The Ripple Effect: What Will State and Local Tax Look Like Under the One Big Beautiful Bill?

by | Jul 9, 2025

ARTICLE | July 09, 2025

At a glance

  • The main takeaway: The One Big Beautiful Bill introduces changes to state and local tax practices and policies, prompting some states to consider measures to limit its impact.
  • Impact on your business: Many individual states, whose legislative sessions for 2025 have already passed, will now need to evaluate federal policy to determine if states will comply or modify provisions.
  • Next steps: An advisor are continuously monitoring the various ways that states will respond to the One Big Beautiful Bill and are prepared to navigate you through these changes.

The full story:

Federal tax policy under the second Trump administration has been set with the passing of the One Big Beautiful Bill (OBBB) Act. While the federal piece is now established, individual states must determine which parts of the new policy their budgets can adopt.

Here is a look at some of the key issues that will impact state income tax policy from the OBBB.

State and Local Tax Deduction Limitation

Prior to the passage of the OBBB, a significant topic of debate revolved around a provision from the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA): whether to keep the SALT deduction limitation, increase it, or let the provision expire. Ultimately, legislators opted to keep a limitation, but increased it to $40,000 for taxpayers earning less than $500,000. Taxpayers with income exceeding $500,000 will see a phase down of the deduction allowance to a minimum of $10,000.

State pass-through entity tax (PTET) election regimes will remain valuable to owners of partnerships and S corporations. However, many states originally enacted their election statutes to terminate at the end of the 2025 tax year. States with an automatic sunset must determine if they want to extend their provision to match the federal limitation through the 2029 tax year.

Bonus Depreciation & Asset Expensing

The OBBB permanently enacts the 100% bonus depreciation for qualifying property and extends the increased Section 179 expense deduction for business assets placed in service. States have adopted these two deductions in varying ways:

  1. States that have generally followed the federal treatment will now need to decide if their budgets can sustain the full deductions long-term.
  2. Other states that have disallowed the federal bonus and Section 179 expenses will need to determine how to incorporate these specific changes.

New to bonus depreciation is a provision that allows for 100% depreciation on nonresidential real property used in manufacturing and production. This provision is separate from the IRC 168(k) bonus depreciation, which states generally reference in their adoption of bonus depreciation. States may have to separately address this provision.

Certain individual states must evaluate several additional provisions and determine if they will comply with federal policy or make modifications. Some of these additional provisions include:

Research & Experimental Expenditures

Many companies have long awaited the repeal of Section 174 requiring the capitalization of domestic and foreign research and experimental (R&E) expenses. The OBBB repeals capitalization for domestic expenses on a going-forward basis. Additionally, it allows taxpayers to elect to accelerate the remaining amortization for expenses incurred prior to 2025.

Business Interest Expense Calculation

Starting in tax year 2022, businesses calculated adjusted taxable income for purposes of the interest expense limitation without depreciation and amortization. The OBBB changes the adjusted taxable income calculation to again include depreciation and amortization. This could result in an adjusted taxable income calculation that differs for state purposes.

Foreign Derived Dividend Deduction & Global Intangible Low-Taxed Income

Both of these foreign provisions saw changes to the calculation and percentages of inclusion and deductions for foreign income items. States will again have to evaluate the fiscal impacts of these changes and whether they warrant continued conformity.

The bottom line

While the state and local landscape after the passage of OBBB remains uncertain, many states have completed their legislative sessions for 2025 without being able to address these policies. States may call a special legislative session later in the year to address the provisions which would give taxpayers more certainty. However, as states review the OBBB’s impacts, they may not produce policy responses until the beginning of 2026.

Got questions? Connect with your advisor with any questions about this article.

Questions or Want to Talk?

