Definition

What is qualified OT tracking?

Qualified OT tracking is the recordkeeping process for estimating and documenting the FLSA overtime premium portion that may matter for the qualified overtime deduction.

Not affiliated with the IRS, Treasury, Department of Labor, payroll providers, or tax software vendors. For educational and tracking purposes only.

Qualified OT tracking in plain English

It is a structured way to connect overtime pay records to an estimate of the qualified overtime premium portion.

The tracking file should show the source documents, calculation method, regular-rate assumptions, overtime hours, and review notes.

Who uses qualified OT tracking

Employees

Employees use it to organize pay statements and prepare questions before handing records to a tax professional.

Employers and payroll teams

Employers use it to create consistent year-end support notes and avoid one-off spreadsheet confusion.

Tax preparers

Preparers use it to understand how a client estimated the amount and what records support the number.

Qualified OT tracking FAQ

Is qualified OT tracking the same as payroll software?

No. It is a documentation workflow. Payroll software may provide source data, but the tracking sheet organizes the deduction-related record trail.

Can I use it before I have a W-2 Box 14 amount?

Yes. For 2025, IRS guidance allows reasonable methods when separate qualified overtime reporting is not provided, so supporting notes are especially important.

Does tracking prove I am eligible?

No. Tracking supports the calculation record. Eligibility and final tax treatment require review of IRS rules and taxpayer-specific facts.

Review the official guidance directly

IRS FAQ: Qualified overtime compensation deduction

Defines qualified overtime compensation, FLSA overtime eligibility, deduction limits, reporting rules, and taxpayer requirements.

Internal Revenue Service | FAQ

Open source

IRS overview: No Tax on Overtime deduction

Summarizes the deduction cap, MAGI phase-out thresholds, Social Security number rule, and 2025 reporting note.

Internal Revenue Service | Overview

Open source

IRS Notice 2025-69

Provides 2025 methods for individuals estimating qualified overtime compensation when separate reporting is not available.

Internal Revenue Service | Notice

Open source

DOL overtime overview

Explains the FLSA overtime baseline for covered, nonexempt employees working over 40 hours in a workweek.

U.S. Department of Labor | Guidance

Open source