Here's how your favorite Staten Island waitstaff, restaurants will be impacted by new tax rule on tips
Briefly

Here's how your favorite Staten Island waitstaff, restaurants will be impacted by new tax rule on tips
"No tax on tips will put more money into some workers' pockets, which I'm sure they'll be happy about."
"But it's also going to be critical that New York State preserves the tip credit, to help save workers' tips and jobs, and to support the local restaurants that employ them."
"If it's helping the team, it's great... but I don't think it's as big of an impact as people seem to think."
"There's a cap on it... I'm worried people aren't going to read the fine print and jump to conclusions."
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act includes a No Tax on Tips provision allowing tipped workers to deduct up to $25,000 in tip income from federal taxes through 2028. The deduction applies to employees in restaurants, bars, salons and hospitality venues. National and independent restaurant advocacy groups are pushing for adjustments and potential permanence. Local restaurateurs express cautious optimism while warning that caps and fine print may limit benefits and urging preservation of New York State's tip credit to protect workers' tips and jobs. The relief arrives amid pandemic recovery and rising operational costs, offering targeted financial help for some workers and businesses.
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