Safe sex can help your taxes. Condoms are now deductible if you itemize, IRS says

If you practice safe sex, the IRS has some good news: Condoms now qualify as an itemized deduction.

When the IRS recently announced new tax brackets, standard deductions and other important items for the 2025 tax season, it also issued Notice 2024-71. It says condoms for a taxpayer, spouse or dependent now qualify as a medical expense and can be deducted if you itemize and your medical expenses exceed 7.5% of adjusted gross income (AGI) for the year. AGI is total income minus deductions, or "adjustments" to income that you are eligible to take.

Previously, condoms as an itemized tax deduction were on a case-by-case basis. “You had to prove you had a medical reason such as not spreading a STD (sexually transmitted disease) rather than just as a contraceptive,” said Richard Pon, a certified public accountant in Northern California.

Condoms have been reimbursable for years through a pre-tax health savings account (HSA) or flexible savings account (FSA), which cover over-the-counter medications that aren’t generally tax deductible as an itemized deduction.

Condoms are only one of many medical-related expenses that qualify for a tax deduction, Pon said. Some listed below aren’t new but may be little known, he said.

More tax-deductible medical-related expenses

  • DNA collection kits if used to obtain health care information, not ancestry information. This is suggested in a 2019 private letter ruling (PLR) for a taxpayer asking the IRS for clarification on the tax treatment for genetic testing. Technically, PLRs apply only to the taxpayer requesting clarification, but the ruling indicates the IRS’s thinking on the matter and how it might treat similar situations, experts said. The IRS said the “taxpayer must allocate the price paid for the DNA collection kit and health services between the medical and non-medical items and services to determine what is medical care” and may deduct that portion of the expense.

  • Breast pumps and lactation supplies, such as pump accessories, nursing pads, milk storage bags and nipple cream and ointments.

  • Smoking cessation programs and nicotine withdrawal drugs, but only if they’re doctor-prescribed. Over-the-counter nicotine patches are not tax deductible.

  • Volunteer-related expenses. The hourly rate for time spent helping can’t be deducted, but unreimbursed items volunteers spent money on can be as noncash charitable contributions. Any deduction of $250 or more requires documentation and possibly, acknowledgment from the qualified charity. “Volunteer medical professionals may have scrubs, uniforms and personal protective equipment,” Pon said. “Sometimes they have volunteer travel, such as Doctors Without Borders. Sometimes they have medical equipment they pay for. Volunteer first responders may also have uniforms and safety gear that are unreimbursed costs.”