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.
Major U.S. tax changes for 2025, largely from the One Big Beautiful Bill (OBBBA), include making lower individual tax rates permanent, increasing the SALT cap to $40,000, adding new deductions for seniors, tips, and car loan interest, expanding the Child Tax Credit to $2,200, making the 20% pass-through deduction permanent, and phasing out certain clean energy credits, with inflation adjustments also increasing standard deductions and retirement limits.
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 ...
Effective 2025 through 2028, individuals age 65 and older may claim an additional $6,000 deduction. This is in addition to the standard deduction for seniors available under existing law. Applies per eligible individual (or $12,000 for a married couple if both spouses qualify).
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?
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.
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) or the Big Beautiful Bill (P.L. 119-21), is a U.S. federal statute passed by the 119th United States Congress containing tax and spending policies that form the core of President Donald Trump's second-term agenda. The bill was signed into law by Trump on July 4, 2025.
Trump Tax Plan Changes: Standard Deduction
The 2017 Trump tax law (TCJA) nearly doubled the standard deduction for all filers, and OBBB bumped them up. If you're a single filer or if you're married filing separately, your standard deduction for 2025 rose to $15,750 under OBBBA.
Each year, the IRS adjusts more than 60 tax provisions to keep income tax brackets, deductions and other inputs in line with the cost of living. For the 2025 tax year (filing returns in 2026) these adjustments, including federal income tax brackets, increased on average by about 2.8%.
No, the IRS is not issuing new $1400 stimulus checks; the final pandemic-era payments for the Recovery Rebate Credit (the third stimulus) were sent out by early 2025 to eligible people who missed them by filing their 2021 return by the April 2025 deadline. While payments were made in late 2024 and early 2025, that was the final opportunity, and any current claims of new stimulus checks are likely scams or misinformation, as Congress has not approved any new federal stimulus programs.
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.
Seven major tax cuts took effect for 2025 under the OBBBA:
Tax changes for 2025, largely driven by the "One Big Beautiful Bill" (OBBBA) Act, introduce significant deductions for seniors, tips, overtime, and auto loan interest, expand the Child Tax Credit, and raise the SALT deduction cap to $40,000, while making several 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act provisions permanent, including the seven tax brackets. Key changes include a $2,200 Child Tax Credit, a $6,000 senior deduction, deductions for qualified tips and overtime, and a permanent standard deduction increase.
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.
Yes, the standard deduction significantly increased for the 2025 tax year due to inflation adjustments and a new law, the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act," raising it to $15,750 for single filers, $31,500 for married couples filing jointly, and $23,625 for heads of household, with additional boosts for seniors and new deductions for overtime pay also taking effect.
Expiring TCJA Provisions
The following TCJA provisions are set to expire after 2025. Near doubling of the standard deduction, repeal of personal exemptions, and lower value of several itemized deductions, including those for: State and local taxes (SALT)
Income Tax Act, 2025 to be effective from April 1, 2026. The Act simplifies language, removes obsolete provisions and consolidates and restructures provisions. It Introduces concept of 'Tax Year' replacing 'Assessment Year' and 'Previous Year'.
The extra $144 added to Social Security usually comes from the Medicare Part B Giveback benefit, offered by some Medicare Advantage (Part C) plans, which pays back some or all your Part B premium, showing up as extra money in your check if it's deducted from your Social Security. To qualify, you need Original Medicare (Parts A & B), pay your own Part B premium, live in a plan's service area, and enroll in a specific Medicare Advantage plan that offers this "rebate," with the amount varying by plan and location.