State and local tax deduction
The state and local tax (SALT) deduction is a provision under Section 164 of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code allowing individual taxpayers who itemize deductions on their federal income tax returns to subtract eligible state and local taxes—including income, real property, and general sales or excise taxes—from their federal taxable income, thereby reducing their overall federal tax liability.[1][2] This deduction, available only to itemizers rather than those taking the standard deduction, effectively mitigates the incidence of double taxation on income or consumption taxed at both state/local and federal levels, though it primarily benefits higher-income households in high-tax jurisdictions due to the itemization requirement and geographic concentration of such taxes.[3][4] Enacted in its modern form following the introduction of the federal income tax in 1913, the SALT deduction has historically permitted unlimited deductions for qualifying taxes paid or accrued during the tax year, including withholdings from wages and estimated payments.[2] The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 imposed a $10,000 annual cap ($5,000 for married individuals filing separately) on total SALT deductions through 2025, aiming to broaden the tax base, offset revenue losses from rate cuts, and curb federal subsidization of state-level fiscal policies in high-tax areas.[5][4] In 2025, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act raised this cap to $40,000 for most joint filers (with phase-downs for higher incomes and annual 1% increases through 2029 before reverting to $10,000 in 2030), reflecting ongoing political pressures to expand relief amid expiring TCJA provisions.[6][7] The deduction remains a flashpoint in tax policy debates, as its benefits skew toward residents of high-tax states like New York, California, and New Jersey—often correlating with progressive state policies—while critics argue it distorts incentives for state spending and disproportionately aids upper-income earners who itemize, with pre-cap data showing over 90% of benefits accruing to the top 20% of households by income.[8][9] Efforts to repeal or further expand the cap have faced resistance on grounds of fiscal equity and federalism, with empirical analyses indicating that uncapped SALT effectively transfers resources from low-tax to high-tax states via reduced federal revenue collection.[10][11]Definition and Mechanics
Eligible Taxes and Deduction Components
State and local real property taxes, imposed on the assessed value of land and buildings including residential homes and commercial properties, qualify for deduction under the provision.[1] These taxes must be paid or accrued during the taxable year and not represent assessments for local benefits or improvements that increase the property's value, such as sidewalk construction or sewer installations.[2][12] State and local personal property taxes qualify only if they are ad valorem taxes based on the fair market value of tangible personal property, such as automobiles, boats, or business inventory, rather than flat fees or taxes on gross receipts.[1][2] Taxes on intangible personal property, like stocks or bonds, generally do not qualify unless imposed at a uniform rate on all intangible property within the jurisdiction.[13] State and local income taxes, including those withheld from wages or paid via estimated payments, are deductible as a component.[2] Taxpayers may elect to deduct state and local general sales taxes in lieu of income taxes, using either actual documented expenditures or the IRS-provided optional sales tax tables adjusted for family size, income, and local rates; this election applies to the entire SALT bundle and cannot be combined with income taxes.[2][14] Foreign real property taxes are deductible separately under the same code section but fall outside the core state and local tax framework, as do federal taxes and state taxes on specific transactions like gasoline or inheritance, which do not qualify.[1][15] The components interact with related itemized deductions, such as mortgage interest, where property taxes on mortgaged real estate contribute to overall homeownership expense calculations without altering the tax's deductibility status.[12]Eligibility Criteria and Itemization Requirements
Taxpayers may claim the state and local tax (SALT) deduction only if they itemize deductions on Schedule A (Form 1040), forgoing the standard deduction.[2] Itemization is advantageous when the sum of all allowable itemized deductions—including SALT, mortgage interest, charitable contributions, and medical expenses—exceeds the standard deduction threshold.[2] For tax year 2025, the standard deduction is $15,750 for single filers and married individuals filing separately, and $31,500 for married couples filing jointly or qualifying surviving spouses; these figures are adjusted annually for inflation pursuant to Internal Revenue Code section 63(c)(7).[16] Married individuals filing separately face the same itemization decision but must coordinate with their spouse to avoid double-dipping on shared deductions; each may claim a portion of SALT paid, subject to overall limitations.