OBBBA Compliance in New York: W-2 Requirements for Tipped Employees (Non-Conforming)

New York does not conform to the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA). Here's what that means for employers with tipped employees in New York.

New York has a tiered tip credit system that varies by region (NYC, Long Island/Westchester, and the rest of the state). State reporting requirements differ from federal.

State Conformity Status: Non-Conforming

Because New York does not conform to OBBBA, your employees can claim the deduction on their federal return but NOT on their New York state return. You are still required to report the qualified amounts on the W-2 for federal purposes.

This means New York employees will see a smaller overall tax benefit compared to employees in conforming states. As an employer, your W-2 reporting obligations are the same regardless of state conformity.

W-2 Reporting Requirements in New York

Regardless of state conformity, all New York employers with tipped employees must:

  1. Track qualified tips separately — voluntary cash and credit card tips vs. mandatory service charges
  2. Calculate the 0.5x overtime premium for each employee's overtime hours
  3. Assign a TTOC code to each tipped employee based on their primary role
  4. Report on W-2s — Code TP (qualified tips) and Code TT (overtime premium) in Box 12, TTOC code in Box 14b

Key Deadlines

Common TTOC Codes for New York Businesses

The most common tipped occupations in New York include:

See the complete TTOC code list for all occupation categories.

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