
Form 8995-A + AI Agent Skill: Full QBI Deduction Guide 2026
Form 8995-A computes the Qualified Business Income deduction when income exceeds the threshold or SSTB rules apply. Full 2026 line-by-line guide with worked examples.

Form 8995 is the one-page IRS form that calculates the qualified business income (QBI) deduction: 20% of your qualified business income, capped at 20% of your taxable income minus net capital gain. You can use this simplified form for a 2025 return (filed in 2026) only if your taxable income before the deduction is at or below $197,300 ($394,600 married filing jointly) and you are not a patron of an agricultural or horticultural cooperative. The result from line 15 goes on Form 1040, line 13.
Key takeaways:

Save this cheat sheet — the Form 8995 flow in one image.
Official IRS resources: Form 8995 (PDF) · Instructions (HTML) · Instructions (PDF) · About Form 8995 + prior-year revisions
Form 8995 (officially "Qualified Business Income Deduction Simplified Computation") is the short IRS form that computes the IRC §199A pass-through deduction for taxpayers at or below the income threshold. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act created the deduction in 2017; OBBBA made it permanent in July 2025. Form 8995's output flows to Form 1040, line 13 (the same line on 2024 and 2025 returns) as a deduction from taxable income. It does not reduce self-employment tax.
Pass-through owners qualify: sole proprietors, partners, S-corp shareholders, and owners of rental real estate that rises to a trade or business. If your taxable income is above the threshold, or you are a cooperative patron, you use Form 8995-A instead.
Legal Basis: IRC §199A, made permanent by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act of 2025 (P.L. 119-21). 2025 thresholds in Rev. Proc. 2024-40; 2026 thresholds in Rev. Proc. 2025-32.
The threshold is inflation-adjusted every year, so the number printed on each revision of the form changes. Use the revision that matches the tax year you are filing:
| Tax year (return filed) | Threshold: single / HoH | Threshold: MFJ | Above the threshold | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 (filed 2025) | $191,950 | $383,900 | Form 8995-A; SSTB phase-in ends at $241,950 / $483,900 | Rev. Proc. 2023-34 |
| 2025 (filed 2026) | $197,300 | $394,600 | Form 8995-A; phase-in ends at $247,300 / $494,600 | Rev. Proc. 2024-40 |
| 2026 (filed 2027) | $201,750 ($201,775 MFS) | $403,500 | Form 8995-A; phase-in ends at $276,750 / $553,500 | Rev. Proc. 2025-32; OBBBA §70105 |
Two notes on that table. First, OBBBA widened the phase-in range above the threshold from $50,000 to $75,000 (single) and from $100,000 to $150,000 (MFJ) starting in tax year 2026. Second, searchers often confuse the 2024 phase-in ceiling ($241,950) with the threshold itself ($191,950): the lower number decides which form you file, the higher number is where the SSTB deduction on Form 8995-A reaches zero.
Filing or amending an older year (2018-2023)? Every prior revision of the form and its instructions is archived on the About Form 8995 page; the thresholds differ each year, so do not reuse a current-year form.
Use Form 8995 (the simplified version) when all of these are true:
Common filers:
Key Point: Even a side hustle with a few thousand dollars of Schedule C profit files Form 8995 to claim the deduction. The form's complexity scales with your income, not your QBI amount.
| Item | Amount | Source |
|---|---|---|
| QBI deduction percentage | 20% of qualified business income | IRC §199A(a) |
| Income threshold (single / HoH / MFS) | $197,300 | Rev. Proc. 2024-40 |
| Income threshold (MFJ) | $394,600 | Rev. Proc. 2024-40 |
| Phase-in range above threshold (single / MFJ) | $50,000 / $100,000 (handled on Form 8995-A) | IRC §199A(b)(3) |
| REIT/PTP component | 20% of qualified REIT dividends + PTP income | IRC §199A(b)(1)(B) |
| Where the deduction goes | Form 1040, line 13 | 2025 Form 1040 |
| Filing deadline | April 15, 2026 (October 15 with Form 4868 extension) | IRC §6072 |
Permanence: OBBBA made §199A permanent; it no longer sunsets after 2025 as the original TCJA text required. From tax year 2026, OBBBA also guarantees a minimum $400 deduction (inflation-adjusted after 2026) if you have at least $1,000 of QBI from businesses in which you materially participate.
Gather these before touching the form:
Income sources:
Carryforwards (if any): qualified business loss carryforward from line 16 of last year's Form 8995, and REIT/PTP loss carryforward from line 17.
Computed numbers: taxable income before the QBI deduction, and net capital gain (qualified dividends plus net long-term capital gain).
Your QBI is not your Schedule C line 31 profit. Treas. Reg. §1.199A-3(b)(1)(vi) requires you to subtract three adjustments first:
| Start with | Amount comes from |
|---|---|
| Schedule C net profit | Schedule C, line 31 |
| minus deductible half of SE tax | Schedule SE, line 13 (deducted on Schedule 1, line 15) |
| minus self-employed health insurance | Schedule 1, line 17 |
| minus self-employed retirement contributions | Schedule 1, line 16 |
Skipping this subtraction is the single most common Form 8995 error, and it always overstates the deduction.