[2] Nonresident aliens filing Form 1040-NR generally cannot claim itemized deductions like SALT, as they are restricted to specific above-the-line adjustments unless electing resident status under IRC section 6013(g) or treaty provisions.[17] Part-year residents, who change residency during the tax year, may deduct SALT attributable to taxes paid on income earned or property held during their period of state residency, reflecting the actual amounts remitted rather than a strict federal proration.[2] Under the alternative minimum tax (AMT), state and local taxes remain nondeductible in computing alternative minimum taxable income per IRC section 56(b)(1)(A), a rule unchanged by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) of 2017.[4] The TCJA reformed AMT exposure by nearly doubling exemption amounts and raising phaseout thresholds—exemptions reaching $85,700 for single filers and $133,300 for joint filers in 2025 (inflation-adjusted)—reducing affected taxpayers from approximately 5 million in 2017 to about 200,000 annually thereafter.[18] This narrowing limits the practical impact of SALT disallowance primarily to higher-income itemizers in low-tax states.[19]Current Limitations and Phase-Outs
Under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act of 2025, the state and local tax (SALT) deduction is capped at $40,000 for married couples filing jointly and $20,000 for married individuals filing separately, effective for tax years 2025 through 2029.[20][21] This cap increases by 1% annually from 2026 to 2029 to account for inflation adjustments.[18] After 2029, the cap reverts to $10,000 ($5,000 for separate filers), aligning with the original Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) limitation.[22][23] The deduction phases out for higher-income taxpayers, beginning when modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) exceeds $500,000 for joint filers ($250,000 for separate filers).[24] The phase-down reduces the allowable deduction by 30% of the excess income over the threshold, continuing until the deduction reaches the post-2029 baseline of $10,000 ($5,000 for separate filers), which occurs at approximately $600,000 MAGI for joint filers.[18][25] This mechanism limits benefits for upper-income households while preserving the full cap for those below the phase-out range.[26] To prevent circumvention, the law includes aggregation rules requiring taxpayers to combine SALT payments from pass-through entities and related state-level workarounds, such as pass-through entity taxes (PTETs), under a single cap calculation.[27][28] These provisions close loopholes that previously allowed high-tax state residents to bypass federal limits by routing deductions through business entities or alternative tax structures.[29]Historical Development
Origins and Early Precedents
The conceptual foundations of deducting state and local taxes from federal taxable income emerged amid 19th-century debates over American federalism, where state sovereignty in taxation was viewed as essential to preserving the Union's structure against centralizing tendencies. Proponents of limited federal authority, drawing from the Tenth Amendment's reservation of powers to the states, argued that federal taxation should not encroach upon state fiscal autonomy, particularly as states relied on property, excise, and poll taxes to fund local governance without federal offset or interference.[30] These discussions intensified during constitutional conventions and congressional sessions, emphasizing that federal levies ought to respect state taxing prerogatives to avoid duplicative burdens that could undermine subnational experimentation in revenue policy.[31] A direct early precedent materialized during the Civil War, when Congress enacted the nation's first federal income tax under the Revenue Act of 1861 to finance military efforts, followed by expansions in the 1862 Act that explicitly permitted deductions for state, local, and even national taxes paid on income or business activities.[32] This allowance addressed concerns over double taxation—federal levies layering atop state assessments—while aligning with federalist principles by mitigating the regressive impact on taxpayers in high-tax states, though the tax applied only to incomes exceeding $600 annually and was structured progressively up to 10% on higher brackets.[33] The deduction covered supplementary categories like interest, losses, and rents tied to business, reflecting an ad hoc recognition that state taxes constituted legitimate prior claims on income, but it was repealed in 1872 amid postwar fiscal retrenchment and opposition to direct federal taxation.[32] Subsequent 19th-century fiscal experiments reinforced these informal precedents without reinstating a broad income tax. The short-lived corporate profits tax of 1909 under the Payne-Aldrich Tariff Act revived deductibility for state and local taxes in limited business contexts, echoing Civil War logic to prevent federal overreach into state revenue spheres.[34] Supreme Court jurisprudence, such as in Pollock v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. (1895), indirectly shaped deductibility principles by scrutinizing federal taxes on income sources like rents—often state-taxed—deeming them direct and unconstitutional without apportionment, thus highlighting tensions between federal revenue needs and state taxing primacy.[31] These pre-1913 developments laid groundwork for viewing state taxes as offsets to federal liability, prioritizing avoidance of intergovernmental conflict over revenue maximization.[30]Establishment in the Revenue Act of 1913
