Podcasters, influencers make Trump White House’s list of jobs covered under no-tax tips list
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Podcasters, influencers make Trump White House’s list of jobs covered under no-tax tips list

Why This Matters

Golf caddies, blackjack dealers and house painters are covered, too, according to the Treasury Department.

September 4, 2025
11:24 PM
3 min read
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Economy·TaxesPodcasters, influencers make Trump White House’s list of jobs covered under no-tax tips listBy Fatima HusseinBy The Associated PressBy Fatima HusseinBy The Associated Press Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent visits Martin's Tavern, Monday, Sept.

1, 2025, in the Georgetown neighborhood of Washington, during an area restaurant tour no taxes on tips and overtime.

AP Photo/Jacquelyn MartinGolf caddies, blackjack dealers and house painters are among the jobs covered under the Trump administration’s preliminary list of occupations not required to pay income tax on their tips under Republicans’ new tax cuts and spending bill.

A bit more unexpected? Podcasters and social media influencers will also be excluded from forking over a portion of their tips, according to the list released Tuesday by the Treasury Department.

The vision in the law signed by President Donald Trump in July eliminates federal income taxes on tips for people working in jobs that have traditionally received them.

It’s temporary and runs from 2025 until 2028. It applies to people who make less than $160,000 in 2025.

The Yale Budget Lab estimates that there were roughly 4 million workers in tipped occupations in 2023, which amounts to roughly 2.5% of all jobs.

The administration was required to publish a list of qualifying occupations within 90 days of the bill’s signing. The full list of occupations is located on the Treasury Department website.

They are broken down into eight , including beverage and food service; entertainment and events; hospitality and guest services; services; personal services; personal appearance and wellness; recreation and instruction; and transportation and dery.

Among other jobs exempted from tax on tips are sommeliers, cocktail waiters, pastry chefs, cake bakers, bingo workers, dancers, DJs, clowns, ers, online creators, ushers, maids, gardeners, electricians, house cleaners, tow truck drivers, wedding planners, personal care aides, tutors, au pairs, massage therapists, yoga instructors, cobblers, skydiving pilots, ski instructors, parking garage attendants, dery drivers and movers.

A report from the Budget Lab shows that the effects of the law would be small, given that tipped workers tend to be lower income.

More than 37% of tipped workers, or over one third, earned income low enough that they faced no federal income tax in 2022.

“The larger and far more uncertain effect would stem from behavioral changes incentivized by the bill, such as substitution into tipped employment and tipped income, which would increase the bill’s overall cost,” states the report, which was written by Ernie Tedeschi, the director of economics at the Budget Lab.

Congressional budget analysts ject the “No Tax on Tips” vision would increase the deficit by $40 billion through 2028.

The nonpartisan Joint Committee on Taxation estimated in June that the tips deduction will cost $32 billion over 10 years.

Only tips reported to the employer and noted on a worker’s W-2, their end-of-year tax summary, will qualify.

Payroll taxes, which pay for Social Security and Medicare, would still be collected along with state and local taxes. Polling shows Americans have panned the big bill. Half U.S.

adults expect the new tax law will help the rich, according to the poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Re.

Most — 6 in 10 — think it will do more to hurt than help low-income people. Fortune Global Forum returns Oct. 26–27, 2025 in Riyadh.

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