Tax Credits or Tax Deductions: Which Will Save You More?
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Although paying taxes is a fact of life, the IRS offers taxpayers the ability to reduce what they owe via various tax credits and tax deductions. A tax credit reduces the amount of taxes you owe dollar-for-dollar, while a tax deduction reduces your taxable income. A tax credit saves you more money and so a more powerful than a tax deduction.
Here’s what you need to know about the differences between tax deductions and tax credits and how they can help you reduce your 2025 tax bill and maximize your tax refund.
Tax Credit vs. Tax Deduction — What It Means for Your Tax Refund
The primary difference between a tax credit versus a tax deduction is that a credit reduces the amount of tax you owe, and a deduction reduces your taxable income.
Tax Credit vs. Tax Deduction – Side-by-Side Example
If your earn $50,000 and decide to take a standard deduction (deduction of $15,000), you will have a taxable income of $35,000. Once you apply credits and deductions you will owe $4,000 in taxes. Here’s side-by-side table to help break it down:
| Feature | Tax Credit | Tax Deduction |
|---|---|---|
| Benefit amount | $1,000 | $1,000 |
| Impacts | Tax bill | Taxable income |
| New taxable income | $35,000 | $34,000 |
| Tax savings | $1,000 | Reduction is based on your bracket |
| How much you taxes you owe | $4,000 – $1,000 = $3,000 | If you’re in the 12% bracket, you save $120 and you owe taxes on $3,880 |
How a Tax Credit Affects Your Refund
The value of a tax credit is easy to measure because each dollar of credit reduces your tax liability by one dollar.
For example, if your tax liability for the year is $10,000 but you have a $2,000 tax credit, your tax liability drops to $8,000. If your liability was $2,000, the $2,000 credit would reduce it to $0.
What that means for your refund depends on how much tax you paid during the tax year.
Had you paid the entire $10,000 tax liability through tax withholding from your paycheck, you’d receive a $2,000 refund. If, on the other hand, you’d only had $8,000 withheld, you wouldn’t owe any additional tax, but you wouldn’t get a refund because you’d have paid the amount you owed after applying the credit.
How a Tax Deduction Affects Your Refund
How a tax deduction affects your refund depends on your tax bracket because a tax deduction only reduces your taxable income.
Tax brackets are the seven layers of income to which a particular tax rate applies. For 2026, the tax brackets are:
| Income Tax Rate | Lowest Annual Income | Highest Annual Income |
|---|---|---|
| 10% | $0 | $11,925 (single)/$23,850 (married filing jointly) |
| 12% | $11,926 | $48,475 (single)/$96,950 (married filing jointly) |
| 22% | $48,476 | $103,350 (single)/$206,700 (married filing jointly) |
| 24% | $103,351 | $197,300 (single)/$394,600 (married filing jointly) |
| 32% | $197,301 | $250,525 (single)/$501,050 (married filing jointly) |
| 35% | $250,828 | $626,350 (single)/$751,600 (married filing jointly) |
| 37% | $626,351 | And up |
Your tax bracket is the one that applies to the last dollar you earned. So, if you had $40,000 in income (single filing status), you’d be in the 12% tax bracket — your first $11,925 would be taxed at 10%, and your income from $11,926 to $40,000 would be taxed at 12%.
The tax rate for your last dollar earned — 12% in this example — is your marginal tax rate. The higher your marginal tax rate, the bigger your potential refund.
To find out how much a deduction saves you, multiply your marginal tax rate by the amount of the deduction. For example, if you can deduct $7,000 for the contributions you made to a traditional IRA and you fall in the 12% tax bracket, multiply $7,000 by 0.12 to find that the deduction saves you $840 on your taxes. If you were in the 32% tax bracket that tax year, that same $7,000 deduction would save you $2,240.
What Are Tax Deductions?
Tax deductions lower your taxable income. Deductions are treated like a discount. For example, if you make $55,000, but you qualify for a $1,000 tax deduction, your taxable income drops to $54,000.
Deductions the IRS allows include adjustments to income and a choice between the standard deduction and itemized deductions.
Adjustments to Income
You can claim adjustments to income — sometimes referred to as “above-the-line” deductions — regardless of whether you claim the standard deduction or itemize your deductions. Adjustments to income include:
- Student loan interest
- Traditional IRA contributions
- Educator expenses
- Contributions to health savings accounts
Standard Deduction vs. Itemized Deductions
The standard deduction makes it easier to do your taxes because it’s a flat amount:
- $15,750 for individual filers
- $31,500 for married joint filers
No worksheets, schedules or calculations needed on your part. But some taxpayers get a bigger break by itemizing deductions.
Itemized deductions are individual expenses the IRS lets you deduct from your taxable income. Some of the more common ones are:
- Charitable donations
- Gambling losses, up to the amount of your winnings
- Medical expenses that exceed 7.5% of your adjusted gross income
- Mortgage interest
- Property tax, up to certain limits
Each year, you have to decide whether to itemize your deductions or take the standard deduction.
What Is a Tax Credit?
A tax credit is a dollar-for-dollar reduction on what you owe on your taxes. For example, if you owe $4,000 in taxes and qualify for a $1,000 tax credit, you will only owe $3,000 in taxes.
Tax credits fall into three categories: refundable credits, partially refundable credits and nonrefundable credits.
Refundable vs. Nonrefundable Credits
A refundable credit helps to eliminate any taxes you owe and also in some instances if there is money left over you can get a refund. A refundable credit gives you the best of both worlds.
A nonrefundable credit will help you lower your tax bill to zero, but if the credit worth more than what you owe, you don’t get a refund.
