NAR: GOP Tax Reform Bill Clears House with Key Real Estate Provisions
The SALT deduction cap is quadrupled from $10,000 to $40,000 for households earning under $500,000. However, the bill does not eliminate the marriage penalty.
The SALT deduction cap is quadrupled from $10,000 to $40,000 for households earning under $500,000. However, the bill does not eliminate the marriage penalty.
WASHINGTON—The House of Representatives early this morning passed the controversial “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” by a slim 215-214 margin that delivers significant wins for the real estate sector, reinforcing tax provisions long championed by the National Association of Realtors.
NAR’s advocacy team successfully secured its top five tax priorities in the bill, including an enhanced small business tax deduction, a strengthened state and local tax deduction, and protections for the mortgage interest deduction. The bill also makes the current lower individual tax rates permanent and increases the child tax credit, moves that could help increase homeownership access for more American families.
In addition to NAR’s top tax priorities, the bill includes a broad range of other Realtor-supported provisions—such as enhancements to the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit, estate tax certainty, renewed Opportunity Zone incentives, and the creation of tax-advantaged child investment accounts that can be used for qualified expenses of the beneficiary such as first-time home purchases—all of which strengthen housing affordability, investment, and generational wealth.
“We appreciate House leaders for taking this important step with a bill that supports hardworking families and strengthens the real estate economy. With lower tax rates, SALT relief, and new incentives for small businesses and community development, this proposal brings real benefits to everyday Americans,” says Shannon McGahn, NAR executive vice president and chief advocacy officer.
“While significant changes are possible as this bill moves to the Senate, NAR will stay closely engaged with lawmakers to ensure real estate remains a central focus,” McGahn said. “We are committed to advocating for provisions that expand opportunity, support homeownership, strengthen communities nationwide, and put the American Dream within reach for more families.”
In a recent national survey commissioned by NAR, Americans expressed strong support for retaining provisions in the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act critical to the real estate economy and homeownership. Fully 76% of voters are aware of efforts to extend the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. Among those familiar with the law, support grows significantly when specific provisions are highlighted—86% back lower income tax rates for individuals and married couples, 83% support a new 20% deduction for independent contractors and small businesses earning under $400,000, and 80% favor tax incentives aimed at spurring investment in underserved communities.
The national survey of 1,000 registered voters was commissioned by NAR and conducted by Public Opinion Strategies and Hart Research from April 3–6, 2025. It has a margin of error of 3.10%.
Below is a summary of the provisions included in the current bill:
1. Qualified Business Income Deduction (Section 199A)
2. State and Local Tax Deduction (SALT)
3. Individual Tax Rates
4. Mortgage Interest Deduction (MID)
5. Business SALT and 1031 Like-Kind Exchanges
Low-Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC)
Child Tax Credit Increased to $2,500 (2025–2028)
Permanent Estate and Gift Tax Threshold Set at $15 Million (Inflation-Adjusted)
No Top Tax-Rate Increase
Restoration of “Big 3” Business Tax Provisions
Immediate Expensing for Certain Industrial Structures
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