Senior Tax Deduction Calculator 2026 β€” OBBBA $4,000 Senior Deduction

Calculate how much you save with the new OBBBA $4,000 senior deduction. See total senior deductions, federal tax savings, and Social Security tax impact.

Must be 65 or older by Dec 31 to qualify
Enter spouse's age for MFJ; enter 0 if not applicable
$
Total SS benefits received (Box 5 of SSA-1099)
$
Taxable distributions from retirement accounts
$
%
Many states exempt SS income β€” enter effective rate
Common income levels:
$0
Total Federal Tax Saved
$0
OBBBA Senior Deduction
$0
Total Senior Add-Ons
$0
State Tax Saved

Senior Deduction: Tax Comparison Line by Line

Item Without OBBBA With OBBBA Savings

How to Use This Senior Tax Deduction Calculator

Enter your age (must be 65+ by Dec 31), Social Security income, pension/IRA distributions, and any other income. The calculator computes your MAGI, checks the phase-out, and shows exactly how much the new OBBBA $4,000 deduction reduces your tax bill.

The comparison table shows your tax side-by-side: without the OBBBA deduction (under prior law) and with it. Note that reducing AGI can also reduce the taxable portion of Social Security benefits β€” creating additional savings beyond the direct deduction benefit.

The Formula

MAGI = AGI (pension + other income + 50% of SS benefits)
OBBBA Phase-Out: $75K–$100K (single), $150K–$200K (MFJ)
OBBBA Deduction = $4,000 Γ— Phase-Out Factor
Senior Add-On (existing) = $2,000 single / $1,600 per 65+ spouse MFJ
Total Extra Deduction = OBBBA Deduction + Senior Add-On
Tax Saved = Total Extra Deduction Γ— Marginal Rate

Example

68-year-old single filer: $30,000 SS + $20,000 pension, 5% state tax:
Gross income: $50,000 (pension + other) + $15,000 (50% of SS) = $50,000 AGI before deductions
Standard deduction: $16,100 | Senior add-on: $2,000 | OBBBA deduction: $4,000
Total deductions: $21,000 | Taxable SS portion: reduced below 50% threshold
MAGI $50,000 is below $75,000 phase-out β€” full $4,000 OBBBA deduction
Federal savings: $4,000 Γ— 12% = $480 | State savings: $4,000 Γ— 5% = $200
Total annual savings: ~$680+ (plus any SS taxation reduction)
Extended

Social Security Tax Impact Analysis

See how the extra deduction changes the taxable portion of your Social Security benefits across all three SS taxation tiers

The extra deduction may reduce your "combined income" below Social Security taxation thresholds, creating additional savings beyond the direct deduction benefit.

SS Taxation Tier Combined Income Threshold Without OBBBA With OBBBA Impact

How Deductions Change Your SS Taxable Amount

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the new OBBBA $4,000 senior deduction?
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) adds an extra $4,000 deduction for taxpayers who are age 65 or older by the end of the tax year. This is on top of the existing standard deduction and the existing senior add-on deduction ($2,000 for single filers, $1,600 per qualifying spouse for MFJ). The $4,000 OBBBA deduction is subject to a MAGI phase-out starting at $75,000 (single) / $150,000 (MFJ).
How does the OBBBA senior deduction interact with Social Security taxation?
Social Security benefits become taxable when your combined income (AGI + nontaxable interest + 50% of SS benefits) exceeds $25,000 (single) or $32,000 (MFJ). The additional OBBBA deduction reduces your AGI, which can lower your combined income below these thresholds β€” potentially reducing the taxable portion of your SS from 85% to 50% or even 0%. This creates a multiplier effect on your tax savings.
Who qualifies for the OBBBA senior deduction?
You must be age 65 or older by December 31st of the tax year (the same rule as the existing senior standard deduction bump). You also must have MAGI below the phase-out threshold: $75,000 for single/HoH/MFS filers, $150,000 for married filing jointly. The $4,000 deduction phases out completely at $100,000 (single) / $200,000 (MFJ).
What is the total extra deduction seniors get in 2026?
In 2026, a senior gets three layers of deductions: (1) standard deduction ($16,100 single / $32,200 MFJ), (2) existing senior add-on ($2,000 single, $1,600 per qualifying 65+ spouse for MFJ), and (3) new OBBBA deduction ($4,000, subject to phase-out). A single senior under the MAGI limit gets $16,100 + $2,000 + $4,000 = $21,000 total, versus $16,100 for a younger filer.
Does the senior deduction affect Medicare premiums (IRMAA)?
IRMAA (Income-Related Monthly Adjustment Amount) is based on your MAGI from 2 years prior. Since the OBBBA deduction reduces your AGI (and therefore your MAGI), it could potentially keep you below an IRMAA tier threshold, saving you on Medicare Part B and D premiums. The IRMAA tiers for 2026 start at $106,000 (single) and $212,000 (MFJ). This is an additional potential benefit not shown in this calculator.