- President Donald Trump’s “big beautiful bill” includes several tax changes that are effective for 2025.
- Provisions include permanent extensions of Trump’s 2017 tax cuts, along with boosts for the standard deduction and child tax credit.
- There are also new temporary deductions for older Americans, tips, overtime income and auto loan interest.
It’s been about two weeks since President
Donald Trump
‘s “big beautiful bill” became law, and
financial advisors
and tax professionals are still digesting what the sweeping legislation means for clients.
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Meanwhile, several changes are
effective for 2025
, which will impact
tax returns
filed in 2026.
While the Trump administration has been promoting ”
working family tax cuts
,” the legislation’s impact depends on your unique situation — and some updates are complex, experts say.
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“There are just so many moving pieces,” said certified financial planner Jim Guarino, managing director at Baker Newman Noyes in Woburn, Massachusetts. He is also a certified public accountant.
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Without income planning, you could reduce, or even eliminate, various tax benefits for which you are otherwise eligible, experts say.
When it comes to tax strategy, “you never want to do anything in a silo,” Guarino said.
Here are some of the key changes from Trump’s legislation to know for 2025, and how the updates could affect your taxes.
The Republicans’ marquee law made permanent
Trump’s 2017 tax cuts
— including
lower tax brackets
and higher standard deductions, among other provisions — which broadly reduced taxes for Americans.
Without the extension, most filers could have seen
higher taxes in 2026
, according to a 2024 report from the Tax Foundation. However, the new law enhances Trump’s 2017 cuts, with a few tax breaks that start in 2025:
- The standard deduction increases from $15,000 to $15,750 (single filers) and $30,000 to $31,500 (married filing jointly).
-
There is also a bump for the
child tax credit
, with the maximum benefit going from $2,000 to $2,200 per child.
If you itemize tax breaks, there is also a temporary higher cap on the
state and local tax deduction
, or SALT. For 2025, the SALT deduction limit is $40,000, up from $10,000.
The higher SALT benefit phases out, or reduces, for incomes
between $500,000 to $600,000, which can create an
artificially higher tax rate
of 45.5% that some experts are calling a “SALT torpedo.”
This creates a “sweet spot” for the SALT deduction between $200,000 and $500,000 of earnings, based on other provisions in the bill, CPA John McCarthy
wrote in a blog post
this week.
Trump’s tax and spending bill also introduced some temporary tax breaks, which are effective for 2025. Some of these were floated during his 2024 presidential campaign.
These provisions include a
$6,000 “bonus” deduction
for certain older Americans ages 65 and over, which phases out over $75,000 for single filers or $150,000 for married couples filing jointly.
There are also new deductions for
tip income
, overtime earnings and
car loan interest
, with varying eligibility requirements.
This chart shows a breakdown of some of the key individual provisions that are effective for 2025 compared to previous law.
During the pandemic, Congress boosted the
premium tax credit
through 2025, which made Marketplace health insurance more affordable.
But Trump’s legislation didn’t extend the enhanced tax break, which could
raise Affordable Care Act premiums
for more than 22 million enrollees if no action is taken, according to KFF, a health policy organization.
That could impact enrollees when choosing ACA health plans this fall, according to Tommy Lucas, a CFP and enrolled agent at Moisand Fitzgerald Tamayo in Orlando, Florida.
Starting in 2026, enrollees need to prepare for the ACA subsidy cliff, where enrollees lose the premium tax credit when income exceeds the earnings thresholds by even $1, he said.
Currently, most ACA enrollees receive at least part of the premium tax credit. However, the subsidy cliff means enrollees lose the benefit once earnings exceed 400% of the federal poverty limit. For 2025, that threshold was
$103,280 for a family of three
, according to The Peterson Center on Healthcare, a nonprofit for healthcare policy, and KFF.
Also on CNBC
-
Student loan bills to double for some borrowers as Biden-era relief expires
-
What a Trump, Powell faceoff means for your money
-
Trump’s ‘no tax on tips’ sparks questions: ‘We’re looking at a crystal ball’







