On July 4, 2025, President Trump signed into law H.R. 1, commonly referred to as the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) (P.L. 119-21) (the Act). The Act includes sweeping tax reform changes, including business tax provisions, international provisions and individual provisions, among others.
The tax provisions include the extension and permanency of many Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) provisions previously scheduled to sunset at the end of this year, enhanced business tax breaks, limitations on individual and business deductions, and significant changes to international tax provisions, all of which have varying effective dates and expiration dates.
Below is an overview of some of the key provisions included in the Act and the potential state impacts.
Generally, the starting point for determining state taxable income is federal taxable income. As such, any changes to the determination of federal taxable income as a result of the Act will likely have a state impact depending on how a state incorporates the federal changes to the IRC.
States generally conform to the IRC in three different approaches, each resulting in different state tax impacts. Specifically:
Statutorily, a rolling conformity state will adopt the IRC as it is amended (i.e. on a “rolling” basis) and generally conforms to IRC law changes automatically. In a rolling conformity state, the state legislature must affirmatively enact legislation to decouple from a specific IRC provision.
Statutorily, a fixed-date conformity state conforms to the IRC as of a specific date. As such, any changes to the IRC after the conformity date will not automatically be adopted. Rather, in order to adopt a specific federal change after the IRC conformity date, the state would need to legislatively adopt specific provisions of the IRC. If later the IRC conformity date is updated to a date that is after the effective date of the federal law change, the legislature may consider specifically decoupling from certain IRC changes, similar to rolling conformity states.
For example, a state with an IRC conformity date of Jan. 1, 2025 would not adopt any of the updated provisions included in the Act unless the state legislatively took action to adopt such provisions.
States in this category adopt a hybrid approach, adopting only certain specific provisions of the IRC.
The following provisions were included in the Act and will require an analysis of the potential state impact of such provisions in relation to a state's conformity guidance.
One of the last rounds of significant federal tax reform, the TCJA, amended IRC section 174 to require taxpayers to capitalize their research and experimental (R&E) expenditures and amortize the costs over a five-year period for domestic costs and 15-year period for foreign costs for tax years beginning after Dec. 31, 2021.
Under the Act, domestic R&E expenditures paid or incurred in tax years beginning after Dec. 31, 2024, are immediately deductible under the new IRC section 174A. Alternatively, taxpayers can make an election to capitalize and amortize R&E costs over different periods based on IRC section 174A(c) or IRC section 59(e). Further, the Act provides taxpayers the ability to accelerate the remaining unamortized domestic amounts for previously capitalized R&E costs in tax years beginning after Dec. 31, 2021, and before Jan. 1, 2025, over a one-year period or equally over two years beginning with the 2025 tax year.
The new R&E provisions will present state conformity issues between states that automatically conform to the new provisions and those that do not based on decoupling or fixed-date conformity as there are states that have previously decoupled from the TCJA section 174 provisions. Specifically, Alabama, a rolling conformity state, enacted legislation (HB 163) in May 2025, that retroactively decouples from TCJA’s changes to section 174. for tax years beginning on or after Jan. 1, 2024. Rather, Alabama taxpayers shall have the option to currently deduct research and experimental expenditures or treat the expenditures as deferred expenses that are capitalized and amortized.
As such, taxpayers will need to analyze the section 174 conformity provisions from the viewpoint of both general IRC conformity discrepancies and previous section 174 decoupling provisions. For multijurisdictional taxpayers that have R&E expenditures, a separate section 174 analysis and calculation may be required based on the state specific guidance.
The Act makes 100% bonus depreciation under IRC section 168(k) permanent avoiding the phase out as previously scheduled by TCJA.
The Act further includes new bonus depreciation provisions for qualified production property (“QPP”) under IRC section 168(n). This new provision allows taxpayers to immediately deduct 100% of the cost of nonresidential real property that meets the definition of QPP. QPP includes manufacturing, production, or refining of specific tangible personal property acquired after Jan. 19, 2025, and before Jan. 1, 2029, but does not include property located outside the U.S.
Many states have historically decoupled from bonus depreciation under IRC section 168(k), required associated state tax addbacks, and provided for their own bonus depreciation calculations. As such, it is important for taxpayers to track federal and state differences in depreciable assets in order to appropriately apply state modifications, if applicable.
Further, similar to IRC section 168(k), states will need to address conformity with the new depreciation provisions provided by IRC section 168(n). Specifically, rolling conformity states will automatically adopt the new provisions but could legislatively decouple in the future.
TCJA provided a limit on the deductibility of business interest expense to 30% of earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT). However, beginning in 2025, the Act provides a less restrictive limitation on the business interest expense deduction which is calculated based on earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA).
Tracking differences between the state and federal section 163(j) limitation carryforwards has been historically nuanced due to state conformity issues in both separate and combined filing states. To add to the complexity, the limitation was temporarily increased to 50% from 30% in 2019 and 2020 due to the CARES act. However, many states decoupled from the increase in the limitation and created additional tracking complexities where the federal carryforward and state carryforward balances differ. Further, the Act adds another layer to the IRC section 163(j) conformity issues as multijurisdictional taxpayers will need to understand a state's conformity to the Act's changes to section 163(j) and determine the potential impact to its state tax filings and associated carryforward attributes.
