The “One Big Beautiful Bill” (OBBB) is now law—and it brings the most sweeping overhaul to the U.S. tax code since 2017. With dozens of changes affecting individual taxpayers, estates, businesses, and international structures, the OBBB Act reshapes both near-term filing strategy and long-term planning priorities.
While headlines have focused on Trump Accounts and clean energy cuts, the real story lies in the fine print: permanent estate tax reforms, expanded business deductions, new rules for U.S.-controlled foreign corporations, and the rollback of dozens of pandemic- and IRA-era incentives. Many of these changes kick in for the 2025 or 2026 tax year, which means clients have a brief but critical window to act.
This guide breaks down the most relevant provisions by taxpayer type and planning theme, and highlights what to do now, what to prepare for in 2026, and where hidden opportunities may still exist.
The OBBB Act introduces the most sweeping update to the U.S. international tax regime since the 2017 TCJA. Whether you operate a multinational business, manage a foreign investment structure, or rely on foreign tax credits, these changes will likely require a fresh review of your exposure, elections, and planning models. Below, we break down the seven most significant provisions.
Global Intangible Low-Taxed Income (GILTI) has officially been renamed Net CFC Tested Income (NCTI) under amended §951A. More than just a rebrand, the effective tax rate is increasing:
Planning Insight: Clients should re-model FTC availability and Subpart F/NCTI allocation across their CFCs. Consider whether foreign effective rates are still sufficient to avoid residual U.S. tax.
The Foreign-Derived Intangible Income (FDII) deduction becomes Foreign-Derived Deduction Eligible Income (FDDEI). Key changes include:
Planning Insight: U.S. exporters and IP-heavy businesses may find that benefits under FDDEI no longer justify their current structuring. Consider IP migration, cost-sharing revisions, or shifting income to non-preferred jurisdictions.
The OBBB Act reverses the TCJA-era repeal of §958(b)(4), meaning U.S. subsidiaries are no longer treated as owning their foreign parent’s stock via downward attribution.
But there’s a catch: new §951B imposes Subpart F and NCTI inclusion on foreign-controlled U.S. shareholders (FCUS) even if the technical “CFC” test isn’t met. This is aimed at U.S. blocker entities commonly used by foreign funds and family offices.
Planning Insight: Don’t assume a domestic blocker shields you. Carefully review any U.S. entity with foreign parentage or co-ownership to see if it now qualifies as a FCUS under §951B.
Two major changes affect sourcing and foreign tax credit usage:
Planning Insight: If your structure depends on high FTC utilization—especially in manufacturing or real estate—you may face higher residual U.S. tax unless sourcing or jurisdiction is optimized.
A long-standing “temporary extender” is now permanent. The CFC look-through rule under §954(c)(6) allows dividends, interest, rents, and royalties between related CFCs to avoid Subpart F inclusion.
Planning Insight: This is a win for foreign holding companies and layered CFC groups. Permanent look-through simplifies deferral and income rebalancing planning across jurisdictions.
The OBBB Act adds important anti-abuse timing rules:
Planning Insight: Year-end restructurings and “just-in-time” stock transfers to shift income now have limited value. Mid-year changes should be closely modeled to avoid surprise inclusions.
U.S. shareholders can no longer elect a one-month deferral for specified foreign corporations (SFCs). Instead, all foreign subsidiaries must align their year-end with that of the U.S. shareholder.
Planning Insight: This closes a long-used deferral technique, particularly among fund structures and consolidated reporting groups. Year-end alignment may require adjustments in accounting systems and Q1 cash flow modeling.
From tightened sourcing and ownership rules to new attribution mechanics and renamed regimes, the OBBB Act overhauls key pillars of international tax planning. For clients with foreign subsidiaries, outbound structures, or inbound U.S. investments, these rules introduce compliance risks—but also planning opportunities.
We recommend a comprehensive review of the full cross-border structure and an update to the NCTI/FTC modeling for 2025–2026. Book a strategy session with our international tax team to ensure your structure remains optimized under the new law.
One of the most client-relevant wins under the OBBB Act is the permanent increase in the federal estate and gift tax exemption to $15 million per person, indexed for inflation beginning in 2025.
