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The One Big Beautiful Bill Act Extends Tax Breaks for Small Businesses

The National Federation of Independent Business called the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), signed into law on July 4, 2025, a historic victory for small business owners.1

The Act provides certainty and stability by making permanent a host of tax provisions that would otherwise have expired at the end of 2025. Here are three specific changes to pay close attention to.

Qualified business income deduction
Owners of sole proprietorships, partnerships, S corporations, and certain LLCs may be eligible for a qualified business income (QBI) deduction — also called the Section 199A deduction. The deduction, equal to 20% of qualified business income, was scheduled to expire in 2025, but the new legislation makes it permanent and expands eligibility.

The deduction may be limited or eliminated if taxable income exceeds certain thresholds. A married couple filing jointly in 2025 would generally be able to claim the full QBI deduction if their taxable income was less than $394,600; if the couple's taxable income was between $394,600 and $494,600, the deduction would be phased out. (The 2025 phaseout range for all other filing statuses is $197,300 to $247,300.)

Starting in 2026, the income range over which the deduction is phased out is expanded from $100,000 to $150,000 for married joint filers and from $50,000 to $75,000 for all other filers. As a result, the phaseout range for joint filers is $394,600 to $544,600 in 2026 ($197,300 to $272,300 for other filing statuses).

Also, there is a new minimum $400 QBI deduction for those with at least $1,000 of income from businesses in which they materially participate. These QBI amounts will be indexed for inflation after 2026.

Enhanced Section 179 expensing
Section 179 of the Internal Revenue Code (IRC) allows businesses to elect to deduct the full cost of depreciable tangible personal property, computer software, and specific improvements to nonresidential buildings (including roofs, HVAC systems, and security systems) in the year of purchase. For property placed in service in 2025, the maximum deduction for expensing doubles to $2.5 million. The maximum deduction is reduced when the cost of Section 179 property placed in service during the year exceeds an established phaseout threshold. OBBBA increases this threshold in 2025 from $3.13 million to $4 million.

100% bonus depreciation
The legislation permanently re-establishes the additional first-year depreciation deduction at 100% for qualifying property acquired after January 19, 2025. This allows businesses to immediately deduct the full cost of new or used equipment, machinery, and other qualifying property rather than depreciate the cost over several years.

1) National Federation of Independent Business, 2025

This content has been reviewed by FINRA.
Prepared by Broadridge Advisor Solutions. © 2026 Broadridge Financial
Services, Inc

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4/7/26