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August 8, 2025by admin

The One, Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) contains a major overhaul to an outdated IRS requirement. Beginning with payments made in 2026, the new law raises the threshold for information reporting on certain business payments from $600 to $2,000. Beginning in 2027, the threshold amount will be adjusted for inflation.

The current requirement: $600 threshold

For decades, the IRS has required that businesses file Form 1099-NEC (previously 1099-MISC) for payments made to independent contractors that exceed $600 in a calendar year. This threshold amount has remained unchanged since the 1950s!

The same $600 threshold is in place for Forms 1099-MISC, which businesses file for several types of payments, including prizes, rents and payments to attorneys.

Certain deadlines must be met. A Form 1099-NEC must be filed with the IRS by January 31 of the year following the year in which a payment was made. A copy must be sent to the recipient by the same January 31 deadline.

A Form 1099-MISC must also be provided to a recipient by January 31 of the year following a payment, but unlike Form 1099-NEC, the 1099-MISC deadline for the IRS depends on how it’s submitted. If a business is filing the form on paper, the deadline is February 28. If the form is being submitted electronically, the deadline is March 31.

The new rules raise the bar to $2,000

Under the OBBBA, the threshold increases to $2,000, meaning:

  • Fewer 1099s will need to be issued and filed.
  • There will be reduced paperwork and administrative overhead for small businesses.
  • There will be better alignment with inflation and modern economic realities.

For example, let’s say your business engaged a freelance graphic designer and pays the individual $650 this year. You’ll need to send a 1099-NEC to the designer for calendar year 2025. But if you hire the same individual in 2026, you won’t be required to send a 1099 to the graphic designer or the IRS in 2027 unless the designer earns more than $2,000.

The money is still taxable income

Even if an independent contractor doesn’t receive a 1099-NEC because the amount paid was below the threshold amount, the payment(s) are still considered part of the individual’s gross income. The contractor must report all business income received on his or her tax return, unless an exclusion applies.

In addition, businesses must continue to maintain accurate records of all payments.

There are changes to Form 1099-K, too

The OBBBA also reinstates a higher threshold for Forms 1099-K, used by third-party payment processors. The reporting threshold returns to $20,000 and 200 transactions, rolling back the phased-in lower thresholds that had dropped toward $600 by 2026. This rollback undoes changes from the 2021 American Rescue Plan Act and earlier IRS delay plans.

Simplicity and relief

Raising the threshold will ease the filing burden for millions of businesses, especially small operations that rely on contractors. There will also be less risk that an IRS penalty will be imposed for failing to file a Form 1099 when required. Contact us with any questions about the new rules or your filing requirements.


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August 8, 2025by admin

The qualified business income (QBI) deduction, which became effective in 2018, is a significant tax benefit for many business owners. It allows eligible taxpayers to deduct up to 20% of QBI, not to exceed 20% of taxable income. It can also be claimed for up to 20% of income from qualified real estate investment trust dividends.

With recent changes under the One, Big, Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), this powerful deduction is becoming more accessible and beneficial. Most important, the OBBBA makes the QBI deduction permanent. It had been scheduled to end on December 31, 2025.

A closer look

QBI is generally defined as the net amount of qualified income, gain, deduction and loss from a qualified U.S. trade or business. Taxpayers eligible for the deduction include sole proprietors and owners of pass-through entities, such as partnerships, S corporations and limited liability companies that are treated as sole proprietorships, partnerships or S corporations for tax purposes. C corporations aren’t eligible.

Additional limits on the deduction gradually phase in if 2025 taxable income exceeds the applicable threshold — $197,300 or $394,600 for married couples filing joint tax returns. The limits fully apply when 2025 taxable income exceeds $247,300 and $494,600, respectively.

For example, if a taxpayer’s income exceeds the applicable threshold, the deduction starts to become limited to:

  • 50% of the amount of W-2 wages paid to employees by the qualified business during the tax year, or
  • The sum of 25% of W-2 wages plus 2.5% of the cost (not reduced by depreciation taken) of qualified property, which is the depreciable tangible property (including real estate) owned by a qualified business as of year end and used by the business at any point during the tax year to produce QBI.

Also, if a taxpayer’s income exceeds the applicable threshold and the QBI is from a “specified service business,” the deduction will be reduced and eventually eliminated. Examples of specified service businesses are those involving investment-type services and most professional practices, including law, health, consulting, performing arts and athletics (but not engineering and architecture).