Under prior law, the temporarily doubled exemption created by the 2017 TCJA was scheduled to sunset after 2025, potentially reducing the exemption from over $13 million per person to around $7 million. The OBBB Act eliminates this sunset entirely by:
As a result, high-net-worth individuals have more certainty and more room for strategic lifetime gifting without clawback risk.
A taxpayer who used $12 million of their exemption in 2024 will still have approximately $3+ million of new exemption available in 2026 and beyond (depending on indexing). Under prior law, they would have exhausted their exemption entirely.
Scenario | Without OBB (2026) | Post-OBBB Law (2026) |
---|---|---|
Lifetime exemption amount | ~$6–7M | $15M+ (indexed) |
TCJA clawback risk | Yes | Eliminated |
Gift made in 2024 of $13M | Fully covered, but risk in 2026 | Fully covered with room to spare |
The OBBB Act reshapes the landscape for pass-through entities, service professionals, and corporate taxpayers. Below are the most impactful updates for closely held businesses, professional practices, and high-income earners.
What Changed:
The Qualified Business Income (QBI) deduction under §199A has been:
Who Benefits:
Pass-through business owners, especially those in previously limited Specified Service Trades or Businesses (SSTBs) like law, medicine, and consulting, who now retain some benefit even at higher incomes.
Planning Tip: Use income-smoothing techniques (e.g., retirement plans, S corp salary optimization) to stay within deduction thresholds. Consider splitting non-grantor trusts to allocate QBI deductions efficiently.
Here’s how the OBBB Act stacks up against prior law across key business provisions:
Provision | Pre-OBBB Law | OBBB Act (Post-2025) |
---|---|---|
§199A QBI Deduction | 20%, sunset in 2025 | 23%, permanent, phase-out revised |
SSTB Limitation | Full phase-out at ~$440K MFJ | Partial deduction phased in (75%) |
Excess Business Loss Rule (§461(l)) | Scheduled to expire after 2028 | Made permanent |
Interest Deduction (§163(j)) | EBIT-based limitation (2022–2024) | EBITDA-based restored (2025–2029) |
SALT Cap (Individual) | $10,000 limit through 2025 | $40,000 cap (2025–2029), phased out |
C Corp Charitable Deduction | Up to 10% of taxable income | 10% cap, but must exceed 1% floor |
What Changed:
The §461(l) EBL rule is now permanent, and disallowed losses are treated as cumulative trade/business losses, not regular NOLs.
Implication:
Clients with large real estate or operating losses can no longer offset them against investment income or wages. Prior “loss harvesting” strategies are curtailed.
Planning Tip: Use entity-level grouping, loss allocation planning, and recharacterization techniques to manage deductibility year-by-year.
What Changed:
The §163(j) limitation reverts to the EBITDA standard (vs EBIT), restoring depreciation and amortization addbacks for 2025–2029. Applies to all except small businesses (<$30M gross receipts).
Who Benefits:
Capital-intensive companies—especially in real estate, manufacturing, or private equity—with higher depreciation expenses and debt loads.
Planning Tip: Take advantage of this window for strategic debt financing. But model carefully—this benefit sunsets in 2029.
What Changed:
Individual SALT deduction cap increased to $40,000 from 2025–2029, then reverts to $10,000 in 2030. A 30% phase-out applies to MAGI over ~$500K.
Who Benefits:
Owners of pass-throughs in high-tax states like California and New York.
Planning Tip: PTET elections remain a valid workaround. Model MAGI to avoid cap phase-out and consider entity-level planning to absorb SALT deductions.
What Changed:
C corporations can only deduct charitable contributions exceeding 1% of taxable income, though the 10% cap still applies. Special rules apply to carryforwards.
Planning Tip: For C corps with philanthropic goals, time contributions carefully. Consider making large gifts in years with strong taxable income to avoid floor limits and carryforward restrictions.
The OBBB Act delivers a mix of opportunity and complexity for business owners. Whether you’re a solo practitioner, multi-entity owner, or involved in private equity or real estate ventures, now is the time to reassess your entity structure, income smoothing tools, and loss utilization strategy. Book a consultation with our team to evaluate how these changes apply to your unique business model.
