Does the "big, beautiful bill" eliminate taxes on Social Security?

Does the "big, beautiful bill" eliminate taxes on Social Security?

Summary

The bill doesn't eliminate taxes on Social Security, but rather introduces a temporary deduction that beneficiaries can claim to lower their federal income tax. The bill does do is provide a temporary tax deduction of up to $6,000 for seniors aged 65 and older. The deduction is set to expire at the end of 2028. The Social Security Administration did not respond to a request for comment. The White House declined to comment on the bill's impact on the Social Security benefits of 51.4 million people on the program. The tax break is available to people with an adjusted gross incomes of $75,000 or less and $150,00 or less for couples filing jointly. The Tax Foundation, a nonpartisan policy research group, said in a June report that exempting Social Security. benefits from taxation would not change the after-tax income for the bottom 20% of taxpayers, noting that. "Those taxpayers are already exempt from taxation on their Social. Security benefits," the group said. It also won't benefit the many low-income seniors who already pay noFederal income tax because they earn too little. The biggest beneficiaries of the bill will be higher-than-65-year-olds, according to AARP.

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