Wednesday, February 4, 2026

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YebboTax • One Big Beautiful Bill (OBBB)

Top 10 OBBB items most taxpayers ask about

These are the most “real-life” changes highlighted in IRS OBBB guidance—organized for quick scanning.

1) Standard deduction increases (2025–2026) 2026: $32,200 (MFJ) / $16,100 (Single/MFS) / $24,150 (HOH). 2025 amounts also updated.
2) Updated 2026 bracket thresholds + inflation adjustments IRS lists updated marginal rate thresholds for 2026 (planning impact for withholding/estimates).
3) Senior deduction (age 65+) for 2025–2028 Additional deduction for eligible seniors with phaseouts at higher income levels.
4) “No tax on tips” deduction (2025–2028) Deduction for qualified tips with caps, phaseouts, and occupation rules.
5) “No tax on overtime” deduction (2025–2028) Deduction for qualified overtime portion with caps and phaseouts.
6) Car loan interest deduction + reporting requirements Includes borrower return requirements (e.g., VIN) and lender reporting transition relief for 2025.
7) HSA expansion (telehealth + eligibility changes) Telehealth safe rule (permanent for plan years starting 2025) + bronze/catastrophic & DPC changes starting 2026.
8) Premium Tax Credit changes (Marketplace) IRS notes removal of limits on repayment of excess advance PTC for tax years beginning after Dec 31, 2025.
9) Clean vehicle credits accelerated end New/Used/Commercial clean vehicle credits not allowed for vehicles acquired after Sept 30, 2025.
10) Home energy credits accelerated end 25C: not allowed for property placed in service after Dec 31, 2025. 25D: not allowed for expenditures after Dec 31, 2025.
Source: IRS OBBB provisions hub + IRS “Individuals and workers” OBBB page. Always verify eligibility, caps, and effective dates in IRS guidance.
YebboTax WP Page OBBB / “One, Big, Beautiful Bill”

One, Big, Beautiful Bill Act (Public Law 119-21): What it means for your taxes

A plain-English guide to key federal tax changes highlighted by the IRS—organized by individuals, healthcare, businesses, clean energy, and more—plus a fast FAQ to help you decide what applies to you.

Powered by YebboTax • a division of Yebbo Communication Network • Since 1999

Quick highlights (IRS hub topics)

Browse the major areas covered on the IRS OBBB provisions page.

Individuals & workers Healthcare Businesses Clean energy Investment & community Charities Other taxes

Important note

Educational only. Tax outcomes depend on your facts. For filing decisions, documentation, and eligibility checks, contact YebboTax.

IRS states the law was signed July 4, 2025 as Public Law 119-21.

Individuals & workers

Key items highlighted by the IRS

  • Tax inflation adjustments (standard deduction amounts and bracket thresholds for 2025–2026).
  • Deduction for seniors (additional deduction for eligible taxpayers age 65+ for 2025–2028, with income phaseouts).
  • “No tax on tips” (deduction for qualified tips for 2025–2028, up to an annual cap, with income phaseouts and occupation rules).
  • “No tax on overtime” (deduction for qualified overtime portion above regular pay for 2025–2028, with caps and phaseouts).
  • “No tax on car loan interest” (deduction rules and reporting requirements; includes VIN and vehicle criteria).
Tip: Keep your documents. Several items rely on what’s reported on W-2/1099 (or other statements), and some claims require additional info (example: VIN for car interest deduction).

Snapshot: Standard deduction amounts (as listed by IRS)

Helpful for planning and estimating—always confirm your filing status.

Tax year Married filing jointly Single / MFS Head of household
2026 $32,200 $16,100 $24,150
2025 $31,500 $15,750 $23,625

Values shown are pulled from the IRS Individuals & Workers OBBB page and are subject to IRS updates/guidance.

Healthcare

Health Savings Account (HSA) expansion

  • Telehealth: Certain telehealth/remote care can be used before meeting an HDHP deductible while still allowing HSA contributions (permanent for plan years starting on/after Jan 1, 2025).
  • Bronze/catastrophic plans: Starting Jan 1, 2026, treated as HSA-compatible (broadening who can contribute).
  • Direct Primary Care (DPC): Starting Jan 1, 2026, certain DPC arrangements may allow HSA contributions (if otherwise eligible) and permit tax-free use of HSA funds for periodic DPC fees.

