Understanding IRS Schedule A: Itemized Deductions

Schedule A allows taxpayers to claim specific deductions that may exceed the standard deduction amount.

Key Itemized Deduction Categories
  • Medical Expenses: Deductible portion exceeding 7.5% of AGI
  • Taxes Paid: State/local income or sales tax (up to $10K cap)
  • Home Interest: Mortgage interest on first $750,000 of debt
  • Charitable Gifts: Cash donations up to 60% of AGI
  • Casualty Losses: Only federally declared disaster losses
When Itemizing Makes Sense
  • Your total deductions exceed the standard deduction ($13,850 single / $27,700 married in 2023)
  • You have significant mortgage interest or property taxes
  • You made large charitable contributions
  • You had major unreimbursed medical expenses

Taxpayers in high-tax states often benefit most from itemizing.

Critical Documentation Needed
  • Medical: Receipts, insurance statements, mileage logs
  • Taxes: Property tax bills, state tax withholding records
  • Interest: Form 1098 from mortgage lender
  • Donations: Acknowledgement letters for gifts over $250
Common Limitations to Know
  • State/local tax (SALT) deduction capped at $10,000
  • Mortgage interest deduction limited to primary/second homes
  • Charitable cash donations limited to 60% of AGI
  • Miscellaneous deductions no longer allowed (2018-2025)
Related Tax Forms
  • Form 1040 (Main tax return)
  • Form 1098 (Mortgage interest statement)
  • Form 8283 (Non-cash charitable contributions)
  • Form 4684 (Casualty losses)

Should You Itemize or Take the Standard Deduction?

KARME Tax Services provides:

  • Deduction optimization analysis
  • Documentation review for audit protection
  • Year-round tax planning to maximize write-offs
  • State-specific deduction strategies