The Revenue Act of 1913, signed into law by President Woodrow Wilson on October 3, 1913, formalized the federal income tax following the ratification of the Sixteenth Amendment on February 3, 1913, which overturned prior constitutional restrictions on direct taxes. The Act's Section II(B) permitted an unlimited deduction for "all national, State, county, school, and municipal taxes paid within the year, except those assessed against local benefits," encompassing state income taxes, property taxes, and various local levies imposed on individuals.[35] This provision applied to the Act's initial progressive rate structure, which imposed a 1 percent tax on net income exceeding $3,000 for single filers (or $4,000 for married couples), escalating to 6 percent on incomes over $500,000. The deduction's inclusion reflected a foundational aim to mitigate double taxation at inception of the permanent federal income tax, as state and local governments had long relied on property, income, and other taxes that would now overlap with federal levies absent such relief.[30] Proponents viewed it as essential for federalism, preserving state fiscal autonomy without fully subordinating it to national revenue demands in a system where only about 1 percent of the population initially faced liability.[36] The exclusion of taxes "assessed against local benefits"—such as fees for specific improvements like sidewalks or sewers—stemmed from early Treasury Department interpretations distinguishing general taxes from user charges or special assessments not deemed broadly applicable.[35] Administrative guidance under the Act, issued by the Treasury, reinforced this by limiting deductibility to involuntary general taxes rather than voluntary payments or fines, establishing precedents that shaped early compliance and narrowed the scope from the statutory language's breadth.[37] These interpretations, while not capping the deduction's amount, introduced categorical exclusions that prevented claims for certain local impositions, reflecting a pragmatic effort to align the provision with income tax principles focused on ability to pay rather than reimbursing all governmental extractions.[31]Mid-20th Century Modifications
The SALT deduction expanded in practical significance following World War II, as state and local governments raised tax rates and broadened bases to finance postwar infrastructure, education, and welfare expansions, while federal marginal rates remained elevated at 91-92% from 1951 to 1963.[30] This era saw state-local tax collections rise from approximately 6% of GDP in 1946 to over 8% by 1960, with the deduction mitigating combined federal-state burdens that could otherwise exceed 100% on high earners and encouraging itemization among upper-income taxpayers.[30] By the mid-1960s, the deduction's aggregate value had grown substantially, reflecting both higher state tax liabilities—particularly property and emerging income taxes—and the high federal rates that maximized its subsidy effect for deductible payments.[37] Amid this proliferation of state income taxes—reaching 37 states with broad-based individual levies by 1961—the Revenue Act of 1964 introduced targeted restrictions to curb the deduction's breadth.[38] Previously encompassing nearly all nondirect taxes paid, the allowable categories were narrowed to real property taxes, personal property taxes, income or war profits taxes, general sales taxes, and gasoline taxes, while excluding items such as occupational licenses, certain excises on alcohol or tobacco, and other fees.[31] [30] This modification, enacted without significant partisan contention, responded to revenue needs and early base-broadening pressures, though it preserved deductibility for core state revenue sources amid ongoing state tax hikes.[31] Further incremental refinements occurred in the 1970s, including clarifications on deductibility for specific local levies and adjustments tied to inflation and administrative rulings, but these did not fundamentally alter the post-1964 framework.[37] The deduction's role as a federal offset to state fiscal expansions persisted, with empirical patterns showing correlated growth in SALT claims and state tax revenues through the decade, underscoring its function in intergovernmental fiscal dynamics without direct caps or major repeals until subsequent periods.[37]Post-1986 Reforms and Pre-TCJA Status