Premium Tax Credit (PTC) updates

  • IRS describes changes affecting repayment limitations for excess advance PTC for tax years beginning after Dec 31, 2025.
  • Also notes elimination of certain PTC rules that were tied to 2020–2021 circumstances.
If you use Marketplace coverage, small changes can impact your filing. Ask YebboTax to review your 1095-A and reconciliation.

Businesses

Vehicle loan interest reporting (transition relief for 2025)

Primarily affects lenders and payors who must file information returns and provide borrower statements.

  • IRS describes transition relief for tax year 2025 related to qualified passenger vehicle loan interest reporting.
  • If you’re a lender/payor, check the relevant IRS notices and instructions for how 2025 reporting applies.

100% first-year depreciation (Qualified Production Property)

  • For many eligible business assets placed in service after Jan 19, 2025, IRS explains you may be able to deduct 100% of cost in the first year (instead of spreading deductions).
  • Often relevant for equipment, machinery, certain plants, and other qualifying property.
  • IRS indicates taxpayers may rely on existing depreciation rules with updated dates/percentages until final regs.
Planning matters: placing assets in service (not just purchasing) can change the year you qualify.

Other business-related items referenced on the IRS hub

  • 1099-K / third-party payment platform thresholds (IRS references proposed regulations and threshold/withholding mechanics on the hub).
  • Employee Retention Credit (ERC) limitation (IRS notes limits on certain ERC refunds/credits for late-filed claims and points to FAQs).

Clean energy

Clean vehicle credit expirations (timing matters)

  • IRS explains several clean vehicle credits are accelerated to end for vehicles acquired after Sept 30, 2025 (including new, used, and commercial categories).

Home & residential energy credit expirations

  • IRS notes accelerated end dates for certain home energy credits—often tied to property placed in service or expenditures after Dec 31, 2025.
If you’re planning upgrades, timing + eligibility rules can decide whether a credit is allowed.

Carbon capture / sequestration guidance

IRS hub references guidance on qualifying, reporting, and safe-harbor methods tied to 2025 activities.

Investment & community development

Rural Opportunity Zones (QOZ) adjustments

  • IRS restates Opportunity Zone basics and highlights a rural area definition used for the law.
  • IRS describes a reduced substantial improvement threshold (down to 50% for certain rural QOZ property) beginning July 4, 2025.

Tax-exempt entities & charitable giving

The IRS hub includes charitable/tax-exempt guidance links and updates as Treasury/IRS release new notices and FAQs.

  • If you run a nonprofit, scholarship organization, or tax-exempt entity, check for updates in the IRS “Resources and guidance” area and talk to a tax professional before adopting new procedures.

IRS resources & guidance (best place for updates)

What to use

  • IRS Fact Sheets and FAQs linked from the hub (often the quickest plain-language guidance).
  • IRS Notices for official interim rules and transition relief.
  • IRS News releases for announcements tied to forms, reporting, and effective dates.

Need help applying it to your return?

YebboTax can help you:

  • Check eligibility (income phaseouts, filing status rules, required IDs like SSN/VIN)
  • Make sure reporting matches your W-2/1099 statements
  • Avoid common filing mistakes that delay refunds
📞 619-255-5530 ✉️ info@yebbo.com

FAQ: One, Big, Beautiful Bill Act (OBBB)

Click a question to expand. This FAQ summarizes how the IRS describes major items and common “how do I claim it?” questions.