Call us directly at 972.221.2500 (Flower Mound) or 940.591.9300 (Denton), or complete the form below and we’ll contact you to discuss your specific situation.
  • Should be Empty:
  • Topic Name:

This article was written by Aprio and originally appeared on 2025-07-09. Reprinted with permission from Aprio LLP.
© 2025 Aprio LLP. All rights reserved. https://www.aprio.com/the-ripple-effect-what-will-state-and-local-tax-look-like-under-the-one-big-beautiful-bill-ins-article-tax/

“Aprio" is the brand name under which Aprio, LLP, and Aprio Advisory Group, LLC (and its subsidiaries), provide professional services. LLP and Advisory (and its subsidiaries) practice as an alternative practice structure in accordance with the AICPA Code of Professional Conduct and applicable law, regulations, and professional standards. LLP is a licensed independent CPA firm that provides attest services, and Advisory and its subsidiaries provide tax and business consulting services. Advisory and its subsidiaries are not licensed CPA firms.

This publication does not, and is not intended to, provide audit, tax, accounting, financial, investment, or legal advice. Any tax advice contained in this communication (including any attachments) is not intended or written to be used, and cannot be used, for the purpose of (i) avoiding penalties under the Internal Revenue Code or under any state or local tax law or (ii) promoting, marketing or recommending to another party any transaction or matter addressed herein. Readers should consult a qualified tax advisor before taking any action based on the information herein.

When “Creative” Tax Deductions Invite the IRS to Your Door

What do an arsonist’s fee, a family dog, and a backyard fallout shelter have in common? They’ve all been claimed as tax deductions — and they all earned the kind of IRS attention no taxpayer wants. While most people aren’t pushing the limits quite that far, the truth is that questionable deductions don’t have to be outrageous to trigger an audit.

Are Taxes Driving Americans to Pack Up and Move?

Millions of Americans are moving — and tax burdens are part of the equation. New IRS data shows high-tax states like California and New York are losing billions in taxable income to no-income-tax states like Florida and Texas. The numbers tell a compelling story.

What Business Owners Must Know About Net Operating Loss Rules in 2025 and Beyond

The pandemic-era flexibility is gone, and the One Big Beautiful Bill has locked in the TCJA’s NOL rules for the foreseeable future. If your business is still planning around old assumptions — like the ability to carry losses back or fully offset taxable income — it’s time for a reset. Here’s what you need to know heading into 2025 and beyond.

Texas Limited Partners Get Good News from the Fifth Circuit — But Don’t Skip the Planning

If you are a limited partner in a Texas-based business, a January 2026 federal court ruling just changed the rules in your favor — and the savings could be significant. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit rejected the IRS’s long-standing “passive investor” test and ruled that any partner in a limited partnership with genuine limited liability qualifies for the self-employment tax exemption under IRC Section 1402(a)(13) — even if you actively work in the business. With self-employment tax running as high as 15.3%, the financial impact of this ruling can be substantial. But the law is still unsettled outside Texas, and the details matter. Read on to find out what this means for your tax strategy and what steps you should be taking right now.

Real Estate and Cost Segregation

Learn more about cost segregation studies and found out if performing one is a smart next step for your real estate portfolio.

Building a Family Limited Partnership That Lasts: What High-Net-Worth Families and Business Owners Need to Know

Most business owners think about succession planning far too late. A Family Limited Partnership, when established early and managed with discipline, gives founders something rare: the ability to transfer economic value to the next generation gradually, deliberately, and on their own terms — without giving up operational control in the process. It is one of the most effective wealth transfer and succession planning tools available. It is also one of the most scrutinized by the IRS. Before you build one, make sure you understand what it takes to make it last.

Manufacturers: A New Tax Break Could Let You Write Off Your Entire Facility on Day One

Congress just handed manufacturers one of the most significant tax incentives in decades. Under the new One Big Beautiful Bill Act, qualifying businesses can now deduct 100% of the cost of a new production building in the very first year it is placed in service — instead of spreading that deduction over 39 years. For a business investing $5 million, $10 million, or more in a new or expanded facility, that difference could be transformational. But the rules are strict, the election is irrevocable, and the clock is already ticking. Read on to find out if your facility qualifies and what you need to do before you file.