2025 tax legislation included various victories that NFIB tirelessly advocated for on behalf of America’s small businesses.
Our Victories
Policy Victories
Taxes
20% Small Business Tax Deduction (Section 199A)
This bill permanently extends the 20% Small Business Deduction
Marginal (Individual) Rates
This bill permanently extends the current federal marginal rates, which were scheduled to expire and increase at the end of the year.
Estate Tax
This bill permanently enshrines the Estate Tax exemption and increases the exemption levels of $15 million individually and $30 million jointly, and is indexed for increases with inflation.
Section 179
This bill increases Section 179 expensing cap from $1.25 million to $2.5 million and allows for increases with inflation.
Form 1099-K
This legislation increases the threshold requiring Form 1099-K from $600 to $20,000.
Form 1099-NEC
This legislation increases the information-reporting threshold from $600 to $2,000 in a calendar year and indexed annually for inflation after 2026.
Form 1099-MISC
This legislation increases the information-reporting threshold from $600 to $2,000 in a calendar year and indexed annually for inflation after 2026.
Section 168(k) (Bonus Depreciation)
This legislation permanently restores 100% immediate expensing for eligible assets.
Research and Development Expensing
This legislation allows all research and development costs to be immediately deducted.
Section 163(j)
This legislation reinstates the EBITDA (earnings before interest, income tax, depreciation, and amortization) limitation for the tax years beginning after December 31, 2024.
C-Corp Rate
The C-Corp rate permanently remains at 21%.
SALT (State and Local Tax Deductions)
This legislation increases the limit on the federal deduction for state and local taxes to $40,000 and adjusts for inflation. After 2029, this increase will expire.
AMT (Alternative Minimum Tax)
This legislation permanently extends the increased individual alternative minimum tax exemption amounts and reverts the exemption phaseout thresholds to $500,000 for individual filers and $1 million for married filers.
No Tax on Tips
This legislation creates a temporary deduction, for tax years 2025 through 2028, of up to $25,000 for qualified tips received by an individual who regularly receives tips.
No Tax on Overtime
This legislation creates a temporary deduction, for tax years 2025 through 2028, of up to $12,500 individually, and $25,000 jointly, for qualified overtime compensation received each year.