Yes: self-employed retirement contributions (SEP-IRA, SIMPLE IRA, solo 401(k)) reduce qualified business income dollar for dollar, because they are deducted on Schedule 1, line 16 and are attributable to the business. A $10,000 SEP-IRA contribution cuts QBI by $10,000 and the deduction by $2,000. One exception: Roth solo 401(k) contributions do not reduce QBI, because they are not deducted anywhere on the return. The same logic applies to the other two adjustments: the deductible half of self-employment tax and the self-employed health insurance deduction both reduce QBI.
Form 8995 has 17 numbered lines on one page. The flow: list each business → total the QBI → take 20% → compare against 20% of taxable income minus net capital gain → keep the smaller number. Line references below match the 2025 revision of the form.
For each qualifying trade, business, or aggregation, fill one row (1i through 1v):
K-1 recipients: use the QBI amount the entity reported (partnership K-1 Box 20 code Z; S-corp K-1 Box 17 code V). If the K-1 statement doesn't break out QBI, ask the preparer. More than five businesses? Attach a continuation statement.
Combine column (c) for rows 1i-1v. Losses count: a negative row reduces the total.
If last year's Form 8995 showed a loss on line 16, enter it here as a negative number. First year filing, or no prior loss: enter 0.
Combine lines 2 and 3. If zero or less, enter -0- (the loss carries forward via line 16; it never makes the deduction negative).
Multiply line 4 by 20% (0.20). This is the business half of the deduction.
Add Section 199A dividends from REITs (Form 1099-DIV, Box 5) and qualified publicly traded partnership income from PTP K-1s. REIT/PTP amounts are tracked separately from QBI and are not reduced by the SE-tax/health-insurance/retirement adjustments.
Prior-year net REIT/PTP loss (from last year's line 17), entered as a negative number. Otherwise 0.
Combine lines 6 and 7. If zero or less, enter -0-.
Multiply line 8 by 20%.
Add lines 5 and 9. This is your tentative §199A deduction before the taxable income cap.
The QBI deduction can never exceed 20% of your taxable income after removing net capital gain. Lines 11 through 14 compute that ceiling:
Line 11: Taxable income before the QBI deduction. Your Form 1040 taxable income computed as if line 13 were zero. Practical formula: Form 1040 line 11 (AGI) minus line 12 (standard or itemized deduction). Do not subtract the QBI deduction itself; that's what you're computing.
Line 12: Net capital gain. Qualified dividends (Form 1040, line 3a) plus net long-term capital gain (Schedule D line 16, or Form 1040 line 7 if Schedule D isn't required, counting only the net long-term amount). Congress excluded this income because it already gets preferential rates; it doesn't also get a 20% deduction.
Line 13: Subtract line 12 from line 11. If zero or less, enter -0-.
Line 14: Income limitation. Multiply line 13 by 20%. This is the hard ceiling on your deduction.
Enter the smaller of line 10 or line 14. If line 10 wins, your own QBI limited the deduction. If line 14 wins, your taxable income limited it, which is common in a first profitable year or when the standard deduction eats a big share of income.
Line 16: combine lines 2 and 3; if the result is a loss, it carries to line 3 of next year's Form 8995. Line 17: the same for REIT/PTP losses (carries to next year's line 7). If either combination is positive, enter -0-.
Form 8995 does not compute W-2 wage or UBIA-of-qualified-property limits, does not apply the specified service trade or business (SSTB) phase-out, and does not cover cooperative patrons. All of that lives on Form 8995-A. It also does nothing for self-employment tax: a $8,000 QBI deduction saves income tax only, and your 15.3% SE tax is computed on Schedule SE as if the deduction didn't exist. Estimate that side with the self-employment tax calculator.
Maya runs Garcia Design as a sole proprietor. Her 2025 numbers:
Step 1 (QBI): $50,000 − $3,532 − $4,200 − $1,500 = $40,768
Step 2 (taxable income before QBI): AGI is also $40,768 (profit minus the same three adjustments), minus the $15,750 standard deduction = $25,018
Step 3 (Form 8995):
| Line | Item | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| 1i | Garcia Design / SSN / QBI (column c) | $40,768 |
| 2 | Total QBI | $40,768 |
| 3 | Loss carryforward | $0 |
| 4 | Total QBI | $40,768 |
| 5 | QBI component (20% × line 4) | $8,154 |
| 6-8 | REIT/PTP income | $0 |
| 9 | REIT/PTP component | $0 |
| 10 | Deduction before income limitation | $8,154 |
| 11 | Taxable income before QBI deduction | $25,018 |
| 12 | Net capital gain | $0 |
| 13 | Line 11 − line 12 | $25,018 |
| 14 | Income limitation (20% × line 13) | $5,004 |
| 15 | QBI deduction (smaller of 10 or 14) | $5,004 |
Maya's deduction is $5,004, capped by the income limitation on line 14, not by her QBI on line 10. It flows to Form 1040 line 13 and cuts her taxable income from $25,018 to $20,014, roughly $600 of federal tax saved in the 12% bracket.
