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Tipped Workers Are Getting the Biggest Tax Refunds of Their Lives, and One Party Voted Against Every Dollar
If you work for tips in America, this tax season probably hit different. And by “different,” we mean thousands of dollars landing in your bank account that you never expected to see.
President Trump flew into Las Vegas on Thursday for a victory lap at the AC Hotel in Symphony Park, the city he calls “the birthplace” of his signature No Tax on Tips policy. He stood with waiters, bartenders, casino dealers, bellmen, and cooks who all had the same message: the refunds are real, and they are life-changing.
The numbers back it up. Over 53 million Americans have now claimed at least one of the new tax deductions signed into law as part of the Working Families Tax Cuts. Six million filers claimed the No Tax on Tips deduction alone, with an average deduction of over $7,100. Workers across Las Vegas reported refunds of $5,000, $6,000, $7,000, even $8,000 or more.
One worker at the roundtable put it simply: “I received the largest tax return in my life this year, all because my tips were not being taxed any longer.”
And here is the part that should make every voter pay attention. Every single Democrat in Congress voted against making this happen.
Remember: EVERY SINGLE DEMOCRAT voted AGAINST No Tax on Tips. https://t.co/2kgUAKLCJP— RJC (@RJC) April 13, 2026
Trump told the packed room how the whole idea started: a waitress approached him during a dinner in Las Vegas and said they should have no tax on tips. He called it “not an expensive consultant” and ran with it all the way to the Oval Office.
RedState covered the event and the broader impact:
President Donald J. Trump returned to the birthplace of his signature No Tax on Tips policy to highlight its massive success and the transformative impact of the largest tax cuts in American history. Approximately 200 people packed the roundtable at the AC Hotel Las Vegas Symphony Park.
The roundtable included Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Nevada Lt. Governor Stavros Anthony, State Assemblywoman Lisa Cole, Clark County Commissioner April Becker, and various hospitality workers. Service workers reported the policy “helps tremendously” and “gives me a little more breathing room when it comes to rent, gas, and food.”
Trump emphasized that “every single radical Left Democrat in Congress voted to deny the American people these life-saving changes.”
It is not just tips. The tax cuts also eliminated taxes on overtime pay, with 25 million filers claiming an average deduction of $3,100. Seniors got No Tax on Social Security. And one million Americans used a new car loan interest deduction for vehicles made in the U.S.
Members of Congress who voted for the bill have not been shy about reminding people where the credit belongs.
This tax season, millions of tipped workers will get a $32 billion tax cut just from No Tax on Tips, ensuring Americans can pocket more of their hard-earned money. https://t.co/5BFzu0RQBt— Rep. Tim Walberg (@RepWalberg) April 13, 2026
Fox 5 Vegas reported from the ground in Las Vegas:
President Trump held a roundtable discussion at the AC Hotel in Symphony Park in downtown Las Vegas. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent attended the event alongside local officials and hospitality workers.
Trump declared that “Las Vegas is the home of the largest concentration of tipped workers anywhere in the country,” adding that thanks to the tax cuts, “thousands of Nevada waiters, waitresses, casino dealers, bartenders, bellmen, and barbers received the biggest tax refunds of their entire lives.” Many workers reported refunds ranging from $5,000 to $8,000 or more.
The policy is set to expire in 2028. Stage participants included an LVMPD officer, a makeup artist, and a longtime bartender, all of whom testified to the policy’s direct impact on their finances.
The policy expires in 2028, which means the midterms just got a lot more interesting. Millions of workers now have a very personal, very tangible reason to pay attention to which party wants to keep their money in their pockets, and which one tried to stop it from happening in the first place.