors
  3. Maintain contemporaneous records (time logs)

  4. Attach a statement to your tax return electing the safe harbor

Legal Citation: Rev. Proc. 2019-38 - Safe harbor for rental real estate (finalizing IRS Notice 2019-07)

Example:

Taxpayer: Owns 3 rental properties
Total rental income: $120,000
Hours performing rental services: 280 hours
Maintains separate books: Yes
Timelog: Yes

Qualifies under safe harbor: ✅ Yes
QBI: $120,000
QBI deduction: $24,000 (20%)

If didn't qualify: $0 QBI deduction

Triple-Net Leases

Triple-net (NNN) leases generally do NOT qualify because the tenant is responsible for all property expenses, leaving minimal landlord involvement.

Result: Likely not a "trade or business" → No QBI deduction


Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them

Mistake #1: Not Claiming the Deduction

Problem: Business owners don't know about QBI deduction or forget to claim it

Consequences:

  • Miss out on 20% deduction
  • Overpay taxes by thousands/tens of thousands

Solution:

  • Always calculate QBI deduction
  • Use tax software or professional that handles Section 199A
  • File Form 8995 (or 8995-A if above threshold)

Mistake #2: Paying Too Little W-2 Wages (S-Corps)

Problem: S-Corp owners minimize W-2 wages to save payroll taxes, not realizing it hurts QBI

Consequences:

  • W-2 wage limitation drastically reduces QBI deduction
  • Net tax increase despite payroll tax savings

Solution:

  • Calculate optimal W-2 amount that:
    • Meets "reasonable compensation" requirement
    • Maximizes QBI deduction
    • Minimizes total tax (income + payroll)
  • Rule of thumb: at W-2 wages of about 2/7 of total S-Corp income (~28.6%), the 50% wage limit exactly equals the 20% tentative deduction; wages far beyond that point just add payroll tax

Mistake #3: Not Investing in Qualified Property

Problem: Service businesses with no equipment miss the property-based calculation

Consequences:

  • Limited or no QBI deduction above income thresholds
  • Leave tens of thousands in deductions on the table

Solution:

  • Invest in depreciable property before year-end
  • Buy equipment, vehicles, furniture, computers
  • Get both depreciation deduction AND improved QBI calculation

Mistake #4: Mixing SSTB and Non-SSTB Activities

Problem: Operating SSTB and non-SSTB businesses in the same entity

Consequences:

  • Entire entity treated as SSTB
  • Lose QBI deduction on non-SSTB income
  • Could cost $20,000+ in lost deductions

Solution:

  • Separate SSTB and non-SSTB activities into different entities
  • Document the separation clearly
  • Ensure activities are truly distinct

Mistake #5: Not Aggregating Eligible Businesses

Problem: Multiple businesses calculated separately when aggregation would help

Consequences:

  • Some businesses fail W-2/property test individually
  • Aggregate would pass the test
  • Miss out on QBI deduction

Solution:

  • Analyze whether businesses qualify for aggregation
  • File Form 8995-A with aggregation election
  • Combine W-2 wages and property across entities

Tax Reporting: How to Claim Your QBI Deduction

To claim the qualified business income deduction for 2026, you file one of two forms depending on the complexity of your situation. The deduction transfers to Form 1040, Line 13, reducing your taxable income before calculating the tax you owe.

Form 8995 (Simple Version)

Who uses it: Per the IRS instructions, you can file the simplified form only if both conditions hold:

  • Taxable income before the QBI deduction is at or below the threshold ($201,750 single/HoH, $201,775 MFS, $403,500 MFJ for 2026)
  • You are not a patron of a specified agricultural or horticultural cooperative

What it calculates:

  • 20% of QBI from each business
  • Total QBI deduction
  • Transfers to Form 1040, Line 13

How to complete:

  1. List each qualified business
  2. Enter QBI from each business (from Schedule C, K-1, etc.)
  3. Multiply by 20%
  4. Sum total QBI deduction

Our line-by-line Form 8995 guide walks through the whole one-page form.


Form 8995-A (Complex Version)

Who uses it:

  • Taxpayers with taxable income above the threshold (in or above the phase-out range)
  • Patrons of agricultural or horticultural cooperatives, at any income
  • Anyone applying SSTB phase-outs, aggregation elections, or the W-2 wage / qualified property limits

What it calculates:

  • QBI for each business
  • SSTB phase-out reduction
  • W-2 wages limitation
  • Qualified property limitation
  • Aggregation calculations
  • Final QBI deduction

Schedules (per the current IRS form):

  • Schedule A: Specified service trades or businesses (the SSTB applicable-percentage calculation)
  • Schedule B: Aggregation of business operations
  • Schedule C: Loss netting and carryforward
  • Schedule D: Special rules for patrons of agricultural or horticultural cooperatives

For the full walkthrough, see our Form 8995-A guide.


Does the QBI Deduction Expire?

No. The QBI deduction is now a permanent part of the tax code. It was originally set to expire on December 31, 2025, but the One Big Beautiful Bill Act repealed the sunset in July 2025, so the deduction remains fully available for 2026 and every year after.

Original Sunset Date

The QBI deduction was originally set to expire on December 31, 2025, reverting to pre-TCJA rules where pass-through owners received no special deduction.

