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Healthcare Costs and Taxes

99 Medical Expenses You Can Deduct in 2026

Charlene Rhinehart, CPA
Written by Charlene Rhinehart, CPA
Updated on January 20, 2026

Key takeaways:

  • If you itemize deductions, you can deduct unreimbursed medical and dental expenses that exceed 7.5% of your adjusted gross income.

  • The IRS lets you deduct expenses for many medically necessary products and services. These include surgeries, prescription medications, and dental and vision care.

  • You can’t deduct medical expenses that are for general health purposes, like nutritional supplements and vitamins. To qualify as a deduction, an expense must be primarily for the diagnosis, prevention, mitigation, or treatment of a medical condition, or it must affect a part or function of the body.

With the tax-filing deadline approaching, you might be trying to lower your income tax bill. One often overlooked opportunity for savings is deducting medical expenses.

Many people take the standard deduction. But if you itemize deductions, you may be able to deduct certain medical and dental expenses. This could lower your income tax for the year.

If you had surgery, were diagnosed with cancer or another serious medical condition, or used in vitro fertilization to help you get pregnant, the high out-of-pocket costs could enable you to claim a medical expense deduction. Some of the expenses that qualify as deductions, such as wigs and LASIK surgery, may even surprise you.

What are the rules for deducting medical expenses?

You must meet certain requirements to be eligible to deduct medical expenses on your tax return.

1.  You must itemize deductions

First, you must itemize your deductions on Schedule A of your tax return, instead of taking the standard deduction.

Generally, you’ll itemize deductions if they total more than the standard deduction. You’ll choose the option that leaves you with the lower federal tax bill.

For example, if you’re a single filer in 2025, you won’t want to itemize deductions unless they exceed the standard deduction amount. For 2025, the standard deduction increased to $15,750 under the One Big Beautiful Bill. Since standard deduction amounts can change, it’s important to review IRS guidelines each year before deciding whether to itemize.

Below are the inflation-adjusted standard deduction amounts for single filers and married couples filing jointly from 2022 through 2026. Refer to IRS guidance for other filing statuses.

Year 

Standard deduction for single filers 

Standard deduction for married couples filing jointly 

2026 

$16,100

$32,200

2025

$15,750

$31,500

2024

$14,600

$29,200 

2023

$13,850

$27,700

2022

$12,950

$25,900

2.  Your medical expenses must exceed the 7.5% income threshold

Even if you itemize, you can’t deduct all medical expenses.

You may deduct unreimbursed medical and dental expenses for you, your spouse, and dependents only to the extent they exceed 7.5% of your adjusted gross income (AGI).

Let’s say your AGI is $60,000. Then 7.5% of your income is $4,500. If your medical expenses total $15,000 for the year, you may deduct $10,500, which is the amount above the threshold.

3. Expenses must be unreimbursed

You can deduct medical expenses only if you paid for them out of pocket. You can’t deduct expenses that were paid or reimbursed by the following:

4. Expenses must be qualified medical expenses

According to IRS Publication 502, medical expenses are costs paid to diagnose, treat, prevent, or manage a physical or mental condition. This includes many medical services, prescription medications, and medical equipment. But general wellness and cosmetic expenses do not qualify.

You can generally deduct medical and dental expenses in the year you paid them. But you usually are not allowed to deduct payments for medical or dental care you’ll receive in a future year.

Below are examples of common medical expenses that may be deductible, organized by category.

Vision-related expenses

Services and products used to improve vision are qualifying medical expenses. This includes contact lenses and related products. Below are 10 vision expenses you may be eligible to deduct in 2026:

Dental expenses

Dental expenses not covered by insurance may be tax-deductible if they help prevent or alleviate dental disease. Below are 14 dental expenses that you may be able to deduct:

Prescription medications

Medications prescribed by a healthcare professional count as qualifying medical expenses. This is also true for insulin that’s sold over the counter. Below are 13 of the most commonly prescribed medications that are tax-deductible.

Antidepressants

Medications for chronic weight management

Medications for erectile dysfunction

Type 2 diabetes medications

Family planning and fertility treatment expenses

You can deduct the following 11 expenses related to family planning and fertility treatments: 

Insurance premiums

You may be able to claim health insurance premiums on your tax return. This depends on how much you spent on medical care, how you paid for premiums, and if you were self-employed. But you cannot deduct expenses that were reimbursed by an insurance plan, an FSA, an HSA, or another tax-advantaged savings account.

If you paid for any of these nine types of insurance premiums with after-tax dollars, they may be deductible:

If you were self-employed during the year, you may be eligible to claim the self-employed health insurance deduction for premiums you paid out of pocket, even if you claim the standard deduction on your taxes. The deduction lets you claim up to 100% of the premiums you paid for yourself, your spouse, your dependents, and your eligible adult children.