Generally you want a refundable credit over a nonrefundable credit since the former offers you a full benefit of getting your taxes lowered and if there is money left over you get money in your pocket. Even if you don’t owe any income tax, you are still entitled to a refundable credit — it’s essentially free money for you.
Refundable Credits
Refundable credits allow for a full refund if the credit reduces your tax liability to less than $0.
For example, say your total tax liability for the year is $1,500. If you have a $2,000 refundable tax credit, you’ll get a $500 refund. If your tax liability is $0, you’ll get the full $2,000 as a refund.
Examples of refundable tax credits include:
- Earned income tax credit
- Premium tax credit
- Additional child tax credit
Partially Refundable Credits
A partially refundable credit allows a portion of the credit to reduce your tax liability to less than $0 so that it can be refunded to you even if you don’t owe tax. The child tax credit is a good example. While technically two credits, one that’s refundable and one that’s not, the IRS considers it a partially refundable credit.
For the 2025 tax year, the Child Tax Credit is worth up to $2,000 per qualifying child. Up to $1,700 may be refundable through the Additional Child Tax Credit if the full credit can’t be used.
So, if you qualify for the $2,000 child tax credit and your tax liability is $4,000, the credit will reduce your tax liability to $2,000. If your tax liability is $0, the additional child tax credit kicks in to reduce your taxable income to -$1,700, effectively refunding all but $300 of the child tax credit.
Nonrefundable Credits
Nonrefundable credits can only be used to reduce your income taxes to $0. Once your total taxes for the year get to $0, nonrefundable credits can’t increase your refund further. So, if you owe $4,000 in taxes but have $5,000 in credits, the credits reduce your tax liability to $0.
Popular nonrefundable tax credits include:
- Child and dependent care credit
- Lifetime learning credit
- Credit for other dependents
- Savers credit
- Energy efficient home improvement credit
Who Benefits Most From Tax Credits and Tax Deductions?
When examining the benefits of tax deductions vs. tax credits, tax credits provide the most benefit to lower- and middle-income taxpayers. The reasons are that many credits have income limits, and lower income means lower tax liability or even no tax liability. Refundable and partially refundable credits like the earned income and child tax credits provide refunds for these taxpayers even if they haven’t paid or overpaid tax.
Tax deductions, on the other hand, benefit higher income taxpayers by reducing taxable income. If deductions reduce taxable income enough, they could bump the taxpayer into a lower tax bracket. In that case, the taxpayer reaps additional savings by paying a lower tax rate on their already-reduced taxable income.
Common Credits vs. Common Deductions
Here’s a list of common credits:
- Child Tax Credit
- Earned Income Tax Credit
- Lifetime Learning Credit
- Saver’s Credit
- Residential Energy Credit
These are common tax deductions:
- Standard deduction
- Student loan interest
- Traditional IRA contributions
- HSA contributions
- Mortgage interest
- Charitable donations
Upcoming Tax Changes To Watch For
Every year, the IRS makes changes that can affect your tax liability. Here are some of the changes the IRS has announced so far that will apply when filing 2025 taxes:
- The standard deduction will increase by $400 to $800, depending on your filing status.
- Tax brackets remain the same, but marginal tax rates within each bracket apply to higher income amounts, which could reduce taxes for some taxpayers and keep others from landing in higher tax brackets.
- The earned income tax credit increases by $216.
- Exemptions for the alternative minimum tax increase, which helps more taxpayers to avoid it.
Strategies for Maximizing Your Tax Credits and Deductions
Taxes are inevitable for most Americans, but you can ease their burden by taking steps to maximize credits and deductions.
- Research tax deductions and credits so you’ll know what you’re entitled to claim. The IRS website is an excellent resource.
- Keep accurate financial records, and organize deductible and credit-eligible expenses by category. At the end of the year, total them to them so you’ll know whether to take the standard deduction or itemize your deductions.
- If you’re married, calculate your tax liability as separate filers and joint filers both to see which is most beneficial.
- Contribute the full allowable amount to your tax-deferred retirement accounts and flexible or health savings account
- Schedule potentially deductible end-of-the-year spending such as mortgage payments for mortgage interest, medical expenses, business expenses and charitable contributions for when they’ll benefit you most — at the end of this year or the beginning of next year.
Which Is Better?
Tax credits are usually better than deductions. A tax credit reduces your tax bill dollar-for-dollar. Tax credits don’t rely on your tax bracket and sometimes you’re even entitled to a refund from a tax credit.
Tax deductions reduces taxable income and is dependent on your tax bracket. There are no refunds associated with a tax deduction and you only save a certain percentage. Deductions are still important because if you’re in a higher tax bracket they lower income enough that you can qualify for certain benefits.
You can’t choose what tax break you prefer. Your eligibility is determined by income, age, filing status and other factors outlined in the tax code.
Takeaway
Finding and working with a financial advisor is a great idea. A financial advisor will help keep track of your finances and assist you in attaining your financial goals. While finding the right one can be overwhelming, you can decide to work with a financial advisor in your community or a virtual one.
Rudri Bhatt Patel, Josephine Nesbit and Daria Uhlig contributed to the reporting for this article.
Our in-house research team and on-site financial experts work together to create content that’s accurate, impartial, and up to date. We fact-check every single statistic, quote and fact using trusted primary resources to make sure the information we provide is correct. You can learn more about GOBankingRates’ processes and standards in our editorial policy.
- IRS "Federal income tax rates and brackets"
- IRS "Retirement topics - IRA contribution limits"
- IRS "Deductions for individuals: The difference between standard and itemized deductions, and what they mean"
- IRS "IRS provides tax inflation adjustments for tax year 2024"
- IRS "Topic no. 419, Gambling income and losses"
- IRS "Refundable tax credits"
- IRS "IRS releases tax inflation adjustments for tax year 2025"
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