I don't understand not paying taxes on tips-it's still income. Yet-somebody making $12.00 an hour working at a car wash will pay taxes on those wages. Makes zero sense.
In most States, the tipped minimum wage is much lower.
In Illinois, the tipped minimum wage is $9 an hour and for normal workers it's $15 an hour, Chicago is higher.
But in many States, like Indiana, it hasn't budged since Roseanne complained that it was $2.12 an hour in 1992.
I remember helping someone get on a Marketplace health insurance plan when the ACA was new. He worked at a restaurant called Bandidos in Fort Wayne, Indiana that wasn't a very good restaurant. He always complained that he'd get worked like a dog on Sundays and then they'd stiff him and then there were also college students that stiffed him. Bad tippers. Table of nine leaves you two bucks.
When I saw his income tax return for the previous year, it was only like $13,000 and something, which is poverty level.
The problem with tipping is that it's very uneven. The only guarantee you get is if your tips don't bring you to an average of $7.25 in Indiana that week, the employer has to.
Meanwhile, less than 0.2% of jobs in Indiana pay $7.25 because it's laughable in 2025.
There's also people who do things like Uber and Doordash and Walmart deliveries where they don't even get the adjustment to the normal minimum wage if they don't equal that at the end of the week.
Most people who make tips exceed minimum wage, but it's not saying much. A better fix would be just applying the normal minimum wage. Some places do that and there are still restaurants and stuff. They like hiding the cost of the service in their low menu prices and then subjecting workers to the cruel whims of some of the customers.
And there go the "cheap" deliveries where people want someone to lug their groceries and bottled water up the stairs but not to pay a fair wage.
Our economy "works" because there's an underclass and people screaming that those people don't deserve a living because "they didn't go to college".
Me personally, I don't ever use those things. I could but I just drove somewhere or use commuter rail, or buses.
I don't tip because I don't use anything if it requires that. It's not that I'm just a lousy bum that stiffs people. I just don't think that people should have to rely on generosity after they do work.
By disregarding tips from the income tax, we'd make more people eligible for things like the Earned Income Tax Credit, and potentially help them in other ways.
The Negative Income Tax is not a new thing. It's a conservative answer to various workfare programs that uses the tax code to quit patronizing people and hand them cash.
It emphasizes work and personal responsibility. Instead of saying "We have to give you food stamps when you may need more money for rent or healthcare." it just gives money and quits insulting people and treating them like little kids.
There's an appeal here as far as I'm concerned because of that and the lack of overhead (government workers, different eligibility requirements, etc.) to manage the NIT.