The OBBB Act reinstates and reshapes many key provisions affecting individual taxpayers, especially those with higher income, real estate holdings, or complex deductions. Here’s what you need to know:
The Act reinstates a modified version of the Pease limitation under IRC §68, which reduces total itemized deductions by 3% of adjusted gross income (AGI) above a set threshold, up to a maximum 80% reduction.
Planning Consideration: High-income earners in states like California may see a meaningful reduction in deductions. Strategies such as maximizing above-the-line deductions (e.g., HSA contributions, retirement deferrals) can help mitigate the impact.
The $750,000 limit on mortgage interest deductions for acquisition indebtedness is now permanent, locking in the TCJA-era cap for all post-2017 home loans.
Planning Consideration:
California homeowners with high-value mortgages will continue to face deductibility limits. For clients considering refinancing or home improvement projects, proper debt structuring remains essential.
Casualty and theft losses are now permanently deductible only if they occur in a federally declared disaster area. Losses from local events or non-disaster-related property damage are no longer deductible.
Planning Consideration:
Clients should review their homeowner’s and umbrella insurance policies, especially in areas with elevated wildfire or storm risk.
The Act makes permanent the suspension of miscellaneous itemized deductions subject to the 2% AGI floor. This includes:
Planning Consideration:
Clients with significant advisory or unreimbursed work expenses should consider entity structuring options (e.g., converting to an S corporation or Schedule C consulting arrangement) to reclassify those costs as deductible business expenses.
For 2025 through 2028, individuals age 65 or older can claim an additional above-the-line deduction of $4,000 per person ($8,000 for couples), even if they itemize.
Planning Consideration:
This benefit helps seniors who still itemize due to property taxes or medical expenses but have limited earned income.
The OBBB Act allows an above-the-line deduction for up to $10,000 annually in personal-use auto loan interest for qualified vehicle loans.
Planning Consideration:
Clients planning large auto purchases may want to accelerate financing decisions to capture the deduction during this limited window.
Employees subject to the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) may deduct all income from qualified overtime wages during this period.
Planning Consideration:
This provision is especially relevant for working-class clients or employees in hourly sectors such as healthcare, hospitality, or logistics. Employers may need to adjust payroll systems for proper reporting.
The OBBB Act introduces a new class of tax-advantaged savings accounts known as Trump Accounts, created under Section 530A of the OBBB Act. These are not to be confused with Coverdell Education Savings Accounts, which are governed by IRC §530 under current law. While both are intended to support long-term education savings, Trump Accounts are structurally distinct, with stricter eligibility rules, different contribution and usage limits, and broader potential uses—including small business startup costs and first-time home purchases.
A Trump Account is a custodial investment account created for the benefit of a U.S. child under age 8, established and administered by a qualifying trustee (e.g., a bank or similar financial institution). It grows tax-deferred, and earnings used for qualified purposes are taxed at favorable capital gains rates.
These accounts may be automatically created by the IRS beginning in 2025, especially for newborns receiving the $1,000 federal Trump Account Pilot Program contribution.
Feature | Rule |
---|---|
Beneficiaries | Must be U.S. children under age 8 at account creation |
Annual Contribution Limit | $5,000 per year (indexed after 2027) |
Contribution Start Date | No contributions allowed before 2026 |
Investment Restrictions | Only U.S.-based index-tracking mutual funds; no crypto, real estate, or private equity |
Tax Treatment | Tax-deferred growth; earnings taxed at long-term capital gains rates if used for qualified purposes |
Qualified Uses | Postsecondary education, credentialing programs, first-time home purchase, small business startup/loan expenses |
Distributions Allowed | After age 18, limited to 1.5× the account’s value at age 18 until age 25; account must terminate by age 31 |
Penalty for Early Use | 10% tax on earnings for non-qualified distributions before age 30 |
One Account Rule | Only one Trump Account allowed per beneficiary |
If account earnings are used for the following, they are taxed at favorable long-term capital gains rates:
First-Time Home Purchase
Must meet the definition under IRC §36; likely subject to $10,000 cap (final guidance pending).
