10 Tax Deductions and Credits You’re Probably Missing That Could Save You Thousands in 2026 and Beyond

10 Tax Deductions and Credits You’re Probably Missing That Could Save You Thousands in 2026 and Beyond


Tax season always feels like a scramble. You’re hunting for receipts, trying to remember if that donation counts and wondering if you’re leaving money on the table. Chances are, you probably are. Many taxpayers miss valuable deductions simply because they don’t know they exist or assume they don’t qualify.

Here are 10 commonly overlooked tax deductions and credits that could save you hundreds or even thousands in 2026.

If you have a high-deductible health plan, contributing to a health savings account is one of the best tax shelters available. For 2026, you can contribute up to $4,400 for individual coverage or $8,750 for family coverage.

HSAs offer triple tax benefits. Contributions are made pretax, the money grows tax-free and withdrawals for qualified medical expenses are also tax-free. You have until the tax filing deadline in April 2027 to make contributions for 2026.

Many people forget about this deduction entirely because they assume only their employer contributions count. But you can contribute on your own and still get the tax benefit.

Find Out: 5 Ways You Can Reduce Your Tax Bill Like a Millionaire, According to Robert Kiyosaki

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If you pay for child care so you can work, this credit just got better. Starting in 2026, the child and dependent care tax credit allows you to claim up to 50% of qualifying expenses, up from 35% in previous years.

You can count up to $3,000 in expenses for one qualifying dependent or $6,000 for two or more. That means a maximum credit of $1,500 for one child or $3,000 for multiple children if your income is $15,000 or less. The credit phases down as income rises but remains available at 20% even for higher earners.

Summer day camps count. Preschool tuition counts. Even payments to relatives who babysit can qualify, as long as they’re not your spouse or someone you claim as a dependent.

Even if you didn’t contribute to an IRA all year, you still have time. You can make contributions up to the tax filing deadline in April and lower your taxable income for 2026.

For tax year 2026, the annual contribution limit for personal IRAs (traditional or Roth) rises to $7,500 (up from $7,000 in 2025). If you’re age 50 or older by the end of the year, you can make an additional “catch-up” contribution of $1,100, bringing your total allowable contribution to $8,600 in 2026.

This deduction can literally move you into a lower tax bracket. If you’re single and your income is just over $48,475, contributing enough to bring it below that threshold drops you from a 22% to a 12% tax rate.


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