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A bill to amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to make permanent the individual tax provisions of the tax reform law, and for other purposes.

USA116th CongressS-1162| Senate 
| Updated: 4/11/2019
Ted Cruz

Ted Cruz

Republican Senator

Texas

Cosponsors (6)
Joni Ernst (Republican)Mike Braun (Republican)Marsha Blackburn (Republican)James M. Inhofe (Republican)Martha McSally (Republican)Kevin Cramer (Republican)

Finance Committee

  • Introduced
  • In Committee
  • On Floor
  • Passed Chamber
  • Enacted
This bill makes permanent several tax provisions that were enacted in 2017 and are scheduled to expire at the end of 2025. The bill makes permanent provisions that reduce individual tax rates, modify the taxation of the unearned income of children, allow a deduction for qualified business income of pass-through entities, increase the standard deduction, increase and modify the child tax credit, increase the limitation for certain charitable contributions, allow additional contributions to ABLE accounts (tax-favored accounts designed to enable individuals with disabilities to save for and pay for disability-related expenses), allow certain members of the Armed Forces in the Sinai Peninsula of Egypt to receive combat zone tax benefits, reduce the adjusted gross income threshold for the medical expense deduction, exclude from gross income discharges of student loan debt due to the death or disability of the student, repeal the deduction for personal exemptions, limit individual deductions for state and local taxes, limit the mortgage interest deduction, double the estate and gift tax exemption amount, increase the alternative minimum tax exemption amount for individuals, and repeal or limit several other deductions and exclusions. The bill also modifies (1) the capital gains tax brackets, and (2) the tax filing requirements for married taxpayers.
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Timeline

Bill from Previous Congress

S 115-2687
A bill to amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to make permanent the individual tax provisions of the tax reform law, and for other purposes.
Apr 11, 2019
Introduced in Senate
Apr 11, 2019
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance.
  • Bill from Previous Congress

    S 115-2687
    A bill to amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to make permanent the individual tax provisions of the tax reform law, and for other purposes.


  • April 11, 2019
    Introduced in Senate


  • April 11, 2019
    Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance.

Taxation

Related Bills

  • S 116-110: Medical Expense Savings Act
AfricaBank accounts, deposits, capitalCapital gains taxCharitable contributionsCommutingDisability and paralysisEgyptEmployee benefits and pensionsGamblingHealth care costs and insuranceHigher educationHousing finance and home ownershipIncome tax creditsIncome tax deductionsIncome tax exclusionIncome tax ratesInflation and pricesInterest, dividends, interest ratesMarriage and family statusMilitary personnel and dependentsPedestrians and bicyclingState and local taxationStudent aid and college costsTax administration and collection, taxpayersTax treatment of familiesTransfer and inheritance taxes

A bill to amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to make permanent the individual tax provisions of the tax reform law, and for other purposes.

USA116th CongressS-1162| Senate 
| Updated: 4/11/2019
This bill makes permanent several tax provisions that were enacted in 2017 and are scheduled to expire at the end of 2025. The bill makes permanent provisions that reduce individual tax rates, modify the taxation of the unearned income of children, allow a deduction for qualified business income of pass-through entities, increase the standard deduction, increase and modify the child tax credit, increase the limitation for certain charitable contributions, allow additional contributions to ABLE accounts (tax-favored accounts designed to enable individuals with disabilities to save for and pay for disability-related expenses), allow certain members of the Armed Forces in the Sinai Peninsula of Egypt to receive combat zone tax benefits, reduce the adjusted gross income threshold for the medical expense deduction, exclude from gross income discharges of student loan debt due to the death or disability of the student, repeal the deduction for personal exemptions, limit individual deductions for state and local taxes, limit the mortgage interest deduction, double the estate and gift tax exemption amount, increase the alternative minimum tax exemption amount for individuals, and repeal or limit several other deductions and exclusions. The bill also modifies (1) the capital gains tax brackets, and (2) the tax filing requirements for married taxpayers.
View Full Text

Suggested Questions

Get AI-generated questions to help you understand this bill better

Timeline

Bill from Previous Congress

S 115-2687
A bill to amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to make permanent the individual tax provisions of the tax reform law, and for other purposes.
Apr 11, 2019
Introduced in Senate
Apr 11, 2019
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance.
  • Bill from Previous Congress

    S 115-2687
    A bill to amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to make permanent the individual tax provisions of the tax reform law, and for other purposes.


  • April 11, 2019
    Introduced in Senate


  • April 11, 2019
    Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance.
Ted Cruz

Ted Cruz

Republican Senator

Texas

Cosponsors (6)
Joni Ernst (Republican)Mike Braun (Republican)Marsha Blackburn (Republican)James M. Inhofe (Republican)Martha McSally (Republican)Kevin Cramer (Republican)

Finance Committee

Taxation

Related Bills

  • S 116-110: Medical Expense Savings Act
  • Introduced
  • In Committee
  • On Floor
  • Passed Chamber
  • Enacted
AfricaBank accounts, deposits, capitalCapital gains taxCharitable contributionsCommutingDisability and paralysisEgyptEmployee benefits and pensionsGamblingHealth care costs and insuranceHigher educationHousing finance and home ownershipIncome tax creditsIncome tax deductionsIncome tax exclusionIncome tax ratesInflation and pricesInterest, dividends, interest ratesMarriage and family statusMilitary personnel and dependentsPedestrians and bicyclingState and local taxationStudent aid and college costsTax administration and collection, taxpayersTax treatment of familiesTransfer and inheritance taxes