Skip Navigation

What Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act means for taxes on Social Security

  • By Laurel Wamsley/NPR
Many Americans received an email from the Social Security Administration applauding the passage of President Trump's megabill.

 Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

Many Americans received an email from the Social Security Administration applauding the passage of President Trump's megabill.

In the hours after Congress passed President Trump’s megabill, an email from the Social Security Administration hit the inboxes of many Americans. It applauded the legislation’s passage and said it includes a provision that “eliminates federal income taxes on Social Security benefits for most beneficiaries.”

But experts say the email was misleading and that what’s really in the new law is a bit more complicated.

What’s in the new law?

Trump campaigned on the promise of “no tax on Social Security benefits.” But the new law doesn’t create a special exemption for taxes on Social Security benefits. Instead, it adds a new tax deduction for people 65 and older — and that means more of them will pay no taxes, or fewer taxes, on their Social Security benefits.

“The legislation that passed does make it so some people won’t pay taxes on their benefits,” says Marc Goldwein, senior vice president at the nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. “The reason is that it’ll make it so that some seniors won’t pay any taxes, because it increases their standard deduction.”

The new senior deduction is $6,000 a year for individuals 65 or older.

About that email — and why it’s controversial

On July 3, the Social Security Administration blasted out an email with the subject line “Social Security Applauds Passage of Legislation Providing Historic Tax Relief for Seniors.”

The agency is not in the practice of sending political emails, so this was notable.

But that wasn’t the only issue, says Howard Gleckman, senior fellow at the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center.

“The email was really pretty misleading. It included a number of assertions that simply are either not true or overstated or described in a way that is really going to confuse people,” says Gleckman.

First, the email implies that the bill changed how Social Security benefits are taxed — and the White House put out a news release headlined “No Tax on Social Security is a Reality in the One Big Beautiful Bill.”

But Social Security benefits are taxed like other income, and this law doesn’t change that.

Support for WITF is provided by:

Become a WITF sponsor today »

Support for WITF is provided by:

Become a WITF sponsor today »

Up Next
National & World News

Congress passed no tax on tips in Trump's 'big, beautiful bill.' Here's how it works