The Section 199A qualified business income (QBI) deduction is a significant benefit for pass-through business owners — up to 20% of qualified business income deducted directly from taxable income. But for clients in specified service trades or businesses (SSTBs) who cross certain income thresholds, the deduction phases out entirely. And the phase-out math is non-trivial.
This guide walks through the 2025 thresholds, the phase-out calculation, and the planning strategies available to SSTB clients approaching the limits.
Understanding the QBI deduction requires understanding the three income tiers that determine how it's calculated:
| Tier | Single Filer (2025) | MFJ (2025) | Effect on SSTB |
|---|---|---|---|
| Below threshold | Under $197,300 | Under $394,600 | Full 20% QBI deduction — SSTB status irrelevant |
| Phase-out range | $197,300–$247,300 | $394,600–$494,600 | SSTB deduction phases out proportionally |
| Above threshold | Over $247,300 | Over $494,600 | Zero QBI deduction for SSTB income |
Key point: "Taxable income" here means taxable income before the QBI deduction itself. The thresholds are applied to the net number after subtracting standard or itemized deductions, but before applying the §199A deduction.
An SSTB is any trade or business where the principal asset is the reputation or skill of its employees or owners — specifically in the following fields under IRC §1202(e)(3)(A):
Notable exclusions from SSTB: engineering, architecture, and real estate — these are explicitly carved out and may claim the full QBI deduction regardless of income level (subject to W-2 wage and UBIA limitations at higher incomes).
When a client's taxable income falls within the phase-out range, you don't simply lose the deduction — it phases out proportionally based on how far into the range they are. Here's the formula:
Divide the amount by which taxable income exceeds the lower threshold by the size of the phase-out range ($50,000 for single, $100,000 for MFJ).
Multiply the tentative QBI deduction (20% × QBI) by (1 − phase-out percentage).
This client retains slightly more than half their QBI deduction — not zero, but meaningfully reduced. Clients often assume the phase-out is a cliff; it's actually a slope, which creates planning opportunity.
For non-SSTB businesses (and SSTB businesses still within the phase-out range), a separate limitation applies above the income thresholds: the deduction is limited to the greater of:
For SSTB clients deep in the phase-out, this limitation applies on top of the SSTB reduction, compounding the impact. Our QBI calculator handles both simultaneously.
Contributions to a SEP-IRA (up to 25% of net SE income, max $70,000 for 2025), Solo 401(k), or defined benefit plan reduce taxable income — potentially pulling a client below the upper threshold or deeper into the phase-in range. This is often the highest-ROI move for a self-employed professional near the cliff.
Accelerate deductible business expenses into the current year — equipment purchases (Section 179 or bonus), prepaid business expenses, increased retirement plan contributions, or additional health insurance deductions. Every dollar of additional deduction reduces taxable income and improves the phase-out calculation.
If a client has income from both an SSTB (e.g., a law practice) and a non-SSTB source (e.g., rental income, a separate product-based business), the non-SSTB income retains its full QBI deduction regardless of the client's total income. Structuring separate entities for distinct business activities can preserve the deduction on the non-SSTB portion.
For SSTB sole proprietors or single-member LLCs near the upper threshold, an S-corp election may allow splitting income between wages (W-2) and pass-through distributions. Since QBI is calculated on the pass-through portion only (not W-2 wages), a higher wage/lower distribution structure reduces QBI — which may seem counterintuitive, but it reduces self-employment tax and may improve the overall outcome. Run the numbers both ways.
For cash-basis SSTB clients, defer year-end billings to January if income is tracking above the upper threshold. Conversely, if a client expects significantly higher income next year, accelerate billings. The QBI phase-out makes income timing more consequential than for W-2 employees.
Watch the aggregation rules: Related businesses may be aggregated for QBI purposes under Prop. Reg. §1.199A-4, which can help non-SSTB businesses meet the W-2 wage test — but aggregating an SSTB with a non-SSTB taints the entire aggregated group as an SSTB. Aggregation elections require careful analysis before implementation.
Our QBI calculator handles SSTB phase-outs, W-2 wage limitations, UBIA thresholds, and MFJ vs. single filer differences — results in under 60 seconds.
The SSTB limitation is one of the more nuanced areas of the QBI rules — and one that disproportionately affects the very professionals who prepare tax returns. CPAs, EAs, attorneys, and financial advisors who operate their own practices are all SSTB owners by definition, which means the phase-out hits close to home.
The good news: the phase-out is a slope, not a cliff, and there are legitimate planning tools that can reduce taxable income, improve the phase-out calculation, or shift income to non-SSTB sources. The clients who benefit most are those who start the conversation in Q3 — not after the year closes.