Here’s the latest I can share based on reputable sources up to now.
Direct answer
- The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 (TCJA) remains a major revision of the U.S. tax code, with many provisions expiring after 2025 unless extended or reenacted, while some changes are permanent. Major points include reduced corporate tax rate to 21%, expanded standard deduction for individuals, changes to SALT deductions, and changes to pass-through income deduction; several individual and business provisions were set to expire after 2025, creating renewed policy questions as of the mid-2020s.
Key developments and context
- Legislative status: By the end of 2025, most individual provisions were scheduled to revert to pre-TCJA rules unless Congress acts to extend or modify them. This creates ongoing policy debates about tax reform and the fiscal impact of expiring provisions.
- Revenue and distributional impacts: Analyses through the mid-2020s indicate the act substantially reduced corporate taxes and altered individual rates, with mixed effects on GDP, wages, and investment, and greater benefits to higher-income households and corporations than to many middle- or lower-income households. Some think tanks and policy groups have continued to discuss the need for potential extensions or revisions.
- Contemporary commentary and outlook: Brookings and other policy centers have hosted discussions around lessons learned from the TCJA and possible directions for later reform, including considerations of extending or modifying expiring provisions and rebalancing corporate vs. individual tax incentives.
What this means for you (practical takeaways)
- If you’re planning taxes for 2025 or 2026, be aware that several TCJA provisions might change or sunset unless Congress acts. This could affect standard deduction amounts, how itemized deductions compare, and any credits or thresholds that were expanded under TCJA.
- For business planning, the 21% corporate tax rate remains in place, and the 20% passthrough deduction remains a key consideration for eligible entities, though interactions with expiring individual provisions could influence overall planning strategies.
Illustration
- Imagine TCJA as a multi-year lease with several clauses expiring in 2025. If Congress chooses to renew those clauses, your tax planning for 2026 could look much like 2025; if not, you’ll revert toward pre-2018 rules, with some new tweaks from any new reform package. This is why policy debates focus on whether to extend, modify, or replace those expiration provisions.
Would you like a concise bullet-point briefing tailored to individuals, small business owners, or corporate taxpayers, with a timeline of the key expiring provisions and proposed policy options? I can also pull a short, up-to-date summary from official sources if you specify the audience.
Sources
Now that the election frenzy is over, policymakers must decide the fate of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act’s expiring provisions. The president-elect supports extending the TCJA, despite an expected deficit hike, while public opinion remains split on its effectiveness.
www.csis.orgPresident Trump hopes to preserve his signature 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) in a bill called One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBA). Here's what else is in it and what you need to know.
www.fidelity.comMajor tax reform was approved by Congress in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) on December 22, 2017. The IRS is working on implementing this major tax legislation that will affect both individuals and businesses. We will provide information and guidance to taxpayers, businesses and the tax community as it becomes available.
www.irs.govThe Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 (TCJA) is the unofficial name for the large set of changes to the Revenue Code of 1986, signed into law by President Trump in 2017. TCJA made many large changes across multiple areas of the tax code, including most infamously reducing the corporate tax rate, increasing the standard deduction, and increasing the applicable exclusion amounts for estate taxes. Only some of the TCJA changes were permanent, and over twenty provisions will expire by the end of 2025....
www.law.cornell.eduA major rewrite of the federal tax code awaits the winners of the upcoming 2024 elections. Unless Congress passes new legislation, the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) individual income and estate tax provisions will expire after 2025. Lawmakers may also seek to alter business tax deductions made less generous by the TCJA to offset the cost of the original bill. … The TJCA reduced statutory income tax rates at almost all levels of taxable income, nearly doubled the standard deduction,...
taxpolicycenter.orgExplore recent events, research, and commentary on the impacts of the TCJA and how Congress might rework or extend it this year.
www.brookings.edu