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Updated November 15, 2017
Key Issues in Tax Reform: Itemized Tax Deductions
Brief Summary of Current Law 
Figure 1. Itemized Deductions Estimated to 
Individual tax filers have the option to claim the standard 
Contribute Most to Revenue Losses ($ Bil.), FY2018 
deduction or itemize their tax deductions, typically 
choosing whichever provides the larger tax benefit. 
Itemized deductions are available for a diverse set of 
activities such as: mortgage interest, charitable giving, state 
and local sales or income taxes, real property taxes, 
unreimbursed employee business expenses, and 
extraordinary medical expenses. For high-income filers, a 
limit on itemized deductions (“Pease” limitation) might 
apply, but this provision actually is structured more like an 
income surtax since it is triggered by income and not by the 
amount of deductions claimed. 
As shown i
n Table 1, 30% of all filers in the 2015 tax year 
chose to itemize. The average sum of itemized deductions 
 
Source: CRS analysis of JCT, 
Estimates of Federal Tax Expenditures, 
among all filers was $28,214, but this total varied widely 
For Fiscal Years 2016-2020, 115th Congress, 1st session, January 3, 
from one end of the income spectrum to the other.  
2017, JCX-3-17. 
Table 1. Tax Data on Itemizers, Tax Year 2015 
Notes: CRS tabulated the sum of all individual tax expenditures 
included in the JCT publication as $1,298 billion in FY2018. Numbers 
Average Sum of 
might not add to 100% due to rounding.  
Share of Tax 
Deductions 
Adjusted Gross 
Filers Who 
Claimed per 
The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA; H.R. 1) 
Income (AGI) 
Itemize 
Itemizer 
Table 2 summarizes changes to select itemized deduction 
provisions proposed in the House and Senate versions of 
$1 to $19,999 
5% 
$15,596  
the TCJA. Both versions would repeal most itemized 
$20k to $49,999 
17% 
$16,115  
deductions or at least restrict them, relative to current law, 
beginning in 2018. The House version retains individual 
$50k to $99,999 
44% 
$19,199  
itemized deductions only for mortgage interest, state and 
$100k to $199,999 
76% 
$25,517  
local real property taxes (up to $10,000), and charitable 
contributions. 
$200k to $499,999 
94% 
$43,427  
$500k to $1 mil ion 
93% 
$84,820  
The House and Senate versions would also repeal personal 
exemptions, increase the standard deduction, and index the 
$1 million + 
91% 
$436,732  
standard deduction to inflation using the Chained Consumer 
All tax filers 
30% 
$28,214  
Price Index for all Urban Consumers (C-CPI-U) instead of 
the current unchained CPI-U. Under current law, the 
Source: CRS analysis of the Internal Revenue Service’s Statistics of 
standard deduction in 2018 for married joint filers is 
Income data, Tables 1.4 and 2.1, at https://www.irs.gov/uac/soi-tax-
$13,000 with a combined personal exemption of $8,300 (for 
stats-individual-statistical-tables-by-size-of-adjusted-gross-income.  
a total of $21,300). Single filers can claim a standard 
deduction of $6,500 plus a personal exemption of $4,150 
Budgetary Issues Under Current Law 
(for a total of $10,650). Within certain income limits, 
Some itemized deductions rank among the largest 
additional personal exemptions can be claimed for any 
individual tax expenditures, or revenue losses compared to 
dependents.  
a broader baseline of income. Specifically, the deductions 
for mortgage interest, state and local taxes, and charitable 
Economic Issues. From an economic perspective, itemized 
contributions rank within the top 10 largest individual tax 
deductions target a mixed bag of economic activities. Some 
expenditures, according to estimates by the Joint 
provisions encourage certain types of behavior (e.g., 
Committee on Taxation (JCT)
. Figure 1 indicates that the 
purchasing a mortgaged house, charitable giving), account 
five largest itemized deductions, in terms of revenue loss, 
for circumstances that reduce a filer’s ability to pay taxes 
account for $264 billion (without interaction effects), or 
(e.g., extraordinary medical expenses, unreimbursed 
20% of all individual tax expenditures, in FY2018.  
employee business expenses, casualty and theft losses), or 
subsidize state and local government spending (e.g., 
deduction for state and local nonbusiness taxes). Some of 
these activities could have positive or negative spillover 
https://crsreports.congress.gov 
Key Issues in Tax Reform: Itemized Tax Deductions 
effects that could affect assessments of their justification in 
Changes to specific itemized deductions in both versions of 
the tax code. Alternatively, some of these benefits could be 
the TCJA would have mixed distributional effects. Broad 
delivered through direct spending programs to reduce the 
repeal of itemized deductions, particularly for state and 
complexity and enhance the progressivity of the tax code. 
local income taxes, and increasing the standard deduction 
would increase progressivity of the individual tax code.  
A broader argument can be made that itemized deductions 
are regressive, as most of the benefits of itemized 
Post-TCJA, the tax benefits from itemized deductions are 
deductions accrue to higher-income filers. Itemized 
likely to be even more concentrated in higher-income 
deductions are typically claimed by one-third of individual 
ranges. Middle and upper-middle income taxpayers will be 
filers, and most of these filers are middle- to higher-income. 
less likely to itemize due to the higher standard deduction 
The provisions are structured as a deduction also means the 
and the repeal and modification of other provisions.  
tax benefit of an itemized deduction increases with one’s 
top marginal tax rate.  
Budgetary Issues. Limits on itemized deductions raise 
revenue by increasing the amount of income subject to 
Repeal or restriction of itemized deductions combined with 
taxation and potentially subjecting more income to higher 
an increase in the standard deduction will decrease the 
marginal tax rates. In both versions of the TCJA, the 
share of tax filers that itemize under the changes proposed 
revenue increase from limiting itemized deductions would 
in the TCJA. The Chief of Staff to the JCT testified during 
be partially offset by more tax filers claiming the standard 
markup of the House version that the share of tax filers that 
deduction. Indexing the standard deduction to the C-CPI-U 
itemize would decrease from 29% to 6% in 2018 under that 
will reduce budgetary costs over time because this chained 
proposal. Although both versions of the TCJA maintain 
index grows more slowly than the unchained CPI-U used 
deductions for mortgage interest and charitable giving, for 
under current law. 
example, only those with total itemized deductions 
exceeding the increased standard deduction will be 
 
