Introduced in House (01/03/2025) To promote freedom, fairness, and economic opportunity by repealing the income tax and other taxes, abolishing the Internal Revenue Service, and enacting a national sales tax to be administered primarily by the States.
New federal tax laws for 2025, largely from the "One Big Beautiful Bill" (OBBBA) passed in mid-2025, permanently extend key parts of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), enhance deductions like SALT (State & Local Tax) to $40k, add new ones for tips, overtime, and car loan interest, expand the Child Tax Credit (CTC) to $2,200, increase estate tax exemption, and offer significant business deductions like 100% bonus depreciation for some assets, making taxes lower for many while making brackets permanent.
The IRS e-file shutdown 2025 begins on Friday, December 26, 2025, at 11:59 A.M. Eastern Time. During this annual maintenance period, the IRS takes its electronic tax filing system offline to update systems and prepare for the new tax year. The IRS announced it will officially reopen e-file on January 26, 2026.
Abolishing the income tax would be a huge windfall for high-income households. Those making between $500,000 and $1 million would, based on recent tax filings, save on average $155,000 every year. The average household with income of $10 million and up would save $7.6 million in income tax annually.
Some of the major tax changes effective from April 1, 2025, are revised tax slabs, rebate of up to Rs. 60,000, revised ITRU deadlines, calculation of partner's remuneration allowable as a deduction and revised TDS/TCS threshold limits. What is the Rebate available under section 87A?
New US income tax rules, primarily from the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act" (OBBBA) signed in July 2025, introduce significant changes for 2025 and beyond, including increased standard deductions, new deductions for tips, overtime, and auto loan interest, an expanded Child Tax Credit, a temporary senior deduction, and permanent seven tax brackets, while making the new tax regime the default for Indian taxpayers with simplified 'Tax Year' rules starting April 1, 2026.
The IRS $600 rule refers to a change in reporting requirements for third-party payment apps (like Venmo, PayPal) for taxable income from goods and services, where platforms must send a Form 1099-K if you receive over $600 in a year, intended to capture gig economy/side hustle income, though delays and phased implementation have adjusted the timeline, with current rules for 2024 using a higher threshold ($5,000) before fully phasing to $600 for future years, but remember all taxable income, regardless of form, must always be reported.
April 10, 2025, the House adopted the Senate's amended version of the budget resolution, which allows $5.3 trillion in deficit-financed tax cuts (the combination of $3.8 trillion of tax cuts assumed to be “costless” under a current policy baseline plus $1.5 trillion in additional deficits permitted), deficit increases ...
Yes, many individual provisions of the Trump-era Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) from 2017 are set to expire at the end of 2025, reverting tax law to pre-2017 levels unless Congress acts, with key changes including the standard deduction, SALT deduction cap, and estate tax rules set to change, although legislation like the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act" (OBBBA) has since extended some of these cuts into the future, changing the original expiration cliff.
If the individual tax cuts expire, taxpayers in all income groups would face higher and more complicated taxes. Machinery and equipment expensing is a key provision that, if allowed to expire, would especially harm capital-intensive industries like manufacturing.
For the 2025 tax year, the standard deduction is $15,750 for Single filers, $31,500 for Married Filing Jointly, and $23,625 for Head of Household, with additional amounts for those 65 or older or blind, thanks to inflation adjustments and a legislative boost from the "One Big Beautiful Bill" (OBBB).
The IRS "10k rule" primarily refers to the requirement for businesses and financial institutions to report cash transactions over $10,000 by filing Form 8300 (for businesses) or a Currency Transaction Report (CTR) (for banks), under the Bank Secrecy Act. This rule helps combat money laundering, tax evasion, and terrorist financing, requiring reporting for single transactions or related transactions totaling over $10,000 in cash within a year, with penalties for non-compliance.
To avoid the 22% tax bracket (or any higher bracket), focus on reducing your taxable income through strategies like maxing out 401(k)s and HSAs, deferring bonuses, tax-loss harvesting, smart charitable giving, and strategic asset location, understanding that higher rates only apply to income within that bracket, not your entire income.
One-time forgiveness, officially known as First-Time Penalty Abatement (FTA), is an IRS program that allows qualified taxpayers to have certain penalties removed from their tax accounts.
The IRS 7-year rule primarily applies to keeping records for claiming a deduction for bad debts or losses from worthless securities, allowing a longer period to file for a credit or refund, but it's not a universal audit limit; it's often a recommended safe buffer for general record-keeping, with the standard IRS audit period usually being 3 years, extending to 6 years for substantial income omission (over 25%) or foreign income issues, and indefinitely for fraud.
Common tax return mistakes that can cost taxpayers
Here's a summary of key changes for the 2025 tax year. The seven federal tax brackets (10%, 12%, 22%, 24%, 32%, 35%, 37%) are now permanent. Standard deductions increased, plus a new “bonus” deduction for older adults. Child tax credit increased to $2,200 per qualifying child.
Unemployment compensation generally is taxable. Inheritances, gifts, cash rebates, alimony payments (for divorce decrees finalized after 2018), child support payments, most healthcare benefits, welfare payments, and money that is reimbursed from qualifying adoptions are deemed nontaxable by the IRS.
In 2021, Congress lowered the threshold for reporting income on payment apps from $20,000 and 200 transactions annually to $600 for a single transaction. Implementation is being phased in over three years. Tax Year 2024: $5,000 minimum.