What’s in Trump’s tax-cut bill making its way through the US Congress?

Published 06/29/2025, 02:46 PM
Updated 06/29/2025, 03:40 PM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A general view of the U.S. Capitol, on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., November 23, 2024. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier/ File Photo

(Fixes headline)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. Senate Republicans are moving forward on President Donald Trump’s sweeping tax-cut and spending bill that includes major elements of his domestic agenda.

The Senate advanced the bill and is set to consider numerous amendments before final passage. The bill will then return to the Republican-controlled House of Representatives for final passage before Trump can sign it into law. Here are some details of what is in the bill:

TEMPORARY VS. PERMANENT TAX BREAKS

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimates that the version of the bill the Senate moved ahead on Saturday night will add about $3.2 trillion to the nation’s debt over the next decade. That’s higher than the estimated $2.8 trillion cost of the version of the bill passed by the House last month, largely because the Senate version makes permanent an array of tax cuts that the House version would have allowed to expire in a few years.

TAX CURRENT HOUSE VERSION SENATE

BREAK LAW VERSION

Child $2,000 Raised to Permanent

tax per $2,500 increase to

credit  child, through 2028, $2,200,

drops to then reverts indexed to

$1,000 to $2,000, inflation.

in 2026 indexed for

inflation.

Standard $30,000 Temporary Permanent

deductio for increase to increase to

n  married $32,000 $32,000 for

couple, through 2028, married

drops by back to couples

about $30,000 after starting in

half in that. 2026

2026

Business Amortize 100% 100%

research d over 5 expensing for expensing for

and years, domestic domestic

developm 15 years research research

ent for through 2029, permanently

costs foreign then reverts

research

Bonus 40% this 100% through 100%

deprecia year, 2029, then permanently

tion for 20% in phases out

business 2026, 0%

equipmen after

t that

purchase

s

Business Up to Expands this Expands this

interest 30% of break to break to

expenses earnings include include

before depreciation EBITDA

interest and permanently

and amortization

taxes (EBITDA)

(EBIT) through 2029

STATE AND LOCAL TAX DEDUCTION

The Senate version raises to $40,000 the maximum deduction for state and local tax payments, with annual inflation adjustments. That deduction will revert to its current $10,000 level after 2029. An earlier version agreed to in the House would have kept the deduction at $40,000 after 2026.

DEDUCTION FOR OLDER AMERICANS

The Senate bill would provide a federal income tax deduction of $6,000 per year for people over 65, the earlier House version would have offered a $4,000 deduction. Both would end after 2028.

NO TAX ON TIPS

The Senate bill would provide a deduction of up to $25,000 for tipped income through 2028. The House version would not cap the deduction.

RETALIATORY (SECTION 899) TAX

Both the House and Senate initially included a provision that would have allowed the U.S. to impose new taxes on residents, businesses and other entities from countries that are found to impose "unfair foreign taxes." 

However, this section was removed after advice from Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who said his tax negotiations with G7 nations were progressing.

DEBT CEILING

The Senate bill would raise the nation’s debt ceiling by $5 trillion; the House version had called for a $4 trillion increase. Congress must act on this by sometime this summer or risk triggering a default on the nation’s $36.2 trillion in debt.

CLEAN ENERGY PROJECTS

The Senate bill would roll back clean-energy incentives created by President Joe Biden’s 2022 Inflation Reduction Act, effectively repealing the incentives for solar and wind immediately. The Senate language also proposes a new tax on these projects if they cannot prove their products are made without Chinese parts, as well as a new tax break for coal production.

MEDICAID

Both bills would clamp down on "provider taxes," which states levy on Medicaid providers as a way to boost federal funding. The Senate version delays the implementation of these changes until 2028, when these provider taxes would start to gradually decrease. The Senate also included an extra $25 billion for rural hospitals after several Republican senators balked at how these changes could impact providers in their states.

SPORTS TEAMS

The Senate version does not include language from the House bill that would have cut a tax break for sports-team owners in half. 

COURTS

The current version of the Senate bill omits language meant to limit U.S. judges’ power to block federal policies nationwide, after the nonpartisan Senate parliamentarian ruled the policy does not align with the chamber’s rules for this specific budget process.

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