motivated by the tax-based incentives to engage in further 
activity related to those provisions.  
 
Table 2.Changes to Select Provisions in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, Effective Tax Year 2018 
Modification to Senate Chairman’s Mark  
(All provisions except C-CPI-U indexation  
Provision 
House Version (H.R. 1) 
expire after 2025) 
Standard deduction  
$12,200 (S); $18,300 (HOH); $24,400 (MFJ) 
$12,000 (S); $18,000 (HOH); $24,000 (MFJ) 
(2018 amounts by filing status)
 
Indexed to C-CPI-U inflation beginning in 2020
  Indexed to C-CPI-U inflation beginning in 2019
 
“Pease” limitation
 
Repeal
 
Repeal
 
Select itemized deductions 
State and local nonbusiness taxes
   
 
–Income or sales, personal property  Repeal
 
Repeal
 
–Real estate 
Restrict deduction to $10k
 
Repeal
 
Mortgage interest
 
Restrict deduction to first $500,000 in 
Maintain current law restriction to interest deduction 
indebtedness on primary residence and repeal  on first $1m in mortgage indebtedness on primary or 
deduction for home equity indebtedness
 
secondary residences but repeal deduction for home 
equity indebtedness
 
Charitable contributions
 
Maintain current law, with modifications
 
Maintain current law, with modifications
 
Medical expenses deduction
 
Repeal
 
Maintain current law restriction that costs are only 
deductible if they exceed 10% of adj. gross income
 
Personal casualty losses
 
Repeal. Preserve the an above-the-line 
Restrict deduction to casualty losses associated with 
deduction for certain casualty losses 
certain disasters
 
associated with special 2017 disaster legislation
 
Sources: CRS summary of Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (H.R. 1) and JCT documents. See JCT, 
Description of H.R. 1, The “Tax Cuts and Jobs Act”, JCX-
50-17, November 9, 2017; 
Description of the Chairman’s Modification to the Chairman’s Mark of the “Tax Cuts and Jobs Act”, JCX-56-17, November 
14, 2017; and 
Description of the Chairman’s Mark of the “Tax Cuts and Jobs Act”, JCX-51-17, November 9, 2017. 
 
Sean Lowry, Analyst in Public Finance   
 
IF10579
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Key Issues in Tax Reform: Itemized Tax Deductions 
 
 
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