Home improvement expenses

If you have a disability and needed to make certain accommodations to your home, you can deduct costs for the following six items as medical expenses:

  • Built ramps to get in and out of your home

  • Installed grab bars in a bathroom

  • Lowered kitchen cabinets

  • Moved electrical outlets

  • Set up outdoor wheelchair lifts (porch lifts) 

  • Widened doors and hallways

Other qualified medical expenses

Here is a list of 36 additional items that you can deduct as medical expenses:

  • Acupuncture treatments

  • Ambulance services

  • Annual physical exams

  • Artificial limbs

  • Bandages

  • Blood sugar test kits

  • Body scans

  • Breast reconstruction surgery

  • Car modifications for people with disabilities

  • Chiropractor services for medical care

  • Copays

  • Crutches

  • Guide dog trained to assist visually impaired or hearing-disabled people

  • Hand sanitizer for preventing the spread of COVID-19

  • Hearing aids

  • Inpatient care at a hospital

  • Lab fees

  • Masks for preventing the spread of COVID-19

  • Medical conference attendance (if related to the treatment of a specific condition)

  • Nursing home costs, including lodging and meals

  • Organ transplant

  • Osteopathic services for medical care

  • Oxygen equipment

  • Oxygen to relieve breathing problems caused by a medical condition

  • Psychiatric care

  • Services from a Christian Science practitioner for medical care

  • Substance use disorder treatment

  • Therapy received as medical treatment

  • Transportation for medical services

  • Treatment at a health institute if certain requirements are met

  • Visits to a psychologist for medical care

  • Weight-loss programs to treat heart disease, hypertension, and certain other conditions

  • Wheelchair maintenance services, like battery or tire replacement

  • Wheelchairs

  • Wigs that are medically necessary

  • X-rays

Which medical expenses are not tax-deductible?

You’re not allowed to deduct expenses that are for general health purposes, such as gym memberships, vitamins, and diet food. You also cannot deduct payments for future medical and dental services.

Below are some other services and items that are likely not tax-deductible:

  • Deodorant

  • Diapers

  • Facelifts

  • Hair transplants

  • Health beverages

  • Herbal supplements

  • Insurance premiums paid by your employer

  • Liposuction

  • Nicotine patches and gum that don’t require a prescription

  • Nonprescription medications

  • Nutritional supplements 

  • Surrogacy expenses

  • Toothpaste

  • Transportation to and from work

How to deduct medical expenses on your taxes

If you qualify to deduct medical expenses, you’ll report them as an itemized deduction on Schedule A of your federal tax return. Here are the steps you need to take to deduct medical expenses on your taxes:

  1. Add all your unreimbursed medical, dental, and vision expenses for the year.

  2. Calculate 7.5% of your AGI.

  3. Subtract the threshold from your total expenses.

  4. Report the remaining amount on Schedule A.

Be sure to keep receipts, bills, and other documentation to support your deduction in case the IRS asks for proof.

Frequently asked questions

It depends on your situation. Medical expenses are deductible only if you itemize and your unreimbursed costs exceed 7.5% of your AGI. If you have unusually high healthcare costs, itemizing may help you lower your tax bill.

You should keep receipts, bills, and statements that show what you paid, when you paid it, and what the expense was for. This can include invoices from healthcare professionals, pharmacy receipts, and insurance statements showing amounts not reimbursed. You’re not required to send this documentation with your tax return, but you should keep it in case the IRS asks for verification later.

You can deduct the portion of your unreimbursed medical and dental expenses that exceed 7.5% of your AGI. This doesn’t mean 7.5% of your expenses are deductible. It means only the amount above the threshold qualifies. For example, if your AGI is $50,000, you can deduct medical expenses above $4,500.

The bottom line

If you itemize deductions, you may be able to deduct medical and dental expenses that have not already been reimbursed. To qualify as deductions, expenses must be related to the prevention or treatment of a specific medical condition or injury. The total expenses must exceed 7.5% of your adjusted gross income if you want to deduct them on your tax return.

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Why trust our experts?

Charlene Rhinehart, CPA, is a personal finance editor at GoodRx. She has been a certified public accountant for over a decade.

References

Internal Revenue Service. (n.d.). Standard deduction.

Internal Revenue Service. (2024). Part III — administrative, procedural, and miscellaneous.

GoodRx Health has strict sourcing policies and relies on primary sources such as medical organizations, governmental agencies, academic institutions, and peer-reviewed scientific journals. Learn more about how we ensure our content is accurate, thorough, and unbiased by reading our editorial guidelines.

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