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Top five tax changes for the wealthy

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A view of the US Capitol in Washington, DC, on June 30, 2025.

Jim Watson | Afp | Getty Images

The wealthy will likely see a host of new tax breaks in the One Big Beautiful Bill, along with permanent extensions of many of the 2017 tax cuts, according to tax experts.

Taxpayers earning $1 million or more are expected to see a boost in after-tax income of about 3% in the Senate version of Trump’s bill, according to the Tax Policy Center. That compares to the nationwide average of about 2.5%. In dollar terms, millionaire earners will see an average after-tax income increase of $75,000 in 2026, according to the Tax Policy Center.  

Virtually all the core provisions of the 2017 tax cut are expected to be extended in the final bill, which is expected to be approved by the House Thursday, with some provisions becoming permanent. There are also several new tax breaks or benefits added in the bill that further lower tax bills for those at the top — especially for investors in small businesses.

Here are the five most important changes in the bill that impact high earners and the wealthy.

SALT

Surprisingly, the Senate bill largely follows the House’s version of the state and local tax, or “SALT”, cap increase. The existing $10,000 cap on SALT deductions will rise to $40,000 for those making less than $500,000, with the income threshold rising 1% a year. Initially the Senate was opposed to a change that largely benefits blue-state top earners. Yet after threats from the House, the Senate agreed to the $40,000 level.

Unlike the original House version of SALT, however, the Senate bill preserves a popular loophole to get around the cap. Dozens of states allow a workaround, called the pass-through entity tax (PTET), that encourages pass-through owners and partners to avoid the cap at the state level. It benefits everyone from car dealers and dentists to accounting and law partners, but not employees of those firms.

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The initial House version of the bill eliminated the loophole benefit for service industries and most white-collar firms (accountants, lawyers, doctors), according to Kyle Pomerleau at the American Enterprise Institute. Yet the Senate didn’t follow the House change.

“The Senate version has no limitation on the workarounds,” Pomerleau said, “effectively allowing these taxpayers to utilize an unlimited SALT deduction.”

Qualified Small Business Stock benefit

Estate and gift tax

Itemized deductions

Philanthropy



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