The Tax Reform Act of 1986 (TRA 1986) sought to simplify the federal income tax system by broadening the taxable base through the elimination or restriction of numerous deductions and preferences, while simultaneously lowering marginal tax rates, including the top individual rate from 50% to 28%. This reform substantially increased the standard deduction, reducing the proportion of taxpayers who itemized deductions from about 40% in 1985 to roughly 25% by the early 1990s. Despite intense debate and proposals to repeal it entirely—viewed by some as a double taxation remedy incompatible with base-broadening goals—the Act preserved the unlimited deduction for state and local income taxes and real property taxes, while repealing the longstanding option to deduct general sales taxes in lieu of income taxes.[30][39][37] From 1986 through 2017, the state and local tax (SALT) deduction remained uncapped for eligible itemizers, encompassing state and local income taxes (or general sales taxes as an alternative, following the partial restoration of the sales tax option under the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004) and real property taxes. The higher standard deduction post-TRA 1986 limited itemization overall, but among those who did itemize—typically higher-income households—the SALT deduction became a dominant component, with 95% of itemizers claiming it by 2014. Its fiscal footprint expanded over time, driven by rising state and local tax burdens amid property value appreciation and policy choices in high-tax jurisdictions; by fiscal year 2017, the deduction reduced federal revenues by an estimated $101 billion.[30][40][5] Pre-TCJA critiques of the uncapped SALT deduction centered on its role as an implicit federal subsidy for subnational government spending, effectively lowering the after-tax cost of state and local taxes and incentivizing higher rates without corresponding accountability to federal taxpayers. Analysts noted its regressive tilt, with over 88% of benefits accruing to households earning above $100,000 annually, disproportionately in six high-tax states that accounted for more than half the total value claimed. This structure was argued to exacerbate interstate fiscal distortions, favoring progressive tax policies in donor states at the expense of low-tax states and the national budget, though defenders countered it prevented cascading taxation across federalist layers.[30][41][30]Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 Cap
The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (Public Law 115-97), signed into law by President Donald Trump on December 22, 2017, imposed a $10,000 annual cap ($5,000 for married individuals filing separately) on the itemized deduction for state and local taxes (SALT), effective for taxable years beginning after December 31, 2017, and set to expire after December 31, 2025.[42][43] The cap applies to the aggregate of state and local real property taxes, personal property taxes, and either state income taxes or general sales taxes (but not both income and sales taxes).[3] This retained the longstanding option for taxpayers to elect sales taxes over income taxes for the deduction, calculated via actual expenses or IRS-provided tables adjusted for local rates.[42] The provision's primary fiscal purpose was to generate revenue to partially offset the TCJA's broad tax rate reductions, including the permanent corporate rate cut from 35% to 21% and temporary individual marginal rate decreases (e.g., the top rate from 39.6% to 37%).[44] Proponents, including Republican lawmakers, further contended that the uncapped SALT deduction effectively subsidized higher state and local tax burdens, disproportionately benefiting residents of high-tax states like New York, California, and New Jersey, where state policies often featured progressive income taxes and elevated property levies.[45][41] By curtailing this federal offset, the cap aimed to encourage fiscal restraint at the state level and promote neutrality in interstate tax competition, without directly altering state tax codes.[46] The Joint Committee on Taxation projected that the SALT cap, in conjunction with other itemized deduction limits, would raise approximately $668 billion in federal revenue over the 2018-2027 period, with the SALT restriction alone accounting for the bulk of this gain through reduced deduction claims by higher-income itemizers.[44] This estimate reflected baseline modeling of taxpayer behavior under the prior uncapped regime, where SALT deductions had cost the Treasury over $100 billion annually pre-TCJA.[11] The cap did not apply to the alternative minimum tax (AMT), under which SALT payments were already nondeductible, though the TCJA's broader AMT exemption expansion for many taxpayers indirectly amplified the cap's effective impact on regular-tax filers.[5]Failed Reforms in Build Back Better Framework
