Why Does Overtime Look Over-Taxed? What You’ll Actually Keep (2025)

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TL;DR Version 

Your overtime isn’t taxed at a higher rate: your employer is just estimating. And there’s a new 2025 federal break on overtime, but you’ll likely see it when you file, not on every paycheck. Here’s what to know.

You picked up overtime. You earned it. 💪

Then payday hits and you’re like… “Wait, where did my money go?”

Let’s clear it up.

1) Overtime Isn’t “Taxed More.” 

Your job is just guessing your taxes. Payroll takes out taxes based on what you made this pay period. So if you worked extra hours, the system may act like: “Cool, you make this much every week now.”

That can make your check look like it’s taxed much more, but that’s an estimated withholding, not your final tax bill.

2) The New Overtime Tax Break Is Real, But It’s Not Magic

For 2025–2028, there’s a new federal tax break tied to overtime. It usually does not mean that your entire overtime pay is “tax-free.”

3) What Usually Counts Is the “Extra” Part of Overtime

Most overtime is time-and-a-half.

Example:

  • Regular rate: $20/hr
  • Overtime rate: $30/hr

That overtime hour is basically:

  • $20 regular pay + $10 extra premium

The new federal break is generally tied to that extra premium part.

4) So What’s the Real Impact?

This is a deduction, which means:

  • It lowers your taxable income
  • The value depends on your tax bracket

Translated to non-accountant-speak, that means that you’ll likely see the benefit most clearly when you file taxes, not instantly on every paycheck.

5) What Won’t Go Away (So You’re Not Surprised)

Even with the new federal break:

  • Social Security & Medicare are still subtracted from your pay
  • Your state/local taxes may still apply (yep, even on overtime)

Do This Now (So You Don’t Miss Money Later)

✅ Save your pay stubs or download them from your payroll app
✅ Keep an eye on overtime hours and your regular rate
✅ At tax time, use your W-2 and pay records to claim the overtime break correctly

Bottom line: Overtime still puts more money in your pocket. And the new federal break may add a little more, as long as you keep records.

👉 Want help tracking your OT pay? We’ve created two documents to help track your time when it comes to filing your 2025 taxes.

✅ Download our free Overtime Pay Tracker. This simple time tracker can help log your hours, rate, and stubs so you don’t miss a dollar at tax time. For a free printable PDF download, click the text link above. 
✅ You can also access this free 2025 Overtime Tax Checklist to help you keep track of your OT pay. Click the text link above for a printable PDF file download.

Quick note: This is general info, not personal tax advice.

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