The OBBBA Changes (2025)

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (H.R. 1, P.L. 119-21), signed July 4, 2025, made three changes:

Made the QBI deduction permanent (no longer expires after 2025)

Added a $400 minimum deduction - Starting in tax year 2026, taxpayers with at least $1,000 of QBI from one or more active businesses in which they materially participate are guaranteed a QBI deduction of at least $400 (both amounts inflation-adjusted after 2026)

Widened the phase-out ranges - $75,000 for single filers and $150,000 for joint filers starting in 2026, up from $50,000 / $100,000

Impact:

  • Business owners can now plan long-term strategies around the QBI deduction for 2026 and beyond
  • No 2026 "tax cliff" to prepare for
  • Small side businesses with modest QBI get at least $400 through the new minimum, provided the owner materially participates
  • Taxpayers in the phase-out zone lose the deduction more slowly than under prior law

Legal Citation: OBBBA § 70105 (P.L. 119-21) - Extension and enhancement of deduction for qualified business income


Clean Books for the QBI Calculation: How Jupid Helps

Every input in the QBI calculation comes from your books: net business income, W-2 wages paid, equipment purchases. Jupid is an AI accountant that keeps those inputs accurate all year. It connects to your business bank account, categorizes transactions with 95.9% accuracy, and accepts receipts forwarded over WhatsApp or iMessage. When you want to know whether you're drifting toward the $201,750 threshold, ask in chat what your net profit is so far, and you still have time to make a retirement contribution or schedule an equipment purchase before December 31.

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Action Checklist: Maximizing Your QBI Deduction

Before Year-End

  • Calculate your projected taxable income for 2026
  • Determine if you're below, within, or above the phase-out threshold
  • Classify your business (SSTB or non-SSTB)
  • Calculate your QBI from all sources
  • Review your W-2 wages (if S-Corp)
  • Inventory your qualified property (unadjusted basis)
  • Consider equipment purchases to increase property basis
  • Evaluate aggregation opportunities (multiple businesses)
  • Project your QBI deduction under different scenarios

Tax Planning Strategies

  • Optimize W-2 wages (S-Corps) to maximize QBI while minimizing total tax
  • Invest in qualified property before December 31
  • Time income and deductions to stay below thresholds (if close)
  • Separate SSTB and non-SSTB activities (if applicable)
  • Make retirement contributions (reduces taxable income)
  • Consider aggregation election (multiple businesses)

When Filing Taxes

  • Complete Form 8995 or Form 8995-A
  • Report QBI from all sources (Schedule C, K-1s, rentals)
  • Calculate SSTB phase-out (if applicable)
  • Apply W-2 wages and qualified property tests (if above threshold)
  • File aggregation election (if applicable)
  • Transfer QBI deduction to Form 1040, Line 13
  • Maintain supporting documentation for 7 years

Throughout the Year

  • Track business income and expenses
  • Monitor taxable income projections
  • Document rental real estate hours (if applicable)
  • Track qualified property additions
  • Review QBI deduction quarterly
  • Adjust estimated tax payments based on QBI deduction

Resources and Citations

IRS Forms and Official Sources

Tax Code and Regulations

  • IRC § 199A - Qualified business income deduction
  • IRC § 199A(b) - Computation of deduction
  • IRC § 199A(c) - Qualified business income defined
  • IRC § 199A(d) - Specified service trade or business
  • Treas. Reg. § 1.199A-1 - Operational rules
  • Treas. Reg. § 1.199A-4 - Aggregation rules
  • Treas. Reg. § 1.199A-5 - Specified service trades or businesses

Notices and Guidance

  • Rev. Proc. 2019-38 - Safe harbor for rental real estate (finalizing Notice 2019-07)
  • Rev. Proc. 2025-32 - Tax year 2026 inflation adjustments (QBI thresholds in § 4.26)
  • IRS Notice 2025-67 - 2026 retirement plan limits

Legislative Updates

  • Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (2017) - Created Section 199A
  • One Big Beautiful Bill Act, H.R. 1 (P.L. 119-21, 2025), § 70105 - Made the QBI deduction permanent, widened phase-out ranges, added the $400 minimum deduction

Final Thoughts

The QBI deduction is one of the most valuable—and most complex—tax benefits available to pass-through business owners. With the potential to deduct up to 20% of your business income, this deduction can save you tens of thousands of dollars annually.

The key is understanding:

  • Your income thresholds and whether limitations apply
  • Whether your business is an SSTB
  • How W-2 wages and qualified property affect your deduction
  • Strategic planning opportunities to maximize the deduction

For high-income business owners: Don't assume you can't benefit from the QBI deduction just because you're above the threshold. With proper planning—optimizing W-2 wages, investing in qualified property, aggregating businesses, and managing taxable income—you can still capture significant tax savings.

For SSTB owners: The phase-out is painful, but not insurmountable. Consider separating non-SSTB activities, shifting business models, or using income timing strategies to stay below the complete phase-out threshold.

Remember: The QBI deduction is now permanent (as of 2025), so you can plan long-term tax strategies around it. This isn't a temporary benefit—it's a fundamental part of running a profitable pass-through business.


Disclaimer

This article provides general information about tax deductions and should not be considered tax advice. The QBI deduction involves complex calculations and multiple limitations that vary by individual circumstances. Tax laws change frequently. For advice specific to your situation, consult with a qualified tax professional.

Tax Year: 2026 Last Updated: July 11, 2026

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Slava Akulov
Slava Akulov

CEO & Co-Founder

Fintech CEO with 10+ years building accounting and financial technology products. Previously co-founded and scaled an AI-powered accounting platform to $30M revenue and 100K+ business users, achieving 30,000 customers per accountant through automation — recognized by CNBC as a top fintech company. Holds a Master's in Management Information Systems. At Jupid, he leads the development of AI-native bookkeeping, tax, and compliance tools designed for freelancers and small business owners.

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