The 2025–2028 Trump car tax deduction (part of the "One, Big, Beautiful Bill") allows taxpayers to deduct up to $10,000 per year in interest paid on loans for new, U.S.-assembled vehicles purchased for personal use. It applies to cars, SUVs, and trucks, reducing taxable income.
OBBB temporarily allows taxpayers to deduct interest owed on certain vehicles purchased with a loan. Specifically: The vehicle must have been purchased after December 31, 2024, and before January 1, 2029. (The deduction expires after tax year 2028.)
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.
The standard deduction increased for 2025 and 2026, and a new temporary “bonus” deduction for adults 65 and older begins in 2025. The child tax credit increased to $2,200 for the 2025 and 2026 tax years; retirement plan contribution limits for IRAs and 401(k)s also increased for 2026.
The new senior tax deduction of up to $6,000 for single filers and $12,000 for joint filers, was created to help cover taxes on Social Security benefits. Taking the new senior deduction helps to reduce your taxable income, which can mean less tax or potentially an even bigger tax refund when you file your return.
For tax year 2025, seniors over 65 get a significant new $6,000 extra standard deduction (or $12,000 for joint filers) under the temporary One, Big, Beautiful Bill (OBBB), effective 2025-2028, phased out at higher incomes ($75k single / $150k joint MAGI). This is in addition to the existing modest age-based increase (around $2,000 for single, $1,600 per spouse for married).
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 ...
President-elect Donald Trump campaigned on lowering the US corporate income tax rate to 15 percent. He made the same request in 2017 when Republicans passed their tax cuts, but Congress only cut the federal rate to 21 percent—down from the worldwide high of 35 percent.
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.
The 2025 Federal Tax Debate
Much like the 2017 tax law, the new law favors the richest taxpayers. More than 70 percent of the net tax cuts will go to the richest fifth of Americans in 2026, only 10 percent will go to the middle fifth of Americans, and less than 1 percent will go to the poorest fifth.
The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimated in 2018 that the 2017 law would cost $1.9 trillion over ten years, and recent estimates show that making the law's temporary individual income and estate tax cuts permanent would cost roughly another $4.2 trillion through 2035.
The tax credit, passed by the Biden administration in 2022 to support EVs, is going away Wednesday as part of President Donald Trump's broad spending and tax bill.
Tariff costs not as bad as feared. Automakers were close to panic when Trump announced plans for a 25% tariff on all imported vehicles, including those from Mexico and Canada, since all companies depend on imported parts to build at US assembly plants and almost all import from those neighboring countries.
For 2025, the big change isn't a traditional credit but a new "above-the-line" deduction for interest paid on new, U.S.-built car loans, up to $10,000, available from 2025-2028 under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, while existing Electric Vehicle (EV) tax credits mostly ended September 30, 2025, making the new interest deduction the main benefit for new vehicle purchases.
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.
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.
The average taxpayer would see a 22 percent tax hike if the Trump tax cuts expire. A family of four making $80,610, the median income in the United States, would see a $1,695 tax increase if the Trump tax cuts expire. This is worth about 9 weeks of groceries to a typical family of four across the country.
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.