The pattern to notice: when taxable income is low relative to QBI (large standard deduction, big adjustments), line 14 wins. As income grows, line 10 usually becomes the binding number. Run your own numbers in the QBI calculator.
Problem: Entering Schedule C line 31 directly into line 1 column (c) without subtracting the ½ SE tax, SE health insurance, and retirement adjustments.
Impact: Overstated QBI → overstated deduction → IRS notice with tax and interest. At Anna Money, working with 60,000+ small business owners, this was the most common return-level QBI miss we saw.
Solution: For most Schedule C filers, correct QBI lands at roughly 85-93% of line 31 depending on health insurance and retirement contributions. Do the subtraction every time.
Problem: Leaving Form 1040 line 13 blank because the deduction sounds like something only big businesses get.
Impact: On $50,000 of Schedule C profit, that forfeits roughly $1,000-$1,800 of federal tax savings, every year.
Solution: Any pass-through income (Schedule C, K-1, REIT dividends, qualifying rental) below the threshold means you file Form 8995. It takes 10-15 minutes.
Problem: Taxable income before QBI is above the threshold ($197,300 single / $394,600 MFJ for 2025), but the filer uses the simplified form anyway.
Impact: Wrong form. Above the threshold, W-2 wage/UBIA limits and the SSTB phase-out apply, and the simplified math overstates the deduction.
Solution: Compute taxable income before QBI first. Above the threshold (or a cooperative patron), switch to Form 8995-A.
Problem: Line 12 (net capital gain) left at zero even though the filer has qualified dividends on Form 1040 line 3a or long-term gains on Schedule D.
Impact: Overstated line 13 → overstated line 14 ceiling → a deduction the return can't support.
Solution: Line 12 = qualified dividends + net long-term capital gain. Even small amounts belong there.
Problem: A partner or S-corp shareholder enters their share of entity net income instead of the QBI figure on the K-1 statement.
Impact: Entity net income can include guaranteed payments, interest income, and other non-QBI items. Guaranteed payments to partners and S-corp owner wages are never QBI.
Solution: Use only Box 20 code Z (partnership) or Box 17 code V (S-corp). Missing statement? Request a corrected K-1.
Every number on Form 8995 traces back to how well your business income and expenses were tracked during the year. Jupid is an AI accountant that lives in WhatsApp and iMessage: connect your bank account and it categorizes every transaction into the right Schedule C line with 95.9% accuracy, so line 31, the starting point of your QBI math, is built continuously instead of reconstructed in April. Ask "what's my QBI so far?" in chat and you get the current figure with the §199A adjustments already applied. Try Jupid.
Form 8995 is one of the highest-ROI 10 minutes on a tax return: 20% of $50,000 in QBI is $10,000 off taxable income, worth $1,200 in the 12% bracket and $2,200 in the 22% bracket. Three things decide whether you get it right: (1) QBI is Schedule C profit minus the §199A adjustments, not the raw line 31; (2) the form only applies at or below $197,300 / $394,600 (2025); above that, it's Form 8995-A; (3) the deduction is capped at 20% of taxable income minus net capital gain (lines 11-14). For the concept-level view of who qualifies and how the deduction interacts with entity choice, see the QBI deduction guide.
If you're using Claude, ChatGPT, or another AI agent to help fill out Form 8995, we've published an open-source skill that gives the agent exact line-by-line instructions, validation checks, ask-don't-guess prompts, and worked examples — the same logic Jupid uses internally.
→ jupid-tax/jupid-skills on GitHub — forms/form-8995/SKILL.md
For Claude Code: cp -r jupid-skills/forms/form-8995 ~/.claude/skills/. For the Anthropic SDK, load SKILL.md into the system prompt and the references/ files on demand. For browser-automation runtimes, filing.md covers the e-file or paper-file workflow.
Disclaimer
This article provides general information about tax filing and should not be considered tax advice. Tax laws change frequently, and individual circumstances vary significantly. For advice specific to your situation, consult with a qualified tax professional.
Tax Year: 2026 (forms covering tax year 2025 income) Last Updated: July 7, 2026

CEO & Co-Founder
Fintech CEO with 10+ years building accounting and financial technology products. Previously co-founded and scaled an AI-powered accounting platform to $30M revenue and 100K+ business users, achieving 30,000 customers per accountant through automation — recognized by CNBC as a top fintech company. Holds a Master's in Management Information Systems. At Jupid, he leads the development of AI-native bookkeeping, tax, and compliance tools designed for freelancers and small business owners.

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