The House-passed version of the Build Back Better Act, approved on November 19, 2021, included a provision to temporarily raise the state and local tax (SALT) deduction cap from $10,000 to $80,000 through 2030 for taxpayers with incomes under $400,000, after which it would revert to $10,000 in 2031.[47][48] This change aimed to provide relief primarily to residents of high-tax states but was estimated by the Joint Committee on Taxation to cost approximately $354 billion in forgone federal revenue over the decade.[49] The proposal faced resistance in Senate negotiations, where fiscal conservatives like Senators Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema prioritized overall spending reductions amid concerns over the bill's multitrillion-dollar price tag.[48] Advocacy for the SALT increase came predominantly from House Democrats representing high-tax jurisdictions such as New York, California, and New Jersey, who argued it would alleviate burdens on middle- and upper-middle-class constituents without broadly violating President Biden's pledge against tax hikes on households earning under $400,000.[50] However, the provision was ultimately dropped as part of concessions to trim costs and secure Senate passage, contributing to the framework's collapse by December 2021, after which Build Back Better evolved into the narrower Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 without any SALT modifications.[51] This omission highlighted tensions between regional interests in high-tax states and broader Democratic priorities for deficit control and program funding.[52]One Big Beautiful Bill Act of 2025 Adjustments
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act of 2025 (OBBBA), enacted as H.R. 1 and signed into law by President Donald J. Trump on July 4, 2025, as Public Law 119-21, temporarily modifies the state and local tax (SALT) deduction cap established under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017.[21][53] The legislation raises the cap to $40,000 for married taxpayers filing jointly ($20,000 for married filing separately) effective for taxable years beginning in 2025 through 2029, up from the prior $10,000 limit ($5,000 for separate filers).[54][55] This increase applies to itemized deductions for state and local income, sales, and property taxes, providing expanded relief primarily to taxpayers in high-tax jurisdictions such as New York, California, and New Jersey.[56] The cap phases out for higher-income taxpayers, reducing by 30% of the amount by which modified adjusted gross income exceeds $500,000 (with thresholds adjusted for filing status), effectively limiting benefits for those above this level while preserving full deductibility for most middle- and upper-middle-income households.[56][57] The $40,000 base amount receives a 1% annual inflation adjustment starting in 2026, tied to the chained consumer price index, to account for rising tax burdens over the provision's term.[58][59] After 2029, the cap reverts to $10,000 unless further extended, maintaining the temporary nature of the adjustment amid fiscal reconciliation constraints.[60][24] OBBBA integrates the SALT cap increase with broader extensions of 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act provisions, including permanent enhancements to the standard deduction—raised to $31,500 for joint filers in 2025 with ongoing inflation indexing—to offset revenue losses and encourage simpler filing for non-itemizers.[61][62] Passed via budget reconciliation following Republican control of Congress after the 2024 elections, the act prioritizes targeted tax relief for working families and small business owners in high-cost areas, as articulated in House Ways and Means Committee summaries, without altering core eligibility for the deduction.[63][64] The IRS issued initial guidance in late 2025 confirming no immediate changes to withholding tables or forms for 2025, with updated schedules for Form 1040 to reflect the higher cap.[65]Economic and Fiscal Impacts
Effects on Individual Taxpayers and Behavior
The state and local tax (SALT) deduction reduces federal taxable income for eligible itemizing taxpayers by the amount of qualifying state income, property, and sales taxes paid, up to the applicable cap, thereby lowering federal income tax liability by the deducted amount multiplied by the taxpayer's marginal federal tax rate.[22] For instance, a taxpayer in the 37% federal bracket deducting $10,000 in SALT saves $3,700 in federal taxes, effectively subsidizing 37% of those state and local taxes paid.[5] Prior to the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), with no deduction cap in place, high-income taxpayers in high-tax states like California (13.3% top state rate) or New York (10.9% top state rate) could realize substantial savings; a top-bracket earner paying $100,000 in state income taxes alone might save approximately $37,000 in federal taxes, reducing the net cost of state taxes by 37 percentage points of the federal rate.[22][5] This benefit scaled with income and tax jurisdiction, disproportionately aiding upper-income households whose higher marginal rates amplified the deduction's value, with filers above $100,000 adjusted gross income (AGI) claiming 87% of total SALT deductions pre-TCJA despite comprising 19% of filers.[4] The TCJA's $10,000 SALT cap (effective 2018-2025) and near-doubling of the standard deduction increased federal tax liabilities for many itemizers exceeding the cap, particularly in high-tax areas, by limiting deductible amounts and making the standard deduction more attractive.