Get a comprehensive snapshot of the One Big Beautiful Bill (OBBB) — its official enactment on July 4, 2025, how it extends or modifies key provisions of the TCJA and beyond, and why it’s considered one of the largest tax‑policy overhauls in recent years.
From Complexity to Clarity:Understanding the One Big Beautiful Bill (OBBB)
Explore our complete library of articles covering the OBBB across individual, business, estate, energy, green incentives, international, and state tax implications—your all‑in‑one source for updated tax insights.
Understand how OBBB permanently extends the 20% Qualified Business Income deduction, enhances §529 education planning (including doubling K–12 tuition withdrawal limits), and adds new personal deductions for tips and overtime pay.
Learn how OBBB affects estate and gift planning, including changes to §529 plan usage and higher thresholds for qualifying withdrawals—features especially relevant for intergenerational wealth strategies.
Dive into the major tax changes impacting businesses: the permanent shift to EBITDA‑based §163(j) interest deduction, extended 100% bonus depreciation, heightened §179 expensing limits, and updated information‑reporting thresholds.
See how the OBBB modifies excise tax rules for tax‑exempt entities—expanding definitions of “covered employees” and adjusting endowment tax rates for large colleges and universities
Understand global businesses’ exposure to OBBB provisions, from interest deduction changes to credit impacts and compliance shifts—especially for companies with cross‑border structures
Discover which clean energy and green tax credits are expiring or being phased out—such as EV credits, home energy improvements, and commercial refueling property incentives—so you can act ahead of deadlines.
Explore how OBBB’s federal tax changes may ripple into state conformity rules and SALT workaround regimes—as well as which proposals didn’t make it into the final bill.
Industry‑specific insights show how sectors like energy, manufacturing, construction, and real estate are impacted by the OBBB—from bonus depreciation in natural resources to advanced manufacturing tax credits for coal and changes to construction‑related clean energy incentives.
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