What to Do Before the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act Provisions Sunset (2024)

The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) of 2017 is currently scheduled to sunset at the end of 2025, meaning significant changes are on the horizon for taxpayers. Now is the time to understand those implications and consider strategies to help mitigate the potential tax risks — and this article can help you get started.

Pay the Taxes You Owe and Not a Cent More

TCJA brought sweeping changes to the tax code for both businesses and individuals. Along with large, permanent tax cuts to corporate profits, the TCJA lowered individual tax rates by restructuring the tax brackets, almost doubled the standard deduction from $13,000 to $24,000, decoupled the income threshold for capital gains taxes from ordinary income tax brackets to benefit higher-income taxpayers and effectively doubled the lifetime gift and estate tax exemption (from $5.6 million to $11.2 million). All these “non-permanent” changes, however, are set to expire on Dec. 31, 2025 — at which point they will revert to pre-TCJA levels.

So, how exactly might this impact your financial plan?

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Barring any action on the part of Congress, the window is quickly closing on several of the tax mitigation benefits afforded by the TCJA. Certainly, there remains time to reach an agreement that would extend at least some of these provisions. But through continued political tension and the general unsteadiness of global economies (including the U.S.), this may be an opportune time to explore some of the following strategies.

House Republican Tax Package Revealed

Estate and gift tax considerations

As of 2023, individuals can currently transfer up to $12.92 million, and a married couple can transfer a total of up to $25.84 million (either during your life or as part of your estate) without triggering federal gift taxes or estate taxes. If no legislative action is taken, however, that historically high exemption amount will be cut in half for the 2026 tax year. As a result, if your taxable estate exceeds the existing exemption amount, some estate planning strategies that may prove beneficial to explore include:

  • Annual cash gifts. You are permitted to gift up to $17,000 a year ($34,000 for married couples filing jointly) to as many individuals as you wish. These annual gifts aren’t subject to taxes and don’t count against your lifetime exemption. If you have a large extended family, this can offer an easy way to transfer considerable wealth to the next generation.
  • 529 plan accelerated gifts. Current tax law allows you to accelerate five years of gifts to educational accounts for your children and grandchildren (as well as any other friends or relatives). This means you could gift up to $85,000 in a single year ($170,000 for a married couple) to each individual. It’s an ideal way to help them save for future qualified educational expenses (where the funds grow tax-free) while reducing your taxable estate.
  • Dynasty trusts. If you haven’t yet used a major chunk of your lifetime gift and estate tax exemption, you may want to consider establishing a dynasty trust. It’s a great way to provide for multiple future generations for as long as state law permits the trust to exist. Any future trust asset income and appreciation can then be transferred between subsequent generations without estate or gift taxes. And by funding the trust with a life insurance policy, you can further increase the trust’s value.
  • Irrevocable life insurance trusts (ILITs). Purchasing a survivorship policy owned by an ILIT is one of the most common ways to transfer wealth outside of your taxable estate. In addition, the death benefit paid out to your beneficiaries is income that’s also considered tax-free.

Income and capital gains tax considerations

Since income tax brackets are also slated to revert back to pre-TCJA levels (e.g., the top tax bracket increasing to 39.6% from its current 37%), many wealthier taxpayers can expect a measurable increase in their effective tax rate. In light of this, you may wish to explore opportunities to accelerate income when and where possible over the next couple years to take advantage of the lower brackets, including:

  • Converting a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA. Whereas required minimum distributions (RMDs) from traditional IRAs start at age 72 (see note below), taxed as ordinary income and subject to a 10% penalty prior to age 59½, Roth IRAs have no RMDs, and all future growth and distributions are tax-free. By converting your traditional IRA to a Roth before 2026, you pay the income tax liability upfront (potentially at a lower tax rate) rather than at the time of distribution.
  • Harvesting capital gains. If you anticipate potentially higher capital gains tax rates in the future, you may want to consider selling some of your highly appreciated securities prior to the expiration of the TCJA. While such sales would produce a taxable gain, it may be less than at some point in the future. And since wash sale rules only apply to harvesting losses (not gains), you could then turn around and repurchase the same securities at a stepped-up cost basis to help reduce future recognized gains while still retaining the investment.

Putting an effective plan in place

While none of us knows what the future holds, as with any form of planning, the more time you have to prepare, the more options you’ll have available to you.

Proper diversification of your assets is regarded as the primary tool for reducing risk without sacrificing return potential. Furthermore, establishing a well-thought-out plan for when it comes time to draw down from your assets for retirement income is vital.

Will You Pay Higher Taxes in Retirement?

With the help of a tax professional and financial adviser, you can explore strategies to increase your likelihood of controlling future tax liability while maintaining liquidity leading up to and through retirement.

Note: Beginning in 2023, the SECURE 2.0 Act raised the age that you must begin taking RMDs to age 73. According to the IRS, if you reach age 72 in 2023, the required beginning date for your first RMD is April 1, 2025, for 2024. If you reach age 73 in 2023, you were 72 in 2022 and subject to the age 72 RMD rule in effect for 2022. If you reached age 72 in 2022:
- Your first RMD was due by April 1, 2023, based on your account balance on
Dec. 31,2021.
- Your second RMD is due by Dec. 31, 2023, based on your account balance on
Dec. 31, 2022.