Even better next year

Under the OBBBA, beginning in 2026, the income ranges over which the wage/property and specified service business limits phase in will widen, potentially allowing larger deductions for some taxpayers. Instead of the distance from the bottom of the range (the threshold) to the top (the amount at which the limit fully applies) being $50,000, or, for joint filers, $100,000, it will be $75,000, or, for joint filers, $150,000. The threshold amounts will continue to be annually adjusted for inflation.

The OBBBA also provides a new minimum deduction of $400 for taxpayers who materially participate in an active trade or business if they have at least $1,000 of QBI from it. The minimum deduction will be annually adjusted for inflation after 2026.

Action steps

With the QBI changes, it may be time to revisit your tax strategies. Certain tax planning moves may increase or decrease your allowable QBI deduction. Contact us to develop strategies that maximize your benefits under the new law.


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August 8, 2025by admin

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) includes a number of beneficial changes that will help small business taxpayers. Perhaps the biggest and best changes are liberalized rules for depreciating business assets. Here’s what you need to know.

100% bonus depreciation is back

The new law permanently restores 100% first-year depreciation for eligible assets acquired and placed in service after January 19, 2025. The last time 100% bonus depreciation was allowed for eligible assets was in 2022. The deduction percentage was generally reduced to 80% for 2023, 60% for 2024, and 40% for eligible assets placed in service between January 1, 2025, and January 19, 2025.

For certain assets with longer production periods, these percentage cutbacks were delayed by one year. For example, a 60% first-year bonus depreciation rate applies to long-production-period property placed in service between January 1, 2025, and January 19, 2025.

Eligible assets include most depreciable personal property such as equipment, computer hardware and peripherals, commercially available software and certain vehicles. First-year bonus depreciation can also be claimed for real estate qualified improvement property (QIP). This is defined as an improvement to an interior portion of a non-residential building placed in service after the building was initially put into use. However, expenditures attributable to the enlargement of a building, elevators or escalators, or the internal structural framework of a building don’t count as QIP. They usually must be depreciated over 39 years.

Section 179 first-year depreciation

For eligible assets placed in service in tax years beginning in 2025, the OBBBA increases the maximum amount that can immediately be written off via first-year depreciation (sometimes called expensing) to $2.5 million. This is up from $1.25 million for 2025 before the new law.

A phase-out rule reduces the maximum Sec. 179 deduction if, during the year, you place in service eligible assets in excess of $4 million. This is up from $3.13 million for 2025 before OBBBA was enacted. These increased OBBBA amounts will be adjusted annually for inflation for tax years beginning in 2026.

Eligible assets include the same items that are eligible for bonus depreciation. Sec. 179 deductions can also be claimed for real estate QIP (defined earlier), up to the maximum annual allowance. In addition, Sec. 179 deductions are also allowed for roofs, HVAC equipment, fire protection and alarm systems, and security systems for non-residential real property. Finally, Sec. 179 write-offs can be claimed for depreciable personal property used predominantly in connection with furnishing lodging.

There’s a special limit on Sec. 179 deductions for heavy SUVs used over 50% for business. This means vehicles with gross vehicle weight ratings between 6,001 and 14,000 pounds. For tax years beginning in 2025, the maximum Sec. 179 deduction for a heavy SUV is $31,300.

Strategy: Sec. 179 deductions are subject to a number of limitations that don’t apply to first-year bonus depreciation. In particular, things can get complicated if you operate your business as a partnership, LLC treated as a partnership for tax purposes or an S corporation. The conventional wisdom is to claim 100% first-year bonus depreciation to the extent allowed rather than claiming Sec. 179 deductions for the same assets.

First-year depreciation for qualified production property

The OBBBA allows additional 100% first-year depreciation for qualified production property (QPP) in the year it’s placed in service. QPP is non-residential real estate, such as a building, that’s used as an integral part of a qualified production activity, such as the manufacturing, production, or refining of tangible personal property. Before the new law, non-residential buildings generally had to be depreciated over 39 years.

QPP doesn’t include any part of non-residential real property that’s used for offices, administrative services, lodging, parking, sales or research activities, software development, engineering activities and other functions unrelated to the manufacturing, production or refining of tangible personal property.

The favorable new 100% first-year depreciation deal is available for QPP when the construction begins after January 19, 2025, and before 2029. The property must be placed in service in the U.S. or a U.S. possession before 2031.

Take another look

These are only some of the business provisions in the new law. We can help you take advantage of tax breaks that are beneficial in your situation for 2025 and future years.