[5] This shifted taxpayer behavior toward the standard deduction: pre-TCJA, roughly 30% of returns itemized, but post-TCJA, itemization rates fell to about 10-13%, with SALT claims declining correspondingly as capped deductions often failed to exceed the enhanced standard amount when combined with other itemized expenses.[66][67] The cap effectively raised the after-tax cost of state and local taxes for affected households, reducing incentives to itemize unless other deductions (e.g., mortgage interest) supplemented SALT sufficiently.[5] Under the 2025 One Big Beautiful Bill Act, the cap rose to $40,000 for certain filers, potentially restoring itemization incentives and yielding larger savings—e.g., $14,800 for a 37% bracket taxpayer deducting the full amount—but primarily benefiting higher earners in high-tax states.[68] Empirical studies indicate the SALT cap influenced residential mobility, with evidence of accelerated out-migration from high-tax states like New York and California to no-income-tax states such as Florida and Texas, as the reduced federal subsidy increased the net burden of local taxes.[69] Tax analyses attribute a portion of post-2017 outflows—e.g., net domestic migration losses of over 1 million from California and New York combined between 2018 and 2023—to the cap's erosion of tax advantages, estimating it added 2-3 percentage points to out-migration rates in affected areas by raising effective tax costs for high earners.[70][71] While some research finds minimal overall migration effects, arguing other factors like housing costs dominate, the cap's targeted impact on upper-income households correlates with observed shifts, including increased relocations to low-tax jurisdictions where SALT payments are negligible.[72][73] This behavioral response underscores how federal deduction limits can alter location decisions by amplifying the relative appeal of lower-tax environments.[69]Influence on State and Local Tax Policies
The deductibility of state and local taxes (SALT) under federal income tax law functions as an indirect subsidy to subnational governments by reducing the after-tax cost of those levies for itemizing taxpayers, effectively shifting a portion of the burden to federal revenues. For taxpayers in the highest federal bracket of 37 percent prior to the 2017 cap, this subsidy could offset up to 37 percent of state income or property taxes paid, enabling states to maintain higher rates than might otherwise be politically feasible without federal assistance.[4][74] This mechanism lowers the perceived price of public services funded by such taxes, incentivizing greater reliance on income and property taxes over less deductible alternatives like sales taxes. Prior to the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), states benefiting most from SALT deductibility—predominantly high-tax jurisdictions such as New York, California, and New Jersey—exhibited per capita state and local spending levels substantially above the national average, with collections averaging over $10,000 per capita in fiscal year 2016 compared to under $6,000 in low-tax states like Tennessee and South Dakota. While econometric studies yield mixed results on direct causality due to confounding factors like demographics and economic bases, the deduction's price-distorting effect aligns with economic theory predicting expanded fiscal capacity in subsidized regimes, as evidenced by persistent tax rate escalation in these states from the 1980s onward.[75][74] The TCJA's $10,000 SALT cap, effective from 2018, curtailed this subsidy for many upper-middle and high-income households in high-tax states, prompting policy adjustments including attempted property tax hikes that faced heightened voter resistance and reduced support for local tax referenda. Municipal bond yields in affected areas became less responsive to property tax revenue projections post-cap, signaling diminished fiscal aggressiveness as the full cost of levies reverted to taxpayers. In response, over 30 states, largely those with above-average tax burdens, enacted pass-through entity (PTE) taxes by 2023, allowing business-level payments deductible as ordinary expenses outside the individual cap, though these maneuvers disproportionately aided high earners and did not fully restore pre-cap incentives.[76][5][22] This cap-induced restraint highlighted the deduction's prior role in insulating state policies from local fiscal discipline.Federal Revenue and Budgetary Consequences