Disclaimer

This article was written by and presents the views of our contributing adviser, not the Kiplinger editorial staff. You can check adviser records with the SEC or with FINRA.

What to Do Before the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act Provisions Sunset (2024)

FAQs

What will happen when TCJA expires? ›

The standard deduction will be roughly half of what is now, adjusted for inflation, if the TCJA expires. Deductions eliminated by the TCJA include the mortgage interest deduction and most miscellaneous deductions, such as investment/ advisory fees, legal fees, and unreimbursed employee expenses.

What is a sunset provision for taxes? ›

In the context of tax law, a sunset is an expiration date for a particular tax provision which is set by the law when enacted or amended. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 (TCJA) made many changes to U.S. tax law.

What tax law sunsets in 2025? ›

With the built-in sunsetting of the TCJA, the lower tax brackets would expire at the end of 2025 and be replaced with the tax brackets that were in place prior to the TCJA. Here is a comparison of how tax rates would differ upon expiration of the TCJA.

Will the salt cap expire in 2025? ›

The SALT cap is set to expire at the end of 2025; however, if the cap is extended or made permanent, taxpayers in those states with a SALT cap workaround may still reap the benefits.

What tax provisions expire in 2025? ›

Top of mind are the individual provisions that are scheduled to expire, including the 37% top individual income tax rate on ordinary income; the 20% deduction for pass-through business income; and the higher standard deduction.

What is the holding period for the TCJA? ›

paying the maximum ordinary-income rate (39.6% under prior law or 37% under the TCJA). The TCJA generally extends the holding requirement period to three years to obtain long-term capital gains treatment.

What is mandatory sunset provisions? ›

In public policy, a sunset provision or sunset clause is a measure within a statute, regulation or other law that provides for the law to cease to be effective after a specified date, unless further legislative action is taken to extend it.

What is an example of a sunset provision? ›

A common example of a sunset provision occurs when artists are being signed by a talent representation company. An agent wants to sign a new up-and-coming band that the agent thinks will be able to make the company some money.

What will happen to taxes in 2026? ›

While the lowest bracket is at a 10% tax rate for the 2023 and 2024 tax brackets and the 2017/2026 tax brackets, the other tax rates for the 2017/2026 brackets are higher. The current 12% tax rate will become 15% in 2026. And the current 22% tax rate will become 25%.

Will social security be taxed in 2025? ›

PAUL – Today, U.S. Representative Angie Craig announced new legislation to eliminate federal taxes on Social Security benefits for seniors. Rep. Craig's You Earned It, You Keep It Act would eliminate all federal taxes on Social Security benefits beginning in 2025 – putting money back into the pockets of retirees.

What will be the sunset tax in 2026? ›

Barring congressional action, the exemption amount will return to about $6.8 million, adjusted for inflation, in 2026. Similarly, the current 40% maximum gift and estate tax rate will increase to 45%.

What is the new tax law for 2024? ›

For single taxpayers and married individuals filing separately, the standard deduction rises to $14,600 for 2024, an increase of $750 from 2023; and for heads of households, the standard deduction will be $21,900 for tax year 2024, an increase of $1,100 from the amount for tax year 2023.

Who benefits from SALT deduction? ›

In 2017, the last year before the cap was implemented, 71 percent of the benefit for the SALT deduction — or $58 billion — went to taxpayers with incomes over $200,000. Even with the SALT cap, most of the benefits of the SALT deduction go to such taxpayers — 64 percent in 2023.

Will personal exemptions return in 2026? ›

Personal Exemption Deduction Eliminated

Personal exemption deductions for yourself, your spouse, or your dependents have been eliminated beginning after December 31, 2017, and before January 1, 2026. Resources: Tax Tips: Tax Reform Tax Tip 2019-140, Tax Reform Tax Tip 2019-27, Tax Reform Tax Tip 2019-35.

What is the salt tax deduction for Trump? ›

At stake is the so-called state and local tax deduction, or the SALT deduction, which was limited to $10,000 in Trump's signature tax law. But a new proposal would lift the cap to $20,000 for married couples, with the change retroactive for the 2023 tax year.

Is the TCJA permanent? ›

However, only some of TCJA changes are permanent and more than 20 provisions are set to expire by the end of 2025, if Congress doesn't act to extend them or make them permanent.

What will long-term capital gains tax be in 2026? ›

Beginning in 2026, the starting points for the 15 percent and 20 percent rates for capital gains and qualified dividends will match the starting points for tax brackets applicable to ordinary income, as under pre-2018 law.

How much would it cost to extend the TCJA? ›

We estimate an expanded TCJA could cost up to $6.4 trillion to extend through 2035.

How does the TCJA tax law changes affect individuals? ›

Family Benefits (Personal Exemptions, Child Tax Credit)

TCJA repealed personal and dependent exemptions. In their place, the law increased the standard deduction and the child tax credit (CTC) and created a new $500 tax credit for dependents not eligible for the child tax credit (table 2).

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