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One Big Beautiful Bill: Impacts For Tax Planning

9/4/2025

2 Comments

 
A sweeping new tax bill—officially called the “One Big Beautiful Tax Bill”—has passed, bringing
a mix of extensions, updates, and brand-new provisions that could shape your tax planning
and financial strategy in the years ahead. Whether you’re focused on wealth preservation,
retirement, or generational planning, here’s a quick look at some of what’s staying the same,
what’s changing, and what’s completely new.
 ________________________________________________
What’s Staying (Mostly) the Same
Several core provisions of the current tax code remain intact, with minor adjustments:
  • Tax Brackets: The existing brackets (10%, 12%, 22%, 24%, 32%, 35%, 37%) stay in place,
            but inflation adjustments in 2026 will slightly shrink the 22% bracket.
  • Standard Deduction: Modestly increased across all filing statuses in 2025
            (e.g., Married Filing Jointly up to $31,500).
  • Filing Thresholds and Return Requirements: No structural changes; thresholds remain
            inflation-adjusted.
  • Itemized Deductions: Limits remain. Mortgage interest deduction is capped, and
            ​deductions for moving expenses, personal exemptions, and miscellaneous items continue
            to be repealed.
  • Mortgage Insurance Premiums: Now treated as qualified residence interest and deductible.
  • Child Tax Credit: The nonrefundable portion increases to $2,200 in 2026. The refundable
            portion ($1,700 in 2025) is now permanent and indexed for inflation.
  • QBI Deduction: Extended with higher income phaseouts—$150,000 for joint filers,
            $75,000 for others.
  • Student Loans: Debt discharged due to death or disability remains non-taxable.
            Employers can continue offering tax-free student loan repayment assistance.
  • ABLE Accounts: Saver’s Credit eligibility and rollover rules from 529 plans remain intact.
  • Education Assistance and Dependent Care Benefits: Exclusion thresholds and rules
            unchanged.
  • Other Provisions: Cash contribution limits, HSA rules, and Pass-Through Entity Taxes
            (PTETs) stay the same.
  • Combat Zone Tax Benefits: No material changes but continue to apply.
 ________________________________________________
What’s Meaningfully Different
Several notable changes could impact higher earners, business owners, and families planning
large gifts or charitable contributions:
  • State and Local Tax (SALT) Deduction: Raised to $40,000 (or $20,000 for Married Filing
            Separately), with income-based phaseouts starting at $500,000 (or $250,000 for Married
            Filing Separately).
  • Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT): More filers could be subject to AMT starting in 2026
            as income thresholds revert to 2018 levels. Seven years of inflation adjustments have
            been removed for joint filers.
  • Itemized Deduction Limitation (Pease Rule): Reinstated for taxpayers in the 37%
            bracket starting after 2025.
  • Adoption Credit: Up to $5,000 will now be refundable starting in 2025.
  • Green Energy Credits: Available through 2025 for clean vehicle and residential energy
            upgrades, with phased expiration timelines. Full list of terminated credits includes: Clean
            Vehicle Credit, Previously Owned Clean Vehicle Credit, Commercial Clean Vehicle Credit,
            Alternative Fuel Refueling Property Credit, Residential Clean Energy Credit, Energy Efficient
            Home Improvement Credit, and New Energy Efficient Home Credit.
  • Qualified Opportunity Zones: New tiers for basis increases after five years—10% for
            regular zones, 30% for rural funds.
  • Bonus Depreciation & Section 179 Expensing: Enhanced limits on both, including 100%
            expensing reinstated for property placed in service after January 20, 2025.
  • Qualified Small Business Stock (QSBS): Tiered gain exclusions now based on holding
            ​period (up to 100%) with higher per-issuer caps and asset thresholds.
  • Exclusion of Interest on Rural or Agricultural Loans: New provision allows interest
            income to be excluded for qualified lenders.
 ________________________________________________
What’s New (and Totally Different)
The bill introduces several brand-new deductions and planning opportunities, particularly
aimed at seniors and middle-income taxpayers:
  • Senior Deduction: Extra $6,000 deduction per qualifying individual age 65+ (phased out at
            higher incomes). Applies 2025–2028.
  • “No Tax on Tips” Deduction: Up to $25,000 deductible for tips, with income-based
            phaseouts and anti-abuse rules. Does not apply to payroll taxes (FICA).
  • Overtime Deduction: Similar $25,000 deduction for overtime income (with limits), phased
            ​out at $300,000 (Married Filing Jointly) / $150,000 (others).
  • Car Loan Interest: Deduction up to $10,000 on new U.S.-assembled car loans (not leases),
            with strict limitations and income thresholds.
  • Charitable Deduction for Non-Itemizers: Up to $2,000 for married couples giving cash,
            beginning in 2026.
  • New Cap on Itemized Deductions: Itemized deductions can’t exceed 35% of adjusted
            gross income (AGI) beginning in 2026.
  • AGI Floor for Charitable Contributions: Must exceed 0.5% of AGI to qualify (starting 2026).
  • “Trump Accounts”: New child-focused savings accounts based on IRA rules with strict
            contribution and investment limits. Designed for dependents under age 18. Employer
            contributions and Treasury pilot funding included. Initial $1,000 seed for children born
            2025–2028.
 ________________________________________________
Other Notable Changes
  • Estate Tax Exemption: Increased to $15 million per person in 2026, with portability and
            inflation adjustments.
  • Medicaid Changes: New work and residency requirements, with major funding cuts
            effective 2026.
  • 529 Plan Expansion: Now includes a broader range of qualified K–12 education expenses,
            with the annual limit doubled to $20,000.
  • Student Loan Strategy: Income-Based Repayment (IBR) and Public Service Loan
            Forgiveness (PSLF) remain viable options; Pay As You Earn (PAYE) may sunset post-2026 --
            borrowers should review their repayment strategies soon.
  • Educator Expenses: Unreimbursed classroom costs now deductible again as
            miscellaneous itemized deductions.
  • Social Security Taxation: No change—benefits remain taxable up to 85%; contrary to
            campaign promises, no exclusion or credit was enacted.
 ________________________________________________
Final Thoughts: What It All Means for You
The One Big Beautiful Tax Bill brings a mix of changes—some permanent, some temporary--
along with detailed updates to existing tax rules. Headlines have focused on features like tax relief
for Social Security recipients and tax breaks on tips and overtime pay, as well as the especially
contentious elements such as Medicaid funding cuts and concerns about the widening federal
deficit. Regardless of where you stand politically, the bill is expected to affect taxpayers across the
country. That said, the impact won’t look the same for everyone—actual outcomes depend heavily
on your income, filing status, and long-term goals.

Source: Focus Partners Wealth
2 Comments
Taylor Davis
10/29/2025 11:29:16 am

Thank you Mr. Bixel! I appreciate this summary

Reply
Tessa
10/29/2025 03:35:50 pm

Thank you so much for this summary. Very, very helpful!!!

Reply



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