OBBBA Expanded the Child Tax Credit to $2,200 Per Child
OBBBA increased the Child Tax Credit from $2,000 to $2,200 per child effective 2025. The $200 boost is small but the SSN rule change matters. Here's what changed.
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TLDR
OBBBA permanently kept the TCJA-era $2,000 base Child Tax Credit and bumped it to $2,200 per qualifying child starting in tax year 2025 ($1,700 maximum refundable portion). Both the qualifying child and the taxpayer claiming the credit now need valid SSNs (previously, only the child needed one). The CTC is indexed for inflation starting in 2026. Income phase-out remains at $200K single / $400K MFJ. The $500 nonrefundable credit for non-child dependents continues.
In this guide, you’ll learn:
- See the three OBBBA changes to the CTC — $200 increase, permanent + inflation-indexed, new SSN rule
- Understand the SSN requirement change that affects ITIN-using households
- Recognize what didn’t change — phase-out thresholds, refundability, age + relationship + residency rules
- See how the CTC stacks with other OBBBA family provisions (Trump Accounts, 529 superfunding, annual exclusion)
- Get the AGI-management move that preserves CTC eligibility when you’re near the $400K MFJ phase-out
#What’s new in OBBBA’s CTC
OBBBA made three changes to the Child Tax Credit.
-
$2,000 → $2,200
Per qualifying child
$200 increase, effective 2025
-
$1,700
Max refundable portion
Per child in 2025
-
$200K / $400K
Phase-out (single / MFJ)
Unchanged from prior law
-
Indexed
Inflation adjustment
Begins 2026 — grows over time
Source: One Big Beautiful Bill Act, Child Tax Credit provisions.
1. $200 increase to the base credit. Pre-OBBBA (TCJA-era): $2,000 per qualifying child. Post-OBBBA (effective 2025): $2,200 per qualifying child.
For a family with two qualifying children, that’s $400/yr of additional tax credit value. Modest but real.
2. Permanence + inflation indexing. The TCJA-era $2,000 credit was scheduled to revert to $1,000 at end of 2025 (a major reduction). OBBBA made the credit permanent at the higher level. Starting in 2026, the credit will be adjusted annually for inflation — meaning it grows over time rather than staying static.
3. SSN requirement for the taxpayer. Pre-OBBBA, the qualifying child needed a valid SSN, but the taxpayer claiming the credit only needed a TIN (which could be an ITIN). Post-OBBBA, both the qualifying child AND the taxpayer claiming the credit need valid SSNs.
This affects taxpayers using ITINs (typically immigrants without work authorization or those without SSNs for various reasons). They can no longer claim the CTC.
#What didn’t change
The phase-out and refundability rules remained the same:
- Phase-out threshold: $200,000 AGI single / $400,000 AGI MFJ (unchanged)
- Phase-out rate: $50 reduction per $1,000 of AGI above threshold
- Maximum refundable portion: $1,700 per child in 2025
- $500 nonrefundable credit for other dependents (parents, college-age kids, etc. who qualify as dependents but not qualifying children): unchanged
- Age requirement: child must be under 17 at end of tax year
- Relationship + residency requirements: standard rules (your son/daughter/stepchild/foster child, lived with you 6+ months, etc.)
#What this means for ETS clients
#For ETS-client families with qualifying children
The $200 increase is automatic. Your return preparation will reflect the new amount without any special action needed.
Verification: ensure both you and any qualifying child(ren) have valid SSNs on file. If anyone in your household uses an ITIN, the new rule may affect your CTC eligibility — discuss with your tax preparer.
#For ETS-client families with kids born 2025-2028
You may layer multiple OBBBA family-favorable provisions:
- Child Tax Credit: $2,200/yr per qualifying child
- Trump Account federal $1,000 seed for births 2025-2028
- Annual Trump Account contributions up to $5K
- 529 plan superfunding if applicable
- Annual exclusion gifting for wealth-transfer planning
The compounded impact across these provisions can be substantial for families with multiple young children.
#For high-income ETS clients above the CTC phase-out
If your AGI is above $400K MFJ ($200K single), the CTC phases out. Above ~$440K MFJ ($240K single), it’s fully phased out. The OBBBA changes don’t affect the phase-out thresholds, so high-income families remain unable to claim the CTC.
Strategic move: AGI management. If you’re hovering around the phase-out threshold, retirement contributions, HSA contributions, and business deductions that reduce AGI can preserve some or all of the CTC.
#Common questions
When does the $2,200 take effect? For the 2025 tax year onward. Returns filed in early 2026 (for the 2025 tax year) will reflect the new amount.
Does the OBBBA increase apply to the refundable portion? The refundable portion remains at $1,700 for 2025. The $200 increase to the total credit ($2,000 → $2,200) is in the nonrefundable portion. So lower-income filers (who are limited by the refundable cap) see less practical benefit from the increase.
What if I use an ITIN? Post-OBBBA, ITIN holders can no longer claim the CTC. This is a meaningful change for taxpayers without SSNs — including some immigrant taxpayers, certain non-resident spouses, and others. Check with your tax preparer on alternatives (e.g., the $500 credit for other dependents may still apply in some cases).
What about the $500 credit for non-child dependents? Continues unchanged. Available for dependents who don’t qualify as qualifying children for the CTC (college-age children, elderly parents you claim, etc.). $500 per qualifying dependent.
Will inflation indexing make a real difference? Modest annually. At 2-3% inflation, the credit might grow $44-66/yr per child. Over a decade, that’s $400-600/yr per child. Real but not life-changing.
Does the credit apply if my child is born in 2025? Yes — if the child meets the qualifying-child rules (born in or before the tax year, lived with you 6+ months, etc.). For a child born in 2025, the family claims the $2,200 credit on the 2025 return.
If you have children under 17 and want to ensure CTC + Trump Account + 529 planning is coordinated, the Discovery call is the right next step. Family-planning provisions stack meaningfully under post-OBBBA rules.