The Act changed the GILTI deduction under IRC section 250 to 40% for tax years beginning after Dec. 31, 2025. Note: the deduction was set to change to 37.5% if TCJA had expired as contemplated. In addition to the section 250 change, the Act also changes how GILTI is calculated (e.g. eliminates the adjustment for qualified business asset investment) which may increase the overall GILTI amount.
Historically, states have issued guidance on the taxability of GILTI in their state via state specific guidance. Many have allowed for a full or partial exclusion of GILTI through its DRD rules while others have taxed fully or partially taxed GILTI outside the DRD regimes.
The Act adds additional complexity and requires further state analysis for states that do not conform (i.e. followed the GILTI regime prior to the Act) or decouple from the new GILTI regime; a separate proforma calculation may be required to arrive at the correct starting point for determining state taxable income.
The cap on individual SALT deductions was one of the more contentious issues evaluated when drafting and enacting the Act. The SALT cap, currently limited to $10,000, was set to expire at the end of 2025. However, the Act extended the SALT cap providing taxpayers with a $40,000 cap through 2029, but the higher limit phases out when taxpayers reach $500,000 in income.
The SALT cap led most states to implement pass-through entity tax (PTET) regimes, allowing PTEs (e.g. partnerships and S corporations) to pay state taxes at the entity level and avoid the SALT cap for individual owners. States enacted PTET regimes at different times, with expiration dates that either align with the SALT cap expiration, are permanent, or set for a fixed date. Some states require legislative action to extend their PTET regimes—for example, California and Virginia recently passed extensions, although Virginia's is only for one year. At this point, the PTET regimes in Oregon, Utah and Illinois will all expire at the 2025 tax year. If the PTET regimes in these states are to continue into 2026 and thereafter, there will need to be a legislative change. Ongoing monitoring of PTET regime extensions will be important for taxpayers that have historically made PTET elections.
The Act modifies the scope and potential benefits of IRC. section 1202, including shorter holding periods, increased exclusion cap and greater asset threshold for a company to qualify as a small business for section 1202 purposes.
Generally, states conform to section 1202 and the changes detailed in the Act are taxpayer friendly, aiming to incentivize taxpayers to invest in small businesses and start-ups. Specifically, the changes allow certain taxpayers to potentially exclude from federal tax capital gains from the sale of QSBS when certain criteria are met. However, in the event a state adopts the IRC based on fixed conformity prior to July 4, 2025, the less favorable section 1202 rules would apply, and absent any legislative action to adopt the updated provision, an individual would be required to recalculate its section 1202 limitation.
There were a few notable tax items left out of the final version of the Act. For example:
Despite being enacted in 1959, P.L. -86-272 has yet to define “solicitation” when determining whether a taxpayer’s activities in a particular state are protected. Generally state guidance, case law and the MTC guidance have provided taxpayers with direction on which activities are protected and unprotected.
The house version of the Act defined “solicitation of orders” to mean “any business activity that facilitates the solicitation of orders even if that activity may also serve some independently valuable business function apart from solicitation.”
Ultimately the final Act did not provide for any changes to P.L. 86-272, including the definition of solicitation of orders in person or via internet activities. As such, the previously issued guidance from the MTC regarding P.L. 86-272, including internet activities, and state issued guidance and case law will continue to drive which activities are protected or unprotected by P.L. 86-272. However, as the guidance is on a state-by-state basis, there is a lack of uniformity among the states which has resulted in recent litigation (e.g. NY, CA) contesting the P.L. 86-272 guidance. Taxpayers that claim P.L. 86-272 protection on any state filings should continue to monitor the ongoing updates to determine the potential impact, if any, of such protection.
The final Act did not include previously considered language limiting PTET workarounds for pass-throughs. The final legislation includes no PTET limitations.
As the majority of states concluded their 2025 legislative sessions prior to July 4, 2025, the enactment of the Act will likely present legislative timing delays for states to address the tax reform changes included in the Act. Specifically, many fixed-conformity states have updated their IRC conformity to a version that does not include the tax reform changes included in the Act. As a result, fixed-conformity states will need to weigh the potential impact of the federal tax reform provisions when updating their conformity to a date after July 4, 2025, and if so, whether to decouple from specific provisions of the Act. Absent special legislative sessions, these decisions will likely come in 2026, or later as states evaluate the implications of the Act to their taxing regimes and overall state budget.
Notably, a few states have been proactive in their response to the Act despite the timing constraints. For example, Virginia, a rolling conformity state, recently enacted its budget legislation which paused rolling conformity effective from Jan. 1, 2025, to Jan. 1, 2027. Additionally, Rhode Island enacted its budget at the end of June which included provisions to effectively decouple Rhode Island from the changes to the IRC brought about by the Act. Since Rhode Island is a rolling conformity state, such legislation was necessary to detach the state’s income tax code from the most recent version of the IRC. The legislation also empowers the Rhode Island Department of Revenue to issue emergency regulations in accordance with its provisions. Further, Maryland generally conforms to the IRC except when a change to the IRC would reduce Maryland’s state revenue by $5 million or more in the year the change is enacted. In those instances, Maryland automatically decouples from that specific federal change.
To understand how these changes could impact you and your organization, contact your firm advisor.
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