Qualified Higher Education Expenses
As defined under §529(e)(3), including tuition, room and board, books, technology, and more (excludes K–12).
Recognized Credentialing Programs
Includes industry certifications, apprenticeships, licensing programs under VA, DoD COOL, or state WIOA lists.
Small Business Start-Up or Loan Costs
Must be tied to official small business or farm loans (pending further Treasury regulations).
For U.S. citizens born between January 1, 2025, and December 31, 2028, the IRS will automatically deposit $1,000 into a newly created Trump Account upon filing a qualifying tax return.
While the Trump Account is still new and awaiting implementation guidance from the IRS, its combination of early savings, targeted usage, and favorable tax treatment makes it a potentially valuable tool for education-focused families, young entrepreneurs, and estate planners looking to transfer wealth with purpose.
If you’d like to model a Trump Account contribution strategy or coordinate it with existing 529 or irrevocable trust planning, our team is happy to help. Read More: 6 Tax-Efficient Ways to Save for Your Child’s Future.
The OBBB Act introduces a suite of changes aimed at modernizing the tax code for families, working parents, and nontraditional educational paths. These provisions reflect a broader commitment to educational flexibility, access to child care, and support for working-class taxpayers. Here’s what changed and how it impacts planning.
Families can now use 529 plan distributions tax-free for a wider range of K–12 expenses, including:
Homeschooling families benefit as well—these qualified expenses apply even if the homeschool isn’t registered as a private school under state law.
Effective: Distributions after the enactment date.
529 plans can now fund expenses tied to vocational and professional training, such as:
Eligible programs must appear on official lists, such as WIOA directories, the VA’s WEAMS database, or be recognized by the Treasury or Labor Departments.
This change allows 529 funds to support trade schools, apprenticeships, and postsecondary certifications beyond the traditional 4-year college route
Employers now receive a larger credit for providing child care benefits:
Effective: Expenses after December 31, 2025.
This provision enhances the employer credit under §45S by:
Effective: Tax years beginning after December 31, 2025
Families adopting children may now claim up to $5,000 of the adoption credit as refundable, even if they have no tax liability. All thresholds are now indexed for inflation.
Effective: Tax years beginning after December 31, 2024.
The OBBB makes permanent a TCJA-era rule: student loan discharges due to death or permanent disability are not taxable. This applies to federal and eligible private student loans discharged after 2025.
While Trump Accounts were created under the OBBB Act (IRC §530A), Coverdell Education Savings Accounts under IRC §530 remain intact. Coverdells still offer:
Planning Note: Families can use Coverdell ESAs and 529 Plans simultaneously, particularly if they want flexibility for both K–12 and postsecondary education.
The OBBB Act delivers major upgrades to health-related tax planning. From reshaping employer plan options to expanding who can contribute to HSAs and how much, these reforms reflect a shift toward individual flexibility, greater small-business support, and modernization of legacy barriers.
The OBBB Act creates CHOICE Arrangements, a new type of Health Reimbursement Arrangement (HRA) that allows employers to reimburse employees for individual market health insurance premiums and medical expenses—without offering a traditional group plan. This reform is especially beneficial for small employers and solo practitioners who want to provide coverage without navigating the complexity of a full group plan.
Key Features:
Employees in a CHOICE Arrangement may now use Section 125 cafeteria plans to make salary reduction contributions toward their individual market health coverage—reversing prior ACA restrictions.
Small employers (generally under 50 FTEs) may claim a new CHOICE Arrangement credit of:
The credit is available only for the first two years the arrangement is offered and may offset regular or AMT liability.
The OBBB Act significantly expands access to Health Savings Accounts (HSAs) and modernizes how and when they can be used.
1. Medicare-Age Eligibility
Beginning in 2026, individuals enrolled in Medicare Part A due to age alone (without full Medicare coverage) may contribute to an HSA.
2. Bronze & Catastrophic ACA Plans Now Qualify as HDHPs
ACA Bronze and Catastrophic plans now count as high-deductible health plans (HDHPs) for HSA eligibility starting in 2026.
3. Direct Primary Care and HSA Compatibility
Taxpayers enrolled in Direct Primary Care arrangements may contribute to an HSA, provided monthly fees do not exceed $150 (individual) or $300 (family). Covered services must be limited to basic outpatient care.
4. Joint Catch-Up Contributions for Married Couples
Spouses age 55+ may now make catch-up contributions to a single HSA, instead of separate accounts. By default, contributions will be split 50/50 unless otherwise agreed.
5. FSA and HRA Rollovers to HSAs for New Enrollees
Employees transitioning to an HDHP can roll over unused general-purpose FSA or HRA funds into their HSA, subject to contribution caps. Rollover amounts must be segregated into HSA-compatible arrangements after the transfer.
6. Retroactive Reimbursements for Initial HDHP Enrollees
Taxpayers who enroll in an HDHP and open an HSA within 60 days may retroactively reimburse themselves for eligible expenses incurred during that period.
7. Spousal FSA Ownership No Longer Disqualifying
HSA eligibility is preserved even if a spouse has a health FSA, so long as that FSA does not reimburse the HSA contributor’s expenses.
8. Income-Based HSA Contribution Boost
Beginning in 2026, lower- and moderate-income taxpayers gain access to enhanced HSA contribution limits:
9. Fitness and Exercise Now Qualify for HSA Reimbursement
Taxpayers may withdraw up to $500 (individual) or $1,000 (joint) per year from their HSA for structured fitness programs, gym memberships, or instructor-led physical activities. Self-guided or on-demand workouts do not qualify.
The OBBB Act marks a decisive rollback of key clean energy incentives enacted under the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA). While some credits remain intact through transition periods, many face early sunsets, foreign-affiliation restrictions, or repealed transferability, fundamentally reshaping clean energy project economics for individuals and businesses alike.
Takeaway: Clients should complete solar and home energy upgrades before year-end 2025 to retain federal credit eligibility.
No credits are allowed for any project or component that:
Covered credits: §45Y, §48E, §45Q, §45X, §45V, §45U, and §48.
Transferability is repealed or phased out for:
Many clean energy tax incentives are ending sooner than expected—and others are now restricted by foreign ownership or supply chain rules. Whether you’re a business owner, developer, or individual considering renewable upgrades, now is the time to reassess your eligibility and timeline. Strategic clean energy tax credit planning in 2025 may be the difference between capturing full federal benefits or missing them entirely.
The OBBB Act introduces dozens of changes that take effect across different timelines, with 2025 and 2026 being critical years for strategic action. Here’s how clients can prepare:
Let’s make a 2025–2026 tax roadmap that fits your goals. Whether you’re planning gifts, investing in your business, or navigating international exposure, our team can help you prioritize the right strategies and deadlines under the new law. Schedule a strategy session today.
The One Big Beautiful Bill represents the most comprehensive rewrite of the U.S. tax code since 2017—reshaping everything from estate planning and business deductions to international structuring and clean energy incentives. While some provisions simplify and expand taxpayer benefits, others impose new limitations, deadlines, and reporting obligations that require early action and careful review.
Whether you’re a high-net-worth individual, business owner, or cross-border investor, now is the time to reevaluate your planning in light of the OBBB Act. Many opportunities will narrow—or disappear—by the end of 2025.
To learn how the new law affects your estate, business, or investment structure, book a consultation with our team.
Yes. The OBBB Act sets the federal estate and gift tax exemption at $15 million per person, indexed for inflation starting in 2025. This eliminates the risk of a sunset back to ~$7 million in 2026 under prior law.
Only if the system is placed in service by December 31, 2025. After that, residential clean energy credits under §25D and others are repealed. Act now to preserve eligibility.
Not directly. However, the OBBB Act creates Trump Accounts (IRC §530A), a new savings vehicle for children under age 8. It does not repeal or replace Roth IRAs or 529 plans.
The Qualified Business Income (QBI) deduction under §199A is increased to 23% and made permanent. Phaseouts are softened for service businesses, expanding eligibility at higher income levels.
Now. Key opportunities—including gifting, equipment purchases, and energy installations—must be completed before 2026 to fully benefit. Others, like international structuring and CHOICE plan adoption, require planning in early 2025.
July 14, 2025
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