OBBBA: The One Big Beautiful Bill Act — What Actually Changed
Signed July 4, 2025. Permanent 100% bonus depreciation, permanent QBI, $40K SALT cap, $15M estate exemption, Trump Accounts for kids, new tip/overtime/auto-loan deductions. The complete provision-by-provision rundown.
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TLDR
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) was signed into law on July 4, 2025. The headline moves: 100% bonus depreciation made permanent (for property acquired after Jan 19, 2025), the 20% QBI deduction made permanent with expanded phase-out thresholds, the
estate tax exemption permanently increased to $15M per individual
($30M MFJ) effective 2026, the SALT cap raised to $40,000 through 2029 (phased down above $500K AGI), new Trump Accounts for kids with a $1K federal seed for births 2025-2028, plus new deductions for tip income, overtime pay, auto loan interest, and seniors. CBO estimates the bill adds $2.4-$2.8 trillion to the federal debt over 10 years.
In this guide, you’ll learn:
- Understand the three big things OBBBA did at once — permanent TCJA, new deductions, IRA clean-energy phaseout
- Get a high-level summary of all 10 provisions that materially affect ETS clients
- See what DIDN’T change (1031 exchanges, S-corp reasonable comp, crypto fundamentals) so you don’t misapply rules
- Recognize the CBO budget impact and what “permanent” really means in tax law
- Get the seven planning moves we’re walking ETS clients through on quarterly check-ins
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July 4, 2025
Signed into law
119th Congress
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100%
Bonus depreciation
Now permanent
-
20%
QBI deduction
Now permanent
-
$15M
Estate exemption
Per individual, indexed
-
$40K
SALT cap
Through 2029
Source: One Big Beautiful Bill Act (Pub. L. 119-21) and IRS implementation guidance, 2025-2026.
#What OBBBA is
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (“OBBBA,” sometimes also “OBBB” or “Big Beautiful Bill”) is a federal tax + spending statute passed by the 119th Congress and signed by President Trump on July 4, 2025. It’s the largest tax legislation since the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017.
OBBBA does three big things at once:
- Makes most TCJA individual provisions permanent (they were set to sunset at the end of 2025)
- Adds new deductions and savings vehicles (tip income, overtime pay, auto loan interest, seniors, Trump Accounts)
- Phases out the Inflation Reduction Act’s clean energy credits
For ETS clients, the headline provisions are tax-strategy-relevant. Most affect business owners, high-income households, real estate investors, and families with children — exactly the segments we serve.
#The provisions that matter most to ETS clients
#1. Permanent 100% bonus depreciation
Effective: Property acquired after January 19, 2025
The bonus depreciation phase-down that was running its course (60% in 2024, 40% in 2025, 20% in 2026, then 0%) is dead. OBBBA restored permanent 100% bonus depreciation for property with a recovery period of 20 years or less.
For real estate investors running cost segregation, this is the single biggest provision in the bill. A $500K rental cost-seg’d in late 2025 deducts the entire 5/7/15-year buckets in year one — recovering ~$60K-$80K of immediate tax savings vs. the 20% rate that was scheduled to apply.
Deep dive: Permanent 100% Bonus Depreciation: What It Means for Your Business
#2. Permanent QBI deduction (Section 199A)
Effective: Tax years beginning after December 31, 2025
The 20% qualified business income deduction for pass-through entities (LLCs, S-corps, partnerships) was set to expire at the end of 2025. OBBBA removed the expiration date entirely — it’s now permanent.
Two important enhancements:
- Expanded phase-out thresholds for 2025: $247,300 single / $494,600 MFJ (up from $197,300 / $394,600)
- New $400 minimum deduction for taxpayers with at least $1,000 of aggregate QBI from active trades/businesses where they materially participate
For solo S-corp owners, single-member LLC owners, and partnership members, this is the single most-impactful provision in OBBBA. Permanence eliminates the planning uncertainty that’s hung over pass-through structures since 2017.
