Standard Deduction in Texas
Texas (TX) has no state income tax for 2025, so there is no state standard deduction. The only standard deduction a Texas resident claims is the federal one: $15,000 for single filers and $30,000 for married filing jointly.
2025 Standard Deduction in Texas
| Filing Status | Standard Deduction |
|---|---|
| Single | N/A |
| Married Filing Jointly | N/A |
| Federal (for comparison) | $15,000 / $30,000 |
How the Texas Standard Deduction Works
Texas has no state income tax for 2025, so there is no separate state standard deduction to claim — there is nothing to deduct it from. The only standard deduction that applies to a Texas resident is the federal one: $15,000 for single filers and $30,000 for married filing jointly in tax year 2025, claimed on your federal Form 1040.
The standard deduction is the amount you can subtract from gross income without itemizing. In Texas, it is claimed before the federal rates apply (there is no state tax to deduct against), which is why a larger deduction directly lowers the income that gets taxed. To see the dollar effect on a specific income, run the figure through the income tax calculator.
Texas is one of nine U.S. states without a broad-based personal income tax. Residents keep more of each paycheck, but the state typically funds itself through higher sales tax, property tax, or severance tax. Whether the no-income-tax structure leaves a household better off depends on spending patterns and home ownership, not on salary level alone.
What This Page Cannot Tell You
The standard-deduction figures above describe the statutory state-level rules. Your actual state tax liability depends on credits (earned-income credit, child credit, dependent credit), itemized deductions, retirement-income exclusions, local-government taxes (city or county income tax in some states), and federal taxable-income conformity rules. None of those interactions are computed here.
This page is informational and is not tax advice. For filing decisions, consult a qualified tax professional and the official IRS publications and Texas Department of Revenue instructions for tax year 2025. The Tax Foundation publishes annual state-tax-burden comparisons at taxfoundation.org if you want a national context for the Texas numbers above.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Texas standard deduction for 2025?
Texas (TX) has no state income tax for 2025, so there is no state standard deduction. The only standard deduction a Texas resident claims is the federal one: $15,000 for single filers and $30,000 for married filing jointly.
Is the Texas standard deduction different for single and married filers?
Texas has no state income tax, so there is no state standard deduction that varies by filing status. Federally, the 2025 standard deduction is $15,000 for single filers and $30,000 for married filing jointly.
How does the Texas standard deduction compare to the federal one?
Texas has no state income tax for 2025, so there is no separate state standard deduction to claim — there is nothing to deduct it from. The only standard deduction that applies to a Texas resident is the federal one: $15,000 for single filers and $30,000 for married filing jointly in tax year 2025, claimed on your federal Form 1040.
Should I take the standard deduction or itemize in Texas?
Texas has no state income tax, so the standard-versus-itemized choice only matters on your federal return. Itemize federally only if your deductible expenses (mortgage interest, state and local taxes up to the cap, charitable gifts, large medical costs) exceed $15,000 (single) or $30,000 (married).
Where does this standard deduction figure come from?
The Texas standard deduction shown here is compiled from official state tax authority publications and the Tax Foundation's annual state tax data, for tax year 2025 (last refreshed April 2026). Federal standard-deduction figures are from the IRS Revenue Procedures. State legislatures occasionally adjust these amounts; verify against the official Texas Department of Revenue instructions before filing. This page is informational and not tax advice.