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Why QSRs Are Suddenly Winning Big with the FICA Tax Tip Credit

By Andy Himmel
Published: November 26, 2025

Table of COntents

For decades, the FICA tax tip credit was primarily a full-service restaurant incentive. 

Counter-service and QSR operators rarely captured much value because tipping wasn’t consistent, reporting was low, and eligibility was unclear.

Today, everything has changed.

A combination of post-COVID tipping culture, updated IRS and legislative interpretation, and the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) has created the most advantageous environment in history for QSRs to maximize the FICA Tip Credit.

If you run a counter-service, hybrid, bakery café, fast casual, smoothie bar, or modern deli concept—you may now qualify for far more than you realize.

Here’s why.

1. Post-COVID Consumer Behavior Made Tipping in QSR Standard

Before the pandemic, tipping in QSR settings was inconsistent. Maybe a tip jar, maybe a few dollars here and there, but not enough volume or reliability to generate meaningful credits.

COVID changed this permanently.

Digital kiosks and iPad-driven checkout screens added default tip prompts.

Customers grew accustomed to tipping baristas, cashiers, bowl builders, smoothie makers, and counter staff.

A “support service workers” mindset solidified as restaurants reopened.

Today, many QSR concepts see tips representing 10-20% of FOH wages, with tipping occurring on roughly half of all transactions. That alone changed the economics of the FICA Tip Credit.

2. The OBBBA Expanded Tip-Eligible Industries

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) broadened the IRS’s interpretation of what counts as a “tipped industry.”

Under OBBBA:

Hair salons, nail salons, barbershops, and other service industries gained access to tip-related credits.

The IRS now acknowledges that modern service industries, not just full-service restaurants, depend heavily on tipping.

This had a crucial ripple effect:

If tipping is customary in your business—even if it didn’t used to be—you likely qualify for the FICA Tip Credit.

3. OBBBA Also Removed Federal Tax on Tips—Unlocking Higher Tip Reporting

Historically, higher reported tips meant increased income tax liability for employees. That discouraged reporting and often caused tension around tip declaration.

OBBBA eliminated federal income tax on tips.

As a result

Employees

  • No longer fear higher taxes from reported tips
  • Report tips more fully and consistently

Operators

  • Get more accurate tip reporting without friction
  • See larger pools of reported tips
  • Benefit from larger FICA Tip Credits

IRS

  • Gains improved compliance and transparency

This alignment has meaningfully increased reported tip volume in QSR settings—directly boosting the value of the FICA Tip Credit.

What the FICA Tax Tip Credit Looks Like for a $1.5M QSR (Today’s Conditions)

Let’s use a realistic case: a single-unit QSR doing $1.5M/year, with higher modern tip averages, and more complete reporting because tips are no longer federally taxed.

Key assumptions:

  • Labor: 30% of revenue
  • FOH tippable labor: 40%
  • FOH wage: $12/hr
  • Average tips (today’s norm), $6.50/hr
  • FOH hours, 15,000 annually
  • Employer FICA, 7.65%

Now, let’s do some math. 

For this QSR, their annual reported tips come out to $97,500. 

That’s just 15,000 hours × $6.50

Remember, the employer will need to pay their portion of the FICA tax on those tips (7.65% × $97,500), which comes out to $7,459. 

In comes the FICA tax tip credit. 

The operator receives a dollar-for-dollar tax credit of ~$7,500. 

Translation: it directly reduces the operator’s tax bill (it’s not a deduction). 

If the business owes $20,000 in federal taxes, the credit drops the liability to $12,500. Keep in mind that excess credit carries forward.

So every dollar of FICA tax paid on tips becomes a dollar the operator keeps.

For multi-unit QSRs, this becomes a goldmine. 

Using the same formulas as above:

  • A 3-unit concept could save about ~$22K/year
  • A 5-unit concept would be around ~$37K/ year
  • A 10-unit concept would get ~$75K+/year

For even small multi-unit operators, this becomes a real margin lever.

QSRs Should Treat the FICA Tip Credit as a Mandatory Strategy

The entire tipping ecosystem is different now. 

Thanks to changing operational procedures and human behavior, tipping is now standard in most QSRs.

With the OBBBA broadening eligibility and redefining tipped industries and tip reporting rising, there are some powerful tax advantages that many QSR operators qualify for. 

If you’re not sure whether you qualify—or how much you’re missing—now is the time to find out.

The Restaurant CPAs can match you with up to three specialized accounting firms that can calculate, claim, and maximize your credit at no cost to you. 

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