Payroll Compliance — Salons, Spas & Barbershops
There is a new federal tax credit worth thousands of dollars per year for salon, spa, and barbershop owners with tipped employees. Most owners have not heard of it. Of the ones who have, most are not claiming it — because their payroll is not built to support it.
That is not a tax problem. It is a payroll problem.
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed July 4, 2025, permanently expanded the Section 45B FICA Tip Credit to the beauty industry. For the first time, salon and spa owners can claim a dollar-for-dollar credit on the employer FICA taxes they pay on employee tips. Restaurants have used this credit since 1993. As of 2025, you have it too.
But here is the catch: the credit only works if your payroll system tracks tips correctly. If it does not, you cannot calculate the credit, you cannot file Form 8846, and you leave the money on the table. In short, this post explains exactly what your payroll needs to look like — and what to check before year-end.
The Short Answer
The FICA Tip Credit gives salon, spa, and barbershop employers a dollar-for-dollar credit equal to 7.65% of the FICA taxes they pay on employee tips — effective January 1, 2025.
Your accountant files it on Form 8846. But your accountant can only calculate it from your payroll data. If tips are not tracked separately from wages, if occupation codes are missing from W-2s, or if booth renters are mixed with W-2 staff — the credit is uncalculable.
Getting the payroll setup right is the prerequisite. Everything else follows from there.
What the Credit Is — in Plain English
When your customers tip your stylists, your employees keep that money. But you still owe the employer share of Social Security and Medicare taxes on it — currently 7.65%. The FICA Tip Credit gives you that money back, dollar-for-dollar, as a credit against your business taxes.
The credit is non-refundable, but unused amounts carry forward up to 20 years. Additionally, for pass-through entities — S-corps, partnerships, sole proprietorships — the credit flows directly to the owner’s personal Form 1040.
Your accountant files Form 8846 and calculates the credit at tax time. However, your payroll data is what makes the calculation possible. Without clean records, there is nothing to file.
For the full breakdown of qualifications and what the credit is worth by business size, see the Accounting Freedom companion post on the FICA Tip Credit for salons and spas. This post focuses on the payroll side — what your setup needs to look like to support it.
Why Payroll Is the Make-or-Break Factor
The IRS does not calculate this credit for you. Your accountant calculates it using the tip data in your payroll records. Specifically, they need:
- Total tips reported by each W-2 employee for the year
- Each employee’s hourly wages (to apply the minimum wage offset calculation)
- Each employee’s occupation, correctly noted on their W-2
- Clean separation between tip income and regular wages throughout the year
If your payroll system lumps tips in with regular wages, or if your staff reports tips inconsistently, or if occupation codes are missing from W-2s — any one of those gaps makes the credit uncalculable. Consequently, your accountant cannot build an accurate number from incomplete records.
New W-2 Requirement Coming in 2026
The OBBBA adds a new requirement starting with W-2s issued for tax year 2026: employers must separately list qualified tip amounts and include an occupation code for each tipped employee. The IRS published the qualifying occupation list in fall 2025.
This is a payroll configuration issue, not a year-end accounting fix. It needs to be in your employee setup before the first 2026 payroll runs — not in January 2027 when W-2s are due.
The Four Payroll Setup Requirements
Here is exactly what your payroll system needs to support the credit. Work through each one — and if you are not sure about any of them, that uncertainty is the answer.
Tips must be a separate pay type from wages
Tips reported by employees need to enter payroll as a distinct pay code — separate from hourly wages, commissions, and bonuses. If your system has one wages bucket and tips get folded in, the data is not usable for Form 8846.
In iSolved, this is a configuration step. We set up a dedicated tip pay code that tracks reported tips alongside wages but keeps them distinct in the employee record and on W-2 output.
Tip reporting must happen every pay period — not at year-end
Some owners let tip reporting slide and try to reconcile it in December. That creates two problems: inconsistent withholding throughout the year, and a year-end scramble that produces unreliable totals.
In practice, you need a consistent system for employees to report tips each pay period — whether through your POS, the iSolved employee self-service app, or a simple paper report. The method matters less than the consistency.
Booth renters must be completely separated from W-2 employees
The FICA Tip Credit applies to W-2 employees only. Booth renters are independent contractors — their tips flow directly to them, and you cannot claim the credit on that income.
Furthermore, if booth renter payments are accidentally running through your payroll, you are overpaying FICA and potentially inflating your credit calculation with tips that do not qualify. In iSolved, W-2 employees and booth renter 1099-NEC records live in completely separate workflows. Getting this right protects your worker classification position as much as it does the credit.
Occupation codes must appear on W-2s starting in 2026
This is the requirement most owners and payroll providers do not know about yet. Under the OBBBA, employers must include an occupation code for each tipped employee on their W-2 — starting with W-2s issued for tax year 2026.
Therefore, this needs to be in your employee setup now. The IRS published the qualifying occupation list in fall 2025. Your payroll system needs to map each tipped employee to the correct code before the first 2026 payroll runs.
