The “One Big Beautiful Bill” Signed Into Law—Major Tax and Policy Changes Now Official
The “One Big Beautiful Bill” Signed Into Law—Major Tax and Policy Changes Now Official
July 11, 2025

On July 4, President Trump signed the much-anticipated “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” (OBBB) into law, following approval by both the Senate and the House of Representatives. This sweeping legislation permanently extends and reshapes many provisions of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), with wide-ranging implications for individuals, businesses, nonprofits, and international taxpayers.

We’re continuing to monitor implementation and are committed to helping our clients understand the law’s implications for planning and operations.

 

What’s in the “One Big Beautiful Bill”?

The final version of the OBBB builds on earlier proposals from both chambers, with several notable revisions and additions. Key highlights include:

 

Individual Provisions

  • Permanent Tax Rates: TCJA’s seven-bracket system becomes permanent, with inflation adjustments. The 10% and 12% brackets receive an extra year of indexing.
  • Standard Deduction & Senior Bonus: The higher standard deduction is locked in. A $6,000 “senior bonus” deduction applies from 2025–2028, phasing out at $150,000/$300,000 MAGI.
  • Child Tax Credit: Increases to $2,200 per child ($1,700 refundable), indexed for inflation. One spouse must have an SSN when filing jointly.
  • Child & Dependent Care Credit: Expanded to 50% of eligible expenses with tiered AGI-based phaseouts.
  • Estate & Gift Tax: Exemption rises to $15 million per individual in 2026, indexed.
  • Tips & Overtime Deductions: Above-the-line deductions up to $25,000 (tips) and $12,500 (overtime) for 2025–2028. Phases out at $150,000/$300,000 MAGI.
  • Car Loan Interest: Deduct up to $10,000 on interest for U.S.-assembled personal vehicles (2025–2028), with MAGI-based phaseouts.
  • Charitable Contributions: Non-itemizers can deduct up to $1,000 ($2,000 joint). Itemizers must exceed a 0.5% AGI floor.
  • SALT Deduction Cap: Temporarily raised to $40,000 from 2025–2029, with inflation adjustments and a phase-down above $500,000 MAGI. PTET workaround remains intact.
  • QBI Deduction: Section 199A is made permanent at 20%, with expanded phase-in limits and a $400 minimum deduction.
  • Trump Accounts: Tax-deferred IRAs for minors with a $1,000 federal contribution (2025–2028) and structured withdrawal rules.

Business & Nonprofit Provisions

  • Bonus Depreciation: 100% expensing restored permanently for property placed in service after Jan. 19, 2025.
  • Section 179: Expensing limit increased to $2.5M with a $4M phaseout.
  • R&D Expensing: Full expensing for domestic R&D from 2025. Retroactive relief to 2022 available for small businesses.
  • Interest Deductibility: Section 163(j) returns to an EBITDA-based limit permanently.
  • Childcare Credit: Credit expanded to 40% of expenses ($500K cap; $600K for small businesses), inflation-adjusted.
  • Qualified Small Business Stock: Gains now excluded 50% (3 years), 75% (4 years), 100% (5+ years). Asset limit raised from $50M to $75M.
  • Nonprofit UBIT Changes: Transportation fringe benefits and royalty income may again trigger unrelated business taxable income (UBTI).

Clean Energy Credits

Multiple energy credits are terminated or phased out, including EV, solar, hydrogen, and energy-efficient property credits.

 

What This Means for You

The “One Big Beautiful Bill” has broad implications across income levels and sectors. Whether you’re planning for retirement, managing a growing business, or overseeing a nonprofit, understanding the implications of this legislation is critical.

These are just a few of the many potential changes we expect over the coming months. We’re closely monitoring developments and will continue to provide updates with clarity, context, and a focus on what matters most to you.

If you have questions about how this legislation could impact your strategy or next steps, we encourage you to connect with your advisor.

Treasury Circular 230 Disclosure

Unless expressly stated otherwise, any federal tax advice contained in this communication is not intended or written to be used, and cannot be used or relied upon, for the purpose of avoiding penalties under the Internal Revenue Code, or for promoting, marketing, or recommending any transaction or matter addressed herein.

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