Prior to the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) of 2017, the unlimited state and local tax (SALT) deduction reduced federal revenues by approximately $101 billion in fiscal year 2017, according to estimates from the Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT).[5] This tax expenditure represented a significant portion of forgone federal income, as it allowed itemizing taxpayers to subtract unlimited amounts of state and local income, property, and sales taxes from their federal taxable income, effectively subsidizing subnational tax burdens at the federal level.[4] The TCJA imposed a $10,000 [cap](/page/Cap) (5,000 for married filing separately) on SALT deductions effective for tax years beginning after December 31, 2017, which increased federal revenues by curtailing the deduction's scope. JCT projections indicated this cap would generate about $77 billion in additional revenue in 2019 alone, contributing to overall TCJA-related revenue gains estimated in the hundreds of billions over the subsequent decade on a static basis.[7] These savings were partially offset by other TCJA expansions, such as broader rate cuts, but the SALT limitation itself served as a key offset mechanism, reducing the net cost of the legislation to the U.S. Treasury.[46] The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) of 2025 raised the SALT cap to $40,000 for most filers starting in tax year 2025, with phase-outs for adjusted gross incomes exceeding certain thresholds (e.g., $500,000) and annual 1% inflation adjustments through 2029 before reverting to $10,000.[18] This expansion is projected to add $200-300 billion in federal revenue costs through 2029 on a static scoring basis, reflecting increased deduction claims in high-tax jurisdictions and straining budgetary offsets within the reconciliation package.[77] Dynamic scoring analyses, however, suggest potential partial offsets through induced economic growth, as a higher deduction could diminish the drag of state tax distortions on labor mobility and investment, leading to expanded taxable income and possible long-term revenue neutrality.[78] Such effects remain speculative and depend on behavioral responses not fully captured in baseline models from the Congressional Budget Office or JCT.[79]Distributional Analysis of Benefits
Prior to the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), the state and local tax (SALT) deduction provided benefits disproportionately to higher-income households, with approximately 91% of the deduction's value accruing to the top income quintile (households earning over $150,000 annually in 2017 dollars).[15] This concentration arose because itemization rates and SALT payments rise with income, as higher earners face progressive state taxes and own more valuable property. Only about 30% of taxpayers itemized pre-TCJA, but those who did claimed an average SALT deduction exceeding $12,000, with the top 1% averaging over $80,000.[80] Geographically, SALT benefits were heavily skewed toward high-tax jurisdictions, where seven states—California, New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Illinois, and Maryland—accounted for over 50% of national SALT deduction claims in 2017, despite comprising less than 20% of the U.S. population.[81] These states, characterized by elevated income and property tax rates, saw average deductions per claimant ranging from $15,000 to $25,000, compared to under $5,000 in low-tax states like Texas or Florida. Urban and suburban counties in these areas dominated, with the top 10 counties (e.g., in New York City metro and Silicon Valley) averaging $25,000+ per deduction in 2017.[82] The TCJA's $10,000 cap (adjusted for inflation post-2018) redistributed benefits modestly toward middle-income households, particularly those with adjusted gross incomes (AGI) between $75,000 and $200,000 in suburban high-tax areas, where SALT payments often fell below the cap threshold.[5] Itemization rates dropped to about 10% by 2022, reducing overall claimants but increasing the relative share for non-top-quintile filers who previously switched to the standard deduction; for instance, households earning $100,000-$200,000 saw their effective SALT benefit utilization rise by 15-20% in capped scenarios versus uncapped projections.[83] High-income earners in urban cores faced the largest absolute losses, shifting some relief to outer suburbs with moderate property taxes. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act of 2025 raised the cap to $40,000 ($20,000 per spouse for joint filers) for tax years 2025-2029, with phase-downs for AGI exceeding $500,000 (reverting to $10,000 at the top), primarily benefiting households in the $200,000-500,000 AGI range in high-tax states.[20] This adjustment is projected to restore 60-70% of pre-TCJA benefits for upper-middle-income suburban homeowners, where property and income taxes often total $20,000-35,000 annually, while limiting gains for millionaires.[84] Demographically, SALT claimants show overrepresentation in urban and high-property-value areas (e.g., 70%+ of deductions from metropolitan counties pre-TCJA), but racial and ethnic skews diminish after controlling for income, geography, and homeownership; white households claim a plurality due to higher average incomes and property ownership rates, yet Black and Hispanic itemizers in similar brackets (e.g., urban professionals) utilize comparable per-capita deductions.[85] Rural areas contribute minimally, with under 5% of national deductions, reflecting lower state income taxes and property values.[86]| Income Group (AGI, 2022 dollars) | Pre-TCJA Benefit Share (%) | Post-TCJA Share (%) | Projected 2025 Share (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bottom 80% (<$150k) | ~9 | ~25 | ~20 |
| Top 20% ($150k+) | ~91 | ~75 | ~80 |
| Top 1% ($1M+) | ~57 | ~40 | ~35 (capped phase-down) |