As you have likely heard by now, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) was signed into law after months of negotiations and razor-thin votes from Washington. While headlines focus on the politics, the real story for clients and advisors is the significant and actionable impact this law has on taxes, estate planning, and long-term strategy.
This is a prime opportunity to revisit client plans, adjust income and gifting strategies, and reinforce your role as a trusted guide.
Key Tax Changes Advisors Should Be Talking About
1. The SALT Deduction Gets a Major Boost
The state and local tax (SALT) deduction cap increases from $10,000 to $40,000 per household beginning in 2025. This change is especially impactful for clients in high-tax states like California, New York, and New Jersey.
- The deduction begins to phase out at $500,000 of MAGI for joint filers, increasing annually by 1% through 2029.
- It reverts to a $10,000 cap permanently in 2030.
Advisor Insight: For many clients, especially those who own property in high-tax jurisdictions, this means a renewed opportunity to itemize and optimize deductions. Now’s the time to evaluate whether prepaying state taxes or adjusting withholding could improve their 2025 return.
2. The QBI Deduction Is Here to Stay
The 20% Qualified Business Income (QBI) deduction for pass-through businesses (S-corps, LLCs, sole proprietorships) has been made permanent. Importantly:
- Phase-out thresholds for service professionals (like doctors, attorneys, consultants) are now more generous—starting at $150,000 of income for joint filers.
- A new $400 minimum deduction was introduced for business owners earning at least $1,000 in QBI.
Advisor Insight: Clients may not even realize they benefit from this deduction. This is a perfect moment to review entity structure, business income levels, and explore ways to stay under phase-out limits.
3. Roth Conversions Remain a Powerful Tool
Despite prior legislative threats, backdoor Roth IRA conversions were not eliminated. In fact, lower tax brackets and a higher standard deduction make conversions more attractive for many clients in 2025.
Advisor Insight: Mid-year Roth conversion reviews should be on the agenda, especially for clients expecting a temporary dip in income, recent retirees, or those executing multi-year tax diversification strategies.
4. Estate Tax Exemption Locked In
The $15 million (per person) estate, gift, and generation-skipping transfer tax exemption is now permanent, adjusted annually for inflation. Previously set to sunset in 2026, this provision provides long-term planning clarity for high-net-worth clients.
Advisor Insight: Consider gifting strategies for clients nearing the exemption limit. Dynasty trusts, spousal lifetime access trusts (SLATs), and intra-family loans should all be revisited under the new law.
What Clients in High-Tax States Need to Know
California
Homeowners in the Bay Area and SoCal will benefit greatly from the new SALT cap. Previously capped at $10K despite property tax bills double or triple that amount, many can now deduct significantly more of their actual payments.
New York
With the average New York SALT deduction previously over $12,000, the expanded cap offers meaningful federal relief especially for clients itemizing with real estate and income taxes in metro areas.
New Jersey
The average NJ property tax bill exceeds $9,000. With the SALT cap quadrupling, most NJ clients can now deduct the full amount they pay in local and state taxes, a key benefit to middle- and upper-middle-income families.
Advisor Talking Points for Client Meetings (Optimistic Tone)
“With the SALT cap rising to $40,000, you’ll likely see meaningful tax relief this year especially if you itemize and live in a high-tax state.”
“If you own an LLC, S-corp, or other pass-through entity, the QBI deduction could reduce your taxable income significantly. We’ll walk through the new thresholds together.”
“We should revisit Roth conversion strategy. With favorable tax brackets and no legislation closing the door, 2025 is a window worth exploring.”
“Your estate plan may benefit from new certainty around the $15M exemption; now’s the time to optimize gifting or trust structures.”
Advisor Talking Points for Client Meetings (Neutral Tone)
“The new SALT cap will affect many clients—particularly in high-tax states. It’s worth reviewing who might benefit from itemizing this year and who won’t.”
“For business owners, the QBI deduction remains in place and has been adjusted. Regardless of how we feel about the bill overall, this is a chance to make sure eligible clients are optimizing their income structure.”
“Roth conversion strategies are still on the table. Clients in lower tax brackets this year may find it’s an efficient time to act before the broader landscape changes again.”
“The estate exemption’s permanence offers clarity. Whether or not clients are above the threshold today, we now have a longer runway to plan intentionally.”
This material is distributed for informational purposes only. Investment Advisory services offered through Journey Strategic Wealth, a registered investment adviser registered with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”). The views expressed are for informational purposes only and do not take into account any individual’s personal, financial, or tax considerations. Opinions expressed are subject to change without notice and are not intended as investment advice. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Please see Journey Strategic Wealth’s Form ADV Part 2A and Form CRS for additional information.