What Happens If Your Payroll Is Not Set Up Correctly
The most immediate consequence is straightforward: you miss the credit entirely, or your accountant reconstructs tip data manually — which is expensive and often produces estimates instead of exact figures.
Beyond the credit, there is a compliance exposure too. Inconsistent tip reporting is one of the IRS’s most common audit triggers in the personal care industry. If your tip records do not match your POS receipts, or if withholding on tips has been uneven, that gap can surface in an examination well before anyone thinks to ask about a credit.
Getting tip payroll right is not just about claiming money back. It is also about making sure there is nothing to find if the IRS comes looking.
How to Check Your Current Setup
Pull the last three months of payroll reports and work through this checklist. If any answer is “I’m not sure” — that is the answer.
- Tip income appears as a separate line from wages on each employee’s pay stub
- Tips show on Line 7 (Social Security tips) of your most recent Form 941
- W-2 preview shows Box 7 (Social Security tips) populated separately from Box 1 (wages)
- Booth renters are completely absent from your payroll register
- Each tipped employee has an occupation field populated in their setup record
National platform vs. local provider — what to look for
| Question | National Platform | Payroll Freedom |
|---|---|---|
| Tracks tips as a separate pay code? | Possible but rarely configured | ✓ Set up in iSolved at onboarding |
| Proactively flagged the 2026 W-2 requirement? | Unlikely — you would have heard | ✓ Addressing now with salon clients |
| Separates booth renters from W-2 staff cleanly? | Depends on how it was set up | ✓ Separate workflows in iSolved |
| Coordinates tip data with your CPA? | Generally no — separate vendors | ✓ Directly with Accounting Freedom |
| Answers the phone when something is wrong? | Ticket system or call center | ✓ Local team, two offices |
What This Means for You
The FICA Tip Credit is permanent. Unlike the employee tip deduction — which expires in 2028 — the employer FICA credit has no sunset date. That means every year you do not claim it is money you leave permanently on the table.
The good news is that fixing a payroll configuration is not complicated. For most salons and spas, getting tip tracking set up correctly in iSolved takes one setup conversation. After that, the data flows automatically every pay period and your accountant has everything they need to calculate the credit at filing.
If you already work with Payroll Freedom, call us and we will review your tip tracking setup at no charge. If you currently use a national platform that has not flagged this for you, consider that a data point — providers who are not proactively addressing the 2025 and 2026 OBBBA requirements are unlikely to catch the next compliance change either.
For the full picture on qualifying and what the credit is worth for your specific business, see the Accounting Freedom salon accounting overview and the companion post on the credit itself.
Already Know You Need to Fix Your Tip Tracking? Let’s Talk.
We review your current setup, configure iSolved for tip pay, and coordinate with your accountant — so the credit is supportable when you file.
Frequently Asked Questions
Setup and configuration
It depends — and the only way to know is to ask directly. Most national platforms can technically record tips, but many are not configured to do so in a way that produces the clean, separated data your accountant needs for Form 8846. Ask your provider specifically whether they separate tip income from wages in employee records and whether they can produce a year-end report showing total creditable tips by employee. If they cannot answer that directly, assume the setup is not there.
Yes — if you get your payroll corrected before year-end, your accountant can use the corrected records for the 2025 credit calculation. The earlier you fix it, the cleaner the data. If you wait until after December 31, 2025, you may need to reconstruct tip data for earlier months, which is possible but adds time and cost to your tax prep.
Yes — for the W-2 employees only. Booth renters are independent contractors, so their tips never run through your payroll and you cannot claim the credit on that income. The key is making sure the two populations are completely separate in your payroll system. If booth renter activity is accidentally in your payroll register, it compromises both your credit calculation and your worker classification position.
Compliance and reporting
Starting with W-2s issued for tax year 2026, the OBBBA requires employers to separately report qualified tip amounts and include an occupation code for each tipped employee. The IRS published the qualifying occupation list in fall 2025. This means your employee setup in payroll needs to include the correct occupation code before the first 2026 payroll runs — not when W-2s are due in January 2027.
No. The FICA Tip Credit is a year-end tax return item, not a payroll deposit adjustment. You still remit the full employer FICA on tips throughout the year via your regular 941 deposits. Your accountant claims the credit at filing using Form 8846 — it offsets your income tax liability, not your quarterly deposits. Your payroll provider handles the data that makes the credit calculable; your CPA handles the filing.
Usually yes. For a salon or spa where tips are a significant part of employee income, even a partial year of clean tip data can support a meaningful credit. Your accountant can work with whatever records are available and use your POS data or credit card processor reports to fill gaps. The more complete the records, the larger and more defensible the credit. Start fixing the setup now, and let your accountant assess what is usable for 2025.
Disclaimer: This article is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute tax, legal, accounting, or financial advice. The FICA Tip Credit rules under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act are new and IRS guidance is still evolving — confirm details with a qualified tax advisor before filing. Reach out to Payroll Freedom or Accounting Freedom for guidance specific to your situation.



