The One, Big, Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) has officially reshaped the business tax landscape, bringing significant changes that could impact your company's bottom line. Whether you're celebrating new deductions or navigating reduced incentives, understanding these provisions is crucial for strategic tax planning.
This comprehensive guide breaks down the key business tax changes under OBBBA, helping you identify opportunities and prepare for the challenges ahead. From permanent QBI deductions to accelerated depreciation rules, we'll explore how these changes affect different business structures and industries.
The Section 199A deduction for qualified business income (QBI) was a game-changer for pass-through entities when the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act introduced it. Now, OBBBA has made this deduction permanent, removing the uncertainty that hung over business owners facing its 2025 expiration.
The new law expands the deduction limit phase-in ranges for specified service businesses and other entities subject to wage and investment limitations. These expanded thresholds provide more breathing room:
This expansion means more businesses can claim the full QBI deduction before hitting the phase-out limits.
Starting in 2025, OBBBA introduces an inflation-adjusted minimum QBI deduction of $400. This applies to taxpayers with at least $1,000 of QBI from active businesses where they materially participate. This provision ensures that even smaller business owners can benefit from the deduction, providing a safety net for those who might otherwise fall through the cracks.
Manufacturing, construction, agriculture, and real estate businesses have reason to celebrate. OBBBA makes permanent 100% first-year bonus depreciation for qualified new and used assets acquired and placed into service after January 19, 2025.
Under the previous TCJA rules, bonus depreciation was set to decline dramatically:
The permanent 100% bonus depreciation removes this uncertainty, allowing businesses to plan major equipment purchases without worrying about reduced tax benefits.
OBBBA introduces a 100% deduction for "qualified production property" — generally nonresidential real property used in manufacturing. This deduction applies to property placed into service after July 4, 2025, and before 2031.
The law also increases Section 179 expensing limits:
The mandatory amortization of research and experimentation (R&E) costs has been a burden for innovation-driven businesses since 2022. OBBBA provides significant relief by permanently allowing the deduction of domestic R&E expenses in the year incurred, starting with the 2025 tax year.
Small businesses with average annual gross receipts of $31 million or less can claim the deduction retroactively to 2022. Any business that incurred domestic R&E expenses from 2022 through 2024 can elect to accelerate the remaining deductions over a one- or two-year period.
This change is particularly valuable for technology companies, pharmaceutical businesses, and other research-intensive industries that have been managing cash flow challenges due to the amortization requirements.
Not all news is positive for businesses. OBBBA eliminates many clean energy tax incentives from the Inflation Reduction Act, affecting companies that had planned to leverage these credits.
The law also accelerates phaseouts and moves up project deadlines for remaining incentives. For example, the commercial clean vehicle credit ends for vehicles acquired after September 30, 2025, instead of December 31, 2032.
Businesses in the clean energy sector need to reassess their investment strategies and consider accelerating projects to capture remaining benefits before they expire.
The Qualified Opportunity Zone (QOZ) program receives a permanent structure under OBBBA, building on the original TCJA program that encouraged investment in distressed areas.
The permanent QOZ policy retains existing benefits while adding incremental reductions in gain starting on an investment's first anniversary. In the seventh year, taxpayers must realize their initial gains, reduced by any step-up in basis based on how long the investment is held.
OBBBA introduces a new type of QOF specifically for rural areas. Investments in these funds receive triple the step-up in basis, providing additional incentives for rural development.
The first round of QOFs under the permanent policy begins January 1, 2027, giving investors time to plan their strategies.
Multinational businesses face permanent changes to international tax rules. OBBBA makes permanent the foreign-derived intangible income (FDII) and global intangible low-taxed income (GILTI) deductions while adjusting effective tax rates to 14%.
The base erosion and anti-abuse tax (BEAT) becomes permanent with an increased tax rate of 10.5%. This affects U.S. corporations with average annual gross receipts of $500 million or more and deductible payments to related non-U.S. parties at or above 3% of all deductible payments.
These changes take effect in 2026, giving businesses time to adjust their international tax strategies.
OBBBA enhances several employee-related tax provisions, making them permanent fixtures in the tax code.
The exclusion from gross income for employer student loan payments becomes permanent, with the maximum annual exclusion of $5,250 adjusted annually for inflation after 2026.
The maximum employer-provided child care credit increases from 25% to 40% of qualified expenses, up to $500,000 per year. Small businesses can claim 50% up to $600,000. These amounts will be adjusted annually for inflation after 2026.
The employer credit for paid family and medical leave becomes permanent after 2025, with employers also allowed to claim credits for a portion of premiums for paid FML insurance.
Businesses that filed Employee Retention Tax Credit claims after January 31, 2024, may face disappointment. OBBBA bars the IRS from issuing refunds for certain claims submitted after that date and gives the IRS at least six years to challenge these claims.
OBBBA includes several other provisions that benefit businesses:
The limit on business interest deduction increases by excluding depreciation, amortization, and depletion from the computation of adjusted taxable income (ATI), starting in 2025. The deduction is generally limited to 30% of ATI.
The law makes permanent the excess business loss limit (previously set to expire in 2029) and extends the New Markets Tax Credit (scheduled to expire in 2026).
Understanding these OBBBA changes is just the first step. The real value comes from incorporating them into your strategic tax planning. Here are key considerations:
For Pass-Through Entities: Take advantage of the permanent QBI deduction and enhanced phase-in ranges to optimize your business structure and income timing.
For Capital-Intensive Businesses: The permanent 100% bonus depreciation provides certainty for equipment purchases and expansion plans.
For Research Companies: Plan to accelerate R&E expense deductions and consider the retroactive benefits for expenses incurred since 2022.
For International Businesses: Prepare for permanent international tax rules and adjust transfer pricing strategies accordingly.
For All Businesses: Review employee benefit programs to maximize new credits and exclusions while maintaining competitive packages.
Since OBBBA primarily extends or modifies existing tax law rather than creating entirely new provisions, the implementation should be smoother than the TCJA rollout. However, staying informed about IRS guidance and regulations remains crucial for compliance and optimization.
The business tax landscape continues to evolve, and these OBBBA changes represent both opportunities and challenges. Working with experienced tax professionals can help you navigate these changes effectively and ensure your business captures every available benefit while remaining compliant with new requirements. Contact us now.