Deep dive: Permanent QBI Deduction Explained
#3. Permanent estate tax exemption — $15M per individual
Effective: January 1, 2026
The estate and gift tax exemption was set to revert to ~$7M per individual at the end of 2025 (down from $13.99M in 2025). OBBBA permanently increased it to $15M per individual ($30M MFJ) and indexed it for inflation going forward.
For households with $5M+ net worth, this changes the entire shape of estate planning. The “rush to use the exemption before sunset” pressure is gone. The exemption now grows annually.
Deep dive: Estate Tax Exemption Permanently at $15M
#4. SALT cap raised to $40,000
Effective: 2025 tax year through 2029, with annual 1% adjustments
The state and local tax deduction cap was $10,000 under TCJA. OBBBA raises it to $40,000 starting in 2025, with 1% annual increases (so $40,400 in 2026) through 2029. The cap reverts to $10,000 in 2030 unless extended.
Phase-down: above $500,000 AGI, the cap phases down at 30%, eventually hitting $10,000 for very high-income filers.
For ETS clients in high-tax states (or who itemize on a Texas return because of high property taxes), this is a real annual deduction recovery — typically $4K-$10K of tax savings on $40K of SALT.
Deep dive: SALT Cap Changes Under OBBBA
#5. Trump Accounts for kids
Effective: Federal seed starts for births 2025-2028; contributions begin July 4, 2026
A new tax-advantaged savings vehicle for children. Key terms:
- Federal $1,000 seed deposit for every child born between Jan 1, 2025 and Dec 31, 2028 (does not count against contribution limit)
- $5,000 annual contribution limit (after-tax) by anyone — parents, grandparents, employers, nonprofits
- Employer contributions up to $2,500/yr don’t count as taxable income to the employee
- No earned-income requirement for the child (unlike IRAs)
- Tax-free growth; distributions taxed at the child’s rate when taken
- Locked until age 18, then converts to a Traditional IRA
- Must be a U.S. citizen child with an SSN
For ETS clients with children born 2025-2028, this is free money from the federal government and a new planning vehicle alongside 529s and UGMA/UTMA accounts.
Deep dive: Trump Accounts for Kids Explained
#6. New worker deductions: tips, overtime, auto loan interest, seniors
Effective: January 1, 2025
OBBBA created four new above-the-line-ish deductions targeted at working Americans:
- Tip income deduction: up to $25,000/yr for workers in IRS-designated tipped occupations
- Overtime pay deduction: up to $12,500 ($25,000 MFJ) of qualified overtime pay
- Auto loan interest deduction: up to $10,000/yr on interest from a qualifying vehicle purchase
- Senior additional deduction: $6,000 for taxpayers age 65+, on top of the existing additional standard deduction
These are narrower than the headline provisions but matter for specific situations. Most ETS clients won’t qualify for the tip deduction (high-income service business owners aren’t typically in tipped occupations), but the senior deduction and auto loan interest deduction reach many households.
Deep dives:
- New Tip Income Deduction
- New Overtime Pay Deduction
- New Auto Loan Interest Deduction
- New $6,000 Senior Deduction
#7. Enhanced + permanent Opportunity Zones (with Rural OZ category)
Effective: July 4, 2025 (effective date varies by provision)
OBBBA permanently extended the Opportunity Zone program and added a new Rural Opportunity Zone category with enhanced benefits:
- 30% basis step-up after 5 years for rural-OZ investments (vs. the standard step-up rules)
- Reduced substantial improvement requirement of 50% (vs. 100% for standard OZs)
- 10-year governor redesignation cycle — next round of QOZ designations on July 1, 2026
For real estate investors with capital gains looking to defer + reinvest, the program is now indefinite rather than scheduled to end. The Rural OZ category opens a new low-population-area investment lane.
Deep dive: OBBBA Opportunity Zones + Rural OZ
#8. Expanded Child Tax Credit
Effective: 2025 tax year
The Child Tax Credit increased from $2,000 to $2,200 per qualifying child (effective 2025), with the maximum refundable portion at $1,700. The credit will be indexed for inflation starting in 2026.
One operational change: both the parent and the qualifying child now need valid SSNs (previously, the SSN requirement was only on the child).
