What’s the Latest on the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act”?
A Clearer Look at the Competing House and Senate Tax Proposals
Key Areas of Difference
Several tax areas are at the center of the debate. These include:
1. Business Tax Breaks ("The Big Three")
- Senate: Wants to make these permanent
- House: Applies them only through 2029
Why it matters: Making these permanent would give businesses more certainty for long-term planning and investments.
2. State and Local Tax (SALT) Deduction
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Senate: Keeps the $10,000 cap in place, no income-based phaseout
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House: Raises the cap to $40,000, but limits it for high earners
Why it matters: High-income taxpayers in high-tax states would see very different results depending on which version prevails.
3. Qualified Business Income (QBI) Deduction
Why it matters: The Senate’s version offers more consistency; the House version gives a short-term bump.
4. Clean Energy Incentives
Both bills look to scale back incentives created by the Inflation Reduction Act—but the Senate's version would phase them out more gradually and on different timelines.
Other Senate Highlights
Individual Tax Provisions
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Makes TCJA-era tax brackets and standard deductions permanent
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Adds new above-the-line deductions for tips and overtime pay
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Locks in limits on business losses used to offset personal income
Estate Tax
Charitable Deductions
Notable Additions in the Senate Bill
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Qualified Small Business Stock (QSBS): More generous gain exclusions and higher thresholds for qualification
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Opportunity Zones: Overhaul and extension, with new benefits for rural investments
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Employee Retention Credit (ERTC): Tightens enforcement and expands audit timelines
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Disaster Relief: Expands eligibility for casualty loss deductions
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Nonprofits & Higher Ed: Higher taxes on large university endowments and expanded excise taxes on compensation
What’s Missing from Both Bills?
Interestingly, both versions avoid:
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Raising corporate tax rates
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Adjusting capital gains or carried interest rules
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Changing the individual tax rates for top earners
What Comes Next
Negotiations between the House and Senate will be critical. If they can’t reach a consensus, the entire package could stall—especially with a projected $2.4 trillion cost attached to the House version. The Senate version has not yet been scored.
Our Take
While no version is final, the shape of the legislation gives a good preview of where tax policy could be heading—especially for business owners, high-income earners, and those planning for major life events like a liquidity event or generational wealth transfer.
If you have questions about how this could impact your financial or tax strategy, now is the time to start planning.