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Accounting

Major Federal Tax Changes Could Be Coming Soon

By Neil Becourtney, CPA, Smolin Lupin & Co., LLC


The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), which became effective in 2018, included numerous tax changes impacting individuals, some business provisions and the estate tax threshold under TCJA with a set expiration as of Dec. 31, 2025. That deadline is rapidly approaching. If Congress takes no action, many tax provisions will revert in 2026 to what they were in 2017. But Congress could also extend the expiring provisions for additional years by approving legislation making the TCJA provisions permanent, or blow everything up via new legislation. 

The Congressional Budget Office and the Joint Committee on Taxation have estimated that the extension of all provisions that are scheduled to either expire or become less generous would cost an estimated $5 trillion between FY2025 and FY2034.

Summary of Expiring TCJA Provisions

  • The top personal income tax rate would increase from 37% to 39.6%. The TCJA did not increase the reduced tax rates on long-term capital gains or qualified dividends.
  • Standard deductions would revert to $6,350 for single filers and $12,700 for joint filers. Consider that for 2024, the basic standard deduction for joint filers (neither spouse age 65 or blind) will be $29,200. This resulted in a substantial drop in the number of taxpayers itemizing their deductions.
  • The maximum child tax credit would drop from $2,000 to $1,000 along with a corresponding drop in the income phaseout thresholds.
  • The $10,000 SALT deduction limit would vanish. There have been continuous efforts by Congressional representatives of high-tax states to either increase or repeal the SALT limit over the past seven years without success.
  • The cap on home mortgage interest deductions would increase from $750,000 of acquisition indebtedness to $1,000,000 along with interest paid on home equity indebtedness of up to $100,000 again being deductible.
  • Cash contributions to public charities, currently limited to 60% of AGI, would be limited to 50% of AGI.
  • Miscellaneous itemized deductions above 2% of AGI would again be deductible as would moving expenses, the latter deduction “above the line.”
  • All casualty losses (currently only those incurred as a result of a federally declared disaster) would be eligible for deduction.
  • The alternative minimum tax (AMT) on individuals that has rarely reared its ugly head since 2018 would reflect decreases in the AMT exemption and phaseout thresholds, which combined with the elimination of the SALT deduction limit (often a leading cause of incurring AMT), would make many taxpayers again subject to AMT.
  • The Sec. 199A (QBI) deduction would disappear. This deduction effectively reduced the top tax rate on eligible Schedule C, rental and pass-through entity income to 29.6% (37% less 20%) compared with the 21% C corporation tax rate.
  • Bonus depreciation for assets placed in service during calendar year 2026, currently slated at 20%, would be eliminated.
  • The estate and gift tax exemption for 2024 has increased to $13,610,000 via annual indexing for inflation. It would revert to $5 million (indexed for inflation, estimated to be about $7 million) for decedents dying on or after Jan. 1, 2026. Final regulations adopted in November 2019 generally prevent an estate from being taxed on gifts made during 2018 through 2025 on a higher basic exemption amount (BEA) that would exceed the exemption amount for 2026 and future years. 

The following individual tax changes included in the TCJA were either made permanent or expire after 2026: 

  • For divorces occurring after Dec. 31, 2018, alimony is no longer deductible to the payer and no longer taxable to the payee (note that New Jersey did not adopt the alimony changes). This permanent change was a revenue raiser as the alimony payer is typically in a higher tax bracket than the alimony recipient. 
  • The Sec. 461 loss limitation of $250,000 for single filers and $500,000 for joint filers (indexed for inflation) was extended to 2028 by the Inflation Reduction Act. 
  • At the end of 2026, the Qualified Opportunity Zones that were created under the TCJA to allow the deferral of capital gains taxes on certain new investments in economically distressed areas are set to expire.

As the New Jersey gross (personal) income tax never piggybacked the Internal Revenue Code, little would change as far as New Jersey taxes are concerned. The only deductions allowed are for medical expenses exceeding 2% of New Jersey gross income and up to $15,000 of real estate taxes paid on a New Jersey principal residence. Alimony remains deductible for New Jersey regardless of when the divorce took place.

About the Author: Neil Becourtney, CPA, is a tax director at Smolin Lupin & Co., LLC. He is a member of the NJCPA and can be reached at [email protected]

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