Utah Accounting, Tax, Financial Blog

The “Big Beautiful Bill”: What the 2025 Tax Law Means for Individuals and Businesses

Written by Quinn Johnson | Sep 16, 2025 8:41:28 PM

Important Disclaimer

CMP is not endorsing any political viewpoint. We’re explaining the tax consequences of the recently passed law—nothing more.

Agenda

  1. Individual tax changes
  2. Business tax changes

Prefer a video? Watch our recent webinar where Quinn Johnson discusses the changes in this legislation.

 

Individual Tax Changes With One Big Beautiful Bill

 

1.  No Tax on Tips (Deduction up to $25,000)

  • Who qualifies: Employees and self-employed individuals receiving qualified tips (voluntary cash/charged tips from customers or via tip sharing).
  • Amount: Deduct up to $25,000/year (above-the-line).
  • Timing: Applies to tax years 2025–2028.
  • Phase-out: Begins at $150,000 AGI (single), $300,000 (married).
  • Reporting: Employers/other payers must file information returns and provide statements showing tip amounts and the recipient’s occupation. The IRS will list occupations that customarily receive tips.

Note: This does not convert non-tipped services into tips. It applies to roles that customarily and regularly receive tips per IRS guidance.

2.  No Tax on Overtime (Half-Rate Portion Only)

  • What’s deductible: The extra “half” portion of time-and-a-half overtime pay (the amount above the regular hourly rate).
    • Example: Regular rate $20/hr → OT rate $30/hr → $10/hr (the “half” portion) is deductible.
  • Annual limits: Up to $12,500 (single) or $25,000 (married).
  • Timing: 2025–2028.
  • Phase-out: $150,000 AGI (single), $300,000 (married).

Practical tip: W-2s for 2025 won’t show a dedicated overtime deduction line. Employees can use pay stubs to calculate. A simple proxy: one-third of the total overtime pay ≈ deductible amount (since the “half” portion is 1/3 of the total time-and-a-half OT pay).

3.  No Tax on Car Loan Interest (Personal Vehicles)

  • What’s allowed: Above-the-line deduction for interest on a new personal-use vehicle loan.
  • Key conditions:
    • Loan originated after 12/31/2024.
    • New vehicle, first used by the taxpayer (used vehicles do not qualify).
    • Personal use only (business vehicles already deduct interest on business returns).
    • The loan must be secured by the vehicle.
    • GVWR < 14,000 lbs and final assembly in the U.S.
  • Not eligible: Leases.
  • Annual cap: Up to $10,000 of interest.
  • Phase-out: $100,000 AGI (single), $200,000 (married).
  • Timing: 2025–2028.

4. New Deduction for Seniors (65+)

  • Amount: Additional $6,000 per person (on top of the existing senior add-on to the standard deduction).
  • Example (2025, married seniors, both 65+):
    • Base standard deduction: $31,500
    • Existing senior add-on: $3,200
    • New senior deduction: $12,000 ($6,000 × 2)
    • Total: $46,700
  • Phase-out: $75,000 AGI (single), $150,000 (married).
  • Timing: 2025–2028.

This reduces taxable income and may lower or eliminate tax on Social Security, depending on your overall situation.

 5. Other Individual Adjustments

  • Child Tax Credit: Increased to $2,200 per child, with $1,700 refundable, and now inflation-indexed.
  • $500 “Other Dependent” Credit: Made permanent (for dependents like older children over 17 or supported parents).
  • Estate & Gift Exemption: Permanently increased; in 2026, up to $15 million can be transferred tax-free (planning recommended for high-net-worth families).
  • “Trump Account”: New tax-deferred account; $1,000 federal contribution for qualifying children born 2025–2028; parents can contribute; designed for long-term growth.

6. Itemized/Above-the-Line Deduction Changes

  • SALT Cap: Temporarily increased to $40,000 for 2025–2029; phases down as income exceeds $500,000; reverts to $10,000 in 2030.
  • Charitable (Above-the-Line) for Non-Itemizers: Starting 2026, up to $1,000 (single) / $2,000 (married) without itemizing.
  • Mortgage Interest: The $750,000 principal cap is made permanent.
  • PMI/MIP:  Mortgage insurance premiums are again deductible like mortgage interest.

7.  Energy Credits Ending / Reduced

  • Energy-Efficient Home Improvement Credit: No credit for expenditures after 12/31/2025.
  • Residential Clean Energy (Solar) Credit: No credit for expenditures after 12/31/2025; “expenditures made” effectively means work completed by that date.
  • EV Credits (30D new / 25E used): No credit allowed after Sept. 30, 2025 (tight window to purchase).

Business Tax Changes

1.  Bonus Depreciation (Permanent)

  • What it does: Allows immediate expensing of qualifying assets (e.g., vehicles, computers, software, furniture, equipment).
  • Real estate: Generally excluded, except for a new elective for the portion of a manufacturing facility (built starting in 2025) used for qualified manufacturing activities (tangible goods, agriculture, chemical production/refining).

2.  Section 179 Expensing (Higher Limits)

  • Limit doubled to $2.5 million for 2025.
  • Useful in states that don’t allow bonus depreciation (e.g., Idaho), to better align federal and state treatment.

3.  R&D (Section 174) – Immediate Expensing Restored

  • Now: Qualifying R&D costs (wages, contractor costs, supplies, certain computing) can be expensed as incurred.
  • Catch-up options: You may amend 2022–2024 returns to remove capitalization or take the full catch-up on 2025.

Note: Determining eligibility can be complex; consider professional guidance and coordination with the R&D credit.

4. Information Reporting Thresholds

  • Form 1099-NEC/MISC: Threshold increases to $2,000 starting in 2026 (2025 still $600).
  • Form 1099-K (third-party platforms like PayPal/Venmo): Threshold set to $20,000 beginning with 2025, reducing noise for casual sales.

5. Section 1202 (QSBS) Gain Exclusion

  • Exclusion cap: Increased to $15 million.
  • Corporate asset limit at issuance: Increased to $75 million.
  • Tiered exclusion by holding period: Partial exclusions available at 3 and 4 years; full at 5 years.
  • For C-corp stock issued by a qualified small business and held for the required period, a significant gain may be excluded—powerful for founders and investors.

Closing & Next Steps

If you have personal circumstances (e.g., tip income, overtime patterns, buying a car, retirement income mix, SALT exposure, solar timing, or R&D activities), schedule time with your CPA to tailor these rules.

For chat questions not covered during the session, please follow up with your CMP advisor.