How QBI works in one paragraph
QBI is a 20% deduction on qualified business income from pass-through entities (sole props, partnerships, S-Corps, LLCs). If your taxable income is below $191,950 single / $383,900 married (2025), you get the full 20% with no restrictions. Above those thresholds, limits on W-2 wages and unadjusted basis apply.
Why QBI creates weird incentives
Every dollar of deduction on Schedule C reduces:
- Income tax at your marginal rate (e.g., 22%)
- Self-employment tax (15.3% of 92.35% = 14.13%)
- QBI deduction (20% of the reduced income)
The combined marginal benefit of a deduction is roughly (22% + 14.13%) × (1 - 20%) = 28.9%, not 36.13%. The 20% QBI "tax" shows up because a smaller business income gets a smaller 20% deduction.
When does QBI turn negative?
There's one scenario where an extra deduction actively costs you: when you're at the QBI phase-in range for specified service trades (SSTBs) and an extra deduction pushes you from fully qualified to fully phased out. That range is $241,950–$291,950 (2025, married filing jointly the numbers double).
You're a consultant (an SSTB). Taxable income: $270,000 married. You're mid-phase-out.
Scenario A: Skip a $5,000 deduction. Pay tax on $270k. QBI deduction: $18,000.
Scenario B: Take the $5,000 deduction. Pay tax on $265k. QBI deduction: $22,000 (larger because you're less phased out).
In Scenario B, the $5,000 deduction saves: $5k × 24% + $4,000 extra QBI × 24% = $2,160. Worth taking.
The trap reverses if you're below the phase-in and the deduction drops you under a dependent-credit threshold or similar. Rare but real.
The simpler trap: QBI when you have $0 taxable income
QBI is limited to 20% of (taxable income − net capital gains), not 20% of business income. If your taxable income is $0 (because standard deduction wiped out your AGI), your QBI deduction is $0 — regardless of how much business income you had.
Tax software sometimes still shows a QBI number in this situation due to rounding or calculation order. But it has no effect on your actual tax. This is a common hallucination in AI-assisted tax tools.
When QBI doesn't apply
- Capital gains — not qualified business income
- W-2 wages you pay yourself from S-Corp
- Guaranteed payments from a partnership
- Investment interest
- Foreign-source business income
SSTBs — who they are
"Specified Service Trade or Business" means the business's principal asset is the reputation or skill of its owners. Examples:
- Health (doctors, dentists, therapists)
- Law
- Accounting
- Consulting
- Financial services
- Performing arts
- Athletics
Engineers, architects, and real estate professionals are not SSTBs (good news for them).
Planning moves near the threshold
- Maximize SEP-IRA / Solo 401k contributions — reduces taxable income, may move you below SSTB phase-in
- Bunch deductions in high-income years — if you're near the SSTB phase-in, accelerate deductions to stay below
- Convert to S-Corp (if eligible) — the W-2 wages you pay yourself can partially protect QBI above the thresholds (complicated; run numbers)
- Income shifting between spouses — if one spouse's income pushes joint income over the SSTB threshold, consider moving business activity
How to check your own QBI calculation
Find Form 8995 (simpler) or Form 8995-A (if you're over the threshold) in your return PDF. The deduction flows to Form 1040 Line 13.
Common errors to verify:
- Did the software apply the SSTB rules correctly?
- If your business has multiple activities, are they aggregated correctly?
- Is the 20%-of-taxable-income limit being applied (not just 20% of QBI)?
QBI is where tax software hallucinates most.
We specifically audit QBI calculations against your actual taxable income. Catches the "phantom QBI" bug.