OBBBA Compliance in New Hampshire: W-2 Requirements for Tipped Employees (Conforming)
New Hampshire conforms to the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA). Here's what that means for employers with tipped employees in New Hampshire.
State Conformity Status: Conforming
Because New Hampshire conforms to OBBBA, your tipped employees can claim both the federal AND state deductions for qualified tips and overtime premiums. This means the data you report on W-2s directly benefits your employees at both tax levels.
W-2 Reporting Requirements in New Hampshire
Regardless of state conformity, all New Hampshire employers with tipped employees must:
- Track qualified tips separately — voluntary cash and credit card tips vs. mandatory service charges
- Calculate the 0.5x overtime premium for each employee's overtime hours
- Assign a TTOC code to each tipped employee based on their primary role
- Report on W-2s — Code TP (qualified tips) and Code TT (overtime premium) in Box 12, TTOC code in Box 14b
Key Deadlines
- 2025 (transition year): IRS offers penalty relief for good-faith compliance efforts
- 2026 onwards: Full enforcement — penalties of $60-$680 per incorrect W-2
- January 31: W-2 filing deadline for the prior tax year
Common TTOC Codes for New Hampshire Businesses
The most common tipped occupations in New Hampshire include:
- FB01 — Waiter/Waitress
- FB02 — Bartender
- FB08 — Barista
- HL06 — Valet Parking
- PC01 — Hairdresser/Stylist
See the complete TTOC code list for all occupation categories.
Related Guides
- What Is OBBBA? Complete Employer Guide
- IRS Penalties for Incorrect W-2s
- Complete TTOC Code List
- Qualified Tips vs. Service Charges
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