How the “Big Beautiful Bill” Impacts Your Retirement and Financial Plan

On July 4th, 2025, a sweeping piece of legislation known as the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) was signed into law. At over 1,000 pages long, this bill touches taxes, healthcare, savings plans, small business provisions, and more.

While the fine print is complicated, the bottom line is this: there are opportunities here for retirees and pre-retirees to keep more of what you’ve earned, reduce your tax liability, and better position your money for the future.


Bigger and More Permanent Standard Deduction

One of the headline provisions is the permanent expansion of the standard deduction. For 2026 and beyond, it looks like this:

Filing Status2025 Standard Deduction (approx.)2026 Standard Deduction (projected)
Single$13,850~$16,300
Married Filing Jointly$27,700~$32,600
Head of Household$20,800~$24,500

👉 What this means for you: Most retirees will continue to benefit from simply taking the standard deduction. This simplifies tax filing and, in many cases, lowers your taxable income compared to pre-2017 rules.


Child and Dependent Credits — A Gift for Grandparents Too

Even though many of you are past the stage of raising children, the Child Tax Credit expansion can still touch your life.

Credit TypePrevious RuleNew Rule Under OBBBA
Child Tax Credit (per child)$2,000$2,500 (2025–2028), then indexed
Other Dependent Credit$500$500 (unchanged)

👉 Why this matters to retirees: If you’re helping raise grandchildren, or if you’re supporting a dependent family member, these credits can lower your tax bill.


Estate and Inheritance Planning

The bill makes permanent many provisions that were set to expire:

  • The higher estate and gift tax exemptions are locked in.
  • The mortgage interest deduction stays capped at loans of $750,000.
ProvisionOld Rule (pre-2017 sunset)New Rule (permanent under OBBBA)
Estate & Gift Exemption$5.49M per person (2017)~$13.6M per person (2025 levels, inflation adjusted)
Mortgage Interest Cap$1,000,000$750,000

👉 For estate planning: This is a good time to review your wills, trusts, and beneficiary designations. With exemptions made permanent, you may have more flexibility in gifting strategies or legacy planning.


Health Savings Account (HSA) Enhancements

Key updates include:

HSA ProvisionOld RuleNew Rule Under OBBBA
Retroactive medical expenses allowedNot allowedAllowed up to 60 days prior to HSA setup
Spouse FSA ruleBlocked HSA eligibilityNow permitted
Extra contributions (income-based)Not available+$4,300 (single) / +$8,550 (joint) if under income thresholds

👉 For retirees/pre-retirees: If you’re not yet on Medicare, maximizing HSA contributions is still one of the most tax-advantaged ways to save for future healthcare costs.


New “MAGA” Savings Accounts for Families

Starting in 2026, families with children under eight can open Money Accounts for Growth and Advancement (MAGA Accounts).

MAGA Account FeatureRule
EligibilityFamilies with children under 8
Contributions$1,000 per year per child
PurposeEducation, first home, or future needs

👉 For retirees: If you want to gift to grandchildren in a tax-smart way, MAGA accounts could become a useful vehicle.


Small Business Owners

Many retirees still run consulting practices, small businesses, or side ventures.

ProvisionOld RuleNew Rule Under OBBBA
Qualified Business Income Deduction20%23% (with smoother phase-outs)
Immediate ExpensingPhased out in 2023Restored 100% expensing through 2029

👉 For retiree business owners: These changes lower your tax liability and encourage reinvestment.


Key Takeaways for Retirees and Pre-Retirees

Here’s the “at-a-glance” view:

  • Bigger, permanent standard deductions → simpler, lower taxes
  • Child and dependent credits extended and expanded → relief for grandparents raising grandkids
  • Estate tax exemptions locked in → more flexibility in legacy planning
  • HSA improvements → more ways to save for healthcare costs
  • MAGA accounts → new vehicle to support grandchildren’s futures
  • Small business provisions → stronger deductions and reinvestment opportunities
big beautiful bill infographic summary retirees

What You Should Do Next

  1. Review your tax plan for 2025–2026. We’ll want to run projections under the new rules.
  2. Update estate documents. Make sure your wills, trusts, and gifting strategies align with the new exemptions.
  3. Explore HSAs and MAGA accounts. Both are tax-smart ways to prepare for healthcare costs and family legacy planning.
  4. If you own a business, let’s review equipment purchases, QBI eligibility, and employee benefits to maximize deductions.

Final Thoughts

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act is sweeping, and while the headlines may sound political, the real impact is personal. For retirees and pre-retirees, it’s about keeping more of what you’ve earned, simplifying taxes, and creating better opportunities for your families.

If you’d like to see exactly how these changes affect your unique situation, let’s schedule time to walk through it together.

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