You wrote a check to your favorite charity last year. Maybe a few checks. So why didn’t it show up as a deduction on your tax return?
The short answer: the standard deduction is probably bigger than all your itemized deductions combined. And that means your charitable giving, your mortgage interest, and your state and local taxes aren’t doing anything for you at tax time.
There are two ways to reduce your taxable income through deductions on a federal tax return. You can itemize, which means adding up specific eligible expenses and deducting the total from your adjusted gross income (AGI). Or you can take the standard deduction, which is a flat amount the IRS gives every taxpayer automatically.
For 2026, the standard deduction is $16,100 for single filers and $32,200 for married couples filing jointly. Those numbers are permanently higher thanks to the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), signed into law on July 4, 2025, which locked in the larger standard deductions that were originally introduced by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act back in 2017.
You can only use one or the other. You either itemize or take the standard deduction — whichever gives you a bigger benefit.
The main itemized deductions most people encounter are:
Here’s the problem. For a lot of people, those numbers just don’t add up to more than the standard deduction.
Say you’re a married couple. You gave $5,000 to charity, paid $5,000 in mortgage interest, and had $5,000 in state and local taxes. That’s $15,000 in itemized deductions. Sounds like a lot. But the standard deduction is $32,200. You’d be leaving $17,200 on the table by itemizing. So you take the standard deduction, and none of those individual expenses make any difference on your return.
One thing worth noting: the SALT deduction cap changed significantly under the OBBBA. From 2018 through 2024, taxpayers could only deduct $10,000 in state and local taxes, no matter how much they actually paid. For 2026, that cap jumps to $40,400 for joint filers (it was $40,000 for 2025), and it’ll increase by 1% each year through 2029 before reverting to $10,000 in 2030.
If you live in a high-tax state like New York or California, where your combined state income and property taxes can easily exceed $30,000 or $40,000, this could change the math significantly. That bigger SALT deduction, combined with mortgage interest and charitable contributions, might push your itemized total past the standard deduction. It’s worth running the numbers, especially if you were automatically taking the standard deduction under the old $10,000 cap.
For most people in lower-tax states, though, the standard deduction will still win.
None of this means you should stop giving. But it’s worth understanding that for most taxpayers, regular charitable contributions aren’t generating a tax benefit right now.
There is a small bright spot. Starting in 2026, non-itemizers can deduct up to $1,000 ($2,000 for joint filers) in cash charitable contributions on top of the standard deduction. It’s not huge, but it does mean your giving isn’t completely invisible to the tax code even if you don’t itemize.
For people who are more charitably inclined and want a real tax benefit, charitable bunching has become a popular strategy. Instead of giving $5,000 a year, you give $20,000 or $25,000 every three or four years. In the year you make that larger gift, your itemized deductions may exceed the standard deduction, and you actually get the tax break. In the off years, you take the standard deduction as usual.
Donor Advised Funds (DAFs) make this a lot easier. You contribute a lump sum to the fund in a single year, take the deduction that year, and then distribute grants to your preferred charities over time. You get the tax benefit upfront without having to rush all your giving into one year. One thing to know: contributions to DAFs don’t qualify for the new non-itemizer deduction mentioned above — that only applies to direct cash gifts to public charities.
For taxpayers who do itemize, there’s also a new wrinkle in 2026. The OBBBA introduced a 0.5% AGI floor on charitable deductions. That means only the portion of your giving that exceeds 0.5% of your AGI is deductible. If your AGI is $300,000, the first $1,500 of charitable contributions doesn’t count. It’s a small hit, but it’s another reason bunching larger gifts into fewer years can make sense.
These rules shouldn’t change whether you give or whether you buy a house. But they’re worth understanding, because a lot of people are surprised when tax time rolls around and their deductions didn’t move the needle.
The standard deduction is big, and it’s not going anywhere. If you’re charitably inclined, a little planning ahead — bunching donations, using a Donor Advised Fund, or just knowing where you stand relative to the standard deduction — can go a long way toward making sure your giving works for you on both sides: the causes you care about and your tax return.
If you’re not sure whether itemizing makes sense for your situation, or you want to think through a charitable giving strategy, we’re always happy to talk it through.
This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute personalized financial, tax, or investment advice. Willcox Wealth Management is a registered investment adviser. Please consult with a qualified professional before making financial decisions based on the information presented here.
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