1) What is the One, Big, Beautiful Bill Act (OBBB)? +
The IRS describes OBBB as a law that significantly affects federal taxes, credits, and deductions. The IRS hub notes it was signed on July 4, 2025 as Public Law 119-21.
2) Which taxpayers should pay the closest attention? +
If you are (a) age 65+, (b) work in tip-based jobs, (c) earn overtime, (d) financed an eligible vehicle, (e) use Marketplace health coverage, (f) are a small business buying equipment/assets, or (g) you’re timing clean-energy purchases— you likely have OBBB-related items to review.
3) Is “No tax on tips” automatic? +
No. The IRS describes it as a deduction for qualified tips for 2025–2028, with eligibility rules (including occupation rules), caps, and income phaseouts. It generally depends on reported tip information (W-2/1099 or other statements, or direct reporting where applicable).
4) What counts as “qualified tips” per IRS descriptions? +
IRS describes qualified tips as voluntary cash or charged tips received from customers (including shared tips). There are caps and limitations (for example, self-employed deduction limits and certain SSTB exclusions).
5) How does “No tax on overtime” work? +
IRS describes a deduction for the overtime portion that exceeds your regular rate (for example, the “half” in “time-and-a-half”), effective 2025–2028, subject to annual caps and income phaseouts. Reporting is tied to W-2/1099 (or other statements) or direct reporting.
6) I’m 65+. What is the senior deduction mentioned by IRS? +
IRS describes an additional $6,000 deduction for eligible individuals age 65+ for 2025–2028 (on top of existing senior standard deduction rules), with phaseouts above certain modified AGI thresholds. For married couples, it can apply per eligible spouse.
7) Do I have to itemize to benefit from these deductions? +
The IRS indicates several highlighted deductions are available to itemizers and non-itemizers (depending on the specific provision). The best approach is to compare outcomes in your return.
8) What’s the “No tax on car loan interest” requirement people miss? +
IRS descriptions include vehicle criteria and documentation requirements. For years you claim it, the IRS notes you must include the VIN on your return, and some eligibility is tied to vehicle characteristics (including final assembly verification methods).
9) What changed with HSAs? +
IRS highlights: (a) telehealth rule allowing certain remote care before meeting the deductible while keeping HSA contribution eligibility (permanent from 2025 plan years), (b) certain bronze/catastrophic plans treated as HSA-compatible starting 2026, and (c) certain Direct Primary Care arrangements starting 2026.
10) I bought business equipment—what is the 100% first-year depreciation item? +
IRS describes that many eligible business assets placed in service after Jan 19, 2025 may qualify for 100% first-year deduction (instead of multi-year), subject to the property and eligibility rules. Timing (placed-in-service date) can be crucial.
11) Did clean vehicle or home energy credits change? +
IRS states several clean vehicle credits are not allowed for vehicles acquired after Sept 30, 2025, and certain home/residential energy credits have accelerated end dates tied to after Dec 31, 2025 thresholds (depending on the credit).
12) Where should I check for the newest IRS guidance? +
Use the IRS OBBB hub’s “Resources and guidance” area—especially fact sheets, FAQs, notices, and news releases linked from the hub. Those pages are where the IRS posts implementation details and transition relief.
13) Can YebboTax help me apply this correctly? +
Yes. We can review your situation, confirm eligibility (caps/phaseouts), verify documents (W-2/1099/VIN/1095-A), and prepare your return in line with IRS rules.

Call: 619-255-5530 • Email: info@yebbo.com
YebboTax • Powered by Yebbo.com • Since 1999
Educational content summary based on IRS OBBB newsroom pages; for official language, always consult IRS guidance.
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Sunday, February 1, 2026

YebboTax Explains S.1582 (GENIUS Act) — What It Means for Regular Americans

YebboTax Explains S.1582 (GENIUS Act) — What It Means for Regular Americans

YebboTax Explains S.1582 (GENIUS Act)

What it means for regular Americans: benefits, risks, and safe-use tips.
Light background • Dark text Consumer-first summary Updated for 2026 readers

What S.1582 Does (Plain English)

S.1582 is a federal law (Public Law 119–27, signed July 18, 2025) that creates rules for “payment stablecoins” — digital assets designed to be redeemed at a fixed value, typically $1.

Potential benefits for everyday people:
  • Faster payments (including weekends/after hours)
  • Lower transfer/remittance fees (in some cases)
  • Clearer rules for reserves, disclosures, and supervision
Most important warning:

Stablecoins are generally not FDIC-insured. Treat them like “digital cash in transit,” not a savings account.

What Could Go Wrong

  • Scams & phishing: fake wallet apps, fake support agents, stolen recovery phrases.
  • User error: sending funds to the wrong address can be irreversible.
  • Redemption delays: even fully-backed systems can face delays during investigations or market stress.
  • Confusing “rewards/yield” offers: some products may mimic interest — understand the risks before using them.

Safe-Use Rules (YebboTax Checklist)

  • Keep emergency funds in insured bank accounts.
  • Use stablecoins mainly for payments/transfers — not long-term storage.
  • Use regulated issuers with clear reserve disclosures.
  • Enable 2FA; never share seed phrases; test transfers with a small amount first.
  • Keep records: dates, transaction IDs, screenshots.
Call YebboTax for a 5-minute guidance check
We