The income phase-out remained at $200K single / $400K MFJ, with the same $500 nonrefundable credit for non-child dependents.
#9. Phased-out clean energy credits
OBBBA accelerated the phase-out of clean energy credits passed under the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act:
- EV tax credit: phased out by September 2025
- EV charging credit: phased out by June 2026
- Wind + solar credits: continue for projects that start construction by June 2026 OR go online by December 2027, with expanded “foreign entity of concern” restrictions
ETS clients who were planning to use EV credits should verify timing carefully — most of the credit window is already closed.
#10. Permanent TCJA individual rates
The individual income tax rates passed under TCJA in 2017 were set to expire at end of 2025. OBBBA made them permanent. Top rate stays at 37%, brackets at TCJA levels, indexed annually for inflation.
This is what stops the “automatic tax increase” that would have hit every American household in 2026.
#What didn’t change (planning rules still active)
#CBO budget impact
Important context: the CBO initially estimated OBBBA adds $2.4 trillion to federal debt over 10 years, later revising to $2.8 trillion. The deficit impact is the primary criticism of the legislation.
For tax-strategy purposes, this matters because:
- Future Congresses may rebalance via offsetting tax increases on other provisions
- Permanence of OBBBA’s tax cuts doesn’t mean those cuts can’t be changed later by a different Congress
- Long-term planning should account for the possibility of tax-rate increases on high-earners in future legislation
The “permanence” of OBBBA’s provisions is legal permanence, not political permanence. Plan accordingly.
#What we’re telling ETS clients
For most ETS clients, the OBBBA-driven planning moves we’re walking through on quarterly check-ins:
- Real estate investors: revisit cost seg studies for properties placed in service in 2025 — the 40% phase-down doesn’t apply if acquired after Jan 19. Recover full year-one deduction.
- S-corp + pass-through owners: QBI is now permanent. The “lock in benefits before 2026 sunset” pressure is gone. Long-horizon entity structure decisions can go back to normal time horizons.
- $5M+ net worth households: estate planning recalibration. The $15M exemption changes which generational-wealth strategies make sense.
- High-SALT-state filers: itemize again in 2025-2029 with the $40K cap. Document state + local taxes carefully.
- Families with 2025-2028 newborns: open Trump Accounts to capture the $1,000 federal seed.
- Workers with significant overtime or tip income: ensure W-2 employers are reporting correctly so the new deductions can be claimed.
- Owners considering vehicle purchases: model the auto loan interest deduction into the after-tax cost.
#Common questions
When did OBBBA take effect? Signed July 4, 2025. Most provisions effective for the 2025 tax year. Some (estate exemption, Trump Account funding) effective in 2026.
Is OBBBA fully implemented yet? Most provisions, yes. The IRS issued substantial guidance throughout 2025-2026 on implementation details (bonus depreciation transition rules, opportunity zone reporting, Trump Account mechanics). Some operational details continue to evolve.
What’s the difference between OBBBA and TCJA? TCJA (2017) was the original Trump tax cuts. Many TCJA individual provisions were scheduled to sunset at end of 2025. OBBBA (2025) made most of them permanent + added new provisions.
Will OBBBA be reversed by a future administration? Possibly. Tax legislation can be changed by any Congress. “Permanent” in tax statutes means “until amended” — not actually forever. Long-term planning should consider the possibility of future tax-law changes.
Does OBBBA affect my state taxes? Federal law only. States that conform to federal definitions (most) will inherit most provisions; states that don’t (a few, including California in some cases) require state-level legislation to mirror federal changes. We model state-level impact in your Tax Analysis.
Where can I read the official IRS guidance? The IRS landing page is at irs.gov/newsroom/one-big-beautiful-bill-provisions — they update this regularly with implementation guidance.
OBBBA is the biggest tax legislation since 2017 and most of its provisions hit ETS-client situations directly. If you haven’t run the post-OBBBA planning numbers on your specific situation, the Discovery call is the right next step. We model the OBBBA impact as part of every Tax Analysis engagement now.