How the Trump Tax Plan Will Affect You

How the Trump Tax Plan Will Affect You

President Trump signed the One Big Beautiful Bill into law on July 4 after the House and Senate approved the legislation package earlier in the week. He pressured Republican lawmakers to pass it, referring to the bill as the “Largest Tax Cuts in History.” With the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) set to expire after 2025, this new tax and spending bill could significantly affect what you owe in taxes. Here’s a breakdown of how the legislation may impact your income, filing status and deductions.

  • The new Trump tax and spending act raises the SALT deduction cap to $40,000 for married couples earning up to $500,000 through 2029, with a 30% phase-down for income over $500,000.
  • The legislation keeps the TCJA tax brackets and the higher standard deduction, expands the senior deduction, raises the estate tax exemption, and exempts qualified tips and overtime from taxes.
  • The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) said that the Senate bill “would increase deficits over the 2025‑2034 period by $3.4 trillion.” The CBO also estimated that the bill could leave 11.8 million uninsured by 2034, including 1.4 million with unverified immigration status losing coverage from state-funded programs.
  • The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget had a similar estimate for the original version of the House bill: It would add $3 trillion to the debt (with interest) over 10 years, and $5 trillion if all temporary parts become permanent.

Key Proposals for the One Big Beautiful Act

President Trump advanced his domestic agenda by signing a new tax and spending bill into law one day after the House passed it with a narrow vote (218-214) on July 3. All 212 Democrats and two Republicans — Thomas Massie (R-KY) and Brian Fitzpatrick (R-PA) — had voted against it. GOP leaders secured the votes after overnight negotiations to meet Trump’s July 4 signing deadline.

The House vote came only two days after the Senate approved a version of the bill on July 1 with Vice President JD Vance breaking a 50–50 tie in the chamber to pass the new Trump tax plan. Republican Senators Susan Collins (R-ME), Thom Tillis (R-NC) and Rand Paul (R-KY) voted against the legislation. None of the Senate Democrats supported it.

The current federal tax system includes many provisions that were enacted through the TCJA. It was signed into law in 2017, during President Trump’s first term. President Biden did not make direct changes to the TCJA, but he proposed adjustments aimed at rolling back parts of the law, especially provisions that benefit high earners and large businesses. The core of Trump’s TCJA provisions, however, have remained unchanged.

The TCJA permanently lowered corporate tax rates, but most individual tax cuts—like lower brackets, a bigger standard deduction and expanded credits—were set to end after 2025 unless Congress extended them.

House Republicans initially passed a version of the new tax plan on May 22. Overall, both versions of the bill in Congress proposed making several provisions from the TCJA permanent. These included maintaining lower individual tax rates, keeping the expanded standard deduction and preserving the qualified business income (QBI) deduction for pass-through entities. The plan also extended the child tax credit and offered seniors a tax break.

Another key proposal in the bill was the estate and gift tax exemption. Under the current law, the exemption amount was scheduled to drop by roughly half after 2025. The new Trump plan preserves the higher exemption threshold, allowing individuals to transfer more wealth tax-free through gifts or inheritances. This change maintains the current structure of estate planning for high-net-worth households.

The new legislation also reduces existing tax benefits. The plan rolls back clean energy credits and removes certain education and health-related deductions. For a deeper breakdown, we have divided the new Trump tax plan into three sections.