One Big Beautiful Bill: Key Tax Changes, Comparisons, and How to Protect Yourself with Strategic Tax Planning
By Juan V. Fanti, MBA, CAA, PA
General Manager & CEO – Two Hundred Global Financial Solutions
Introduction
January 1, 2025, marks the beginning of a new tax era in the United States with the implementation of the "One Big Beautiful Bill", a comprehensive tax reform that significantly modifies various provisions of the federal tax code. This legislation was enacted to align the tax system with current economic realities, though its impact will vary widely depending on each taxpayer’s financial profile.
At Two Hundred Global Financial Solutions, as experts in tax planning, accounting, and business advisory services, we believe it is essential to evaluate how these changes will benefit or affect our clients—both individuals and businesses—and what the consequences would have been had the bill not passed.
馃搶 Key Provisions of the “One Big Beautiful Bill”
(Effective January 1, 2025)
1. Increase in the Standard Deduction
Previous (2024):
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Single filers: $13,850
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Married filing jointly: $27,700
New Law (2025):
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Single filers: $15,000
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Married filing jointly: $30,000
馃搱 Benefit:
Fewer taxpayers will need to itemize deductions. This adjustment reduces taxable income automatically, leading to lower tax liability for most middle-income filers.
馃搲 If not enacted:
The standard deduction would have only increased marginally due to inflation, offering little actual relief. This change constitutes a real and direct improvement.
2. New 39.6% Tax Bracket for High-Income Earners
Previous (2024):
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Top marginal rate: 37% on income over $578,125 (individual) or $693,750 (married filing jointly)
New Law (2025):
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New 39.6% bracket on income above:
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$500,000 (individuals)
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$1,000,000 (married couples)
-
馃搲 Impact:
Business owners, professionals, and high-net-worth individuals will experience an increase in their marginal tax rate.
馃搳 Comparison:
This partially reverses the individual income tax cuts introduced under the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA).
3. Child Tax Credit (CTC)
Previous (2024):
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$2,000 per qualifying child under 17
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Only $1,600 was refundable
New Law (2025):
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Increased to $2,500 per child
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Fully refundable
馃搱 Benefit:
Families, especially those with low or moderate income, will receive greater financial relief—even if they owe no taxes.
馃洃 If not enacted:
The credit would have automatically decreased in 2025 due to TCJA sunset provisions, significantly reducing support for families.
4. Limitations on the 20% Qualified Business Income (QBI) Deduction
Previous (2024):
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Up to 20% deduction on passthrough business income (LLCs, S-Corps, sole proprietors)
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No strict income threshold for many professions if certain conditions were met
New Law (2025):
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Deduction capped for income below $400,000
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Professionals in fields like accounting, law, medicine, and consulting lose access if income exceeds threshold
馃搲 Impact:
Successful professionals will see a notable increase in their taxable income. Many existing tax strategies must be reevaluated.
馃搳 Comparison:
This is among the most restrictive provisions of the reform, removing a significant benefit for small business owners and high-income service professionals.
5. Reduction of Bonus Depreciation
Previous (2024):
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100% immediate bonus depreciation on qualified capital expenditures
New Law (phased from 2025):
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2025: 60%
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2026: 40%
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2027: 20%
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Eliminated in 2028
馃搲 Negative Impact:
Businesses will no longer be able to fully expense capital investments in the year of acquisition, complicating investment and asset planning.
馃搳 Comparison:
This change reverts to a slower cost recovery model, potentially discouraging new capital investments.
6. Reinstated Cap on State and Local Tax (SALT) Deductions
Previous (2024):
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$10,000 SALT deduction cap
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Workarounds existed for passthrough entities in some states
New Law (2025):
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Maintains the $10,000 cap, adjusted slightly for inflation
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Closes passthrough workarounds (SALT cap bypass)
馃搲 Impact:
Taxpayers in high-tax states (e.g., California, New York, New Jersey) will continue to face limited deductibility of state and local taxes.
馃搳 Comparison:
This confirms the continuation of TCJA policies, disappointing taxpayers expecting broader deductions.
馃挱 What If the Law Had Not Passed?
Had the "One Big Beautiful Bill" not been enacted, most provisions of the TCJA were scheduled to expire automatically at the end of 2025, creating uncertainty and abrupt tax increases:
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Immediate tax hikes for families and businesses
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Reduction or elimination of child tax credits
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Loss of passthrough business deductions
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Automatic return to higher pre-2017 tax brackets
Inaction would have had widespread negative consequences for all taxpayers.
✅ Conclusion: Strategic Tax Planning is More Essential Than Ever
This new tax framework demands a personalized evaluation. What may benefit one taxpayer could create significant burdens for another.
The best way to protect your wealth is not to guess—it's to plan.
At Two Hundred Global Financial Solutions, we work closely with individuals and business owners to develop tailored tax optimization strategies that comply with federal and state regulations.
馃攳 Reviewing your business structure, income streams, available deductions, and applicable credits is not only advisable—it is imperative in today’s evolving tax environment.
Signed,
Juan V. Fanti, MBA, CAA, PA
General Manager & CEO
Two Hundred Global Financial Solutions
www.200GFS.com