2025 Tax Reform Explained: Dallas CPA Breaks Down $3.4T Bill
Dallas CPA deciphers the 2025 $3.4T reconciliation bill: tax cuts, SALT cap, QBI boost, Medicaid & SNAP changes. Stay compliant & plan ahead and read now.
TAX KNOWLEDGE
Overview of the \”One Big Beautiful Bill\”
Signed into law on July 4, 2025, this sweeping reconciliation act carries a $3.4 trillion ten‑year deficit and encompasses across-the-board policy changes—tax reform, social spending cuts, defense, immigration, and energy subsidies. I focus on two main reform related to people’s life
2. Tax Reform and Relief
a. Extension of Trump-era Cuts
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Permanent retention of 2017 tax brackets and standard deduction levels (e.g., $15,750 single, $31,500 joint).
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Benefits largely skew to higher-income households, though substantial relief is provided across tax
b. New Deductions Introduced
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Tip Income Exemption: Up to $25,000 deduction annually through 2028
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Overtime Pay Deduction: $12,500 single, $25,000 joint, reducing taxable income
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U.S. Assembled Auto Loan Interest: Max $10,000 deduction, phase‑out above $100k/$200k income
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Senior Deduction: An Additional $6,000 deduction is available for taxpayers over 65, income-phased
c. Family and Business Incentives
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Child Tax Credit: Increased to $2,200 per child and inflation-indexed
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SALT Deduction Cap: Raised to $40,000 (for incomes < $500k) before reverting to $10k after five years
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QBI Deduction Raised: From 20% → 23%, permanently benefiting small businesses
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100% Bonus Depreciation: Extended through 2029 to spur capital investment
3. Welfare Restrictions & Spending Cuts
a. Medicaid Overhaul
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Work Requirement: 80 hours/month for childless adults aged 19–64
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Cost‑sharing: Individuals at 100–138% poverty line may pay charges up to $35 per service
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Frequent Eligibility Checks: From annual to semi‑annual reviews.
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Coverage Loss: CBO estimates 11–12 million Americans may lose Medicaid by 2034
b. SNAP Reforms
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Extended Work Requirement: Now includes childless adults and some parents—80 hours/month.
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State Cost‑sharing: States bear up to 75% of administrative costs; penalties for high error rates
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Budget Reductions: SNAP funding slashed by $186–295 billion over 10 years; as many as 2 million households impacted.
c. Other Cuts
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Gender‑affirming care, zero tolerance on Planned Parenthood funding, and elimination of some green energy tax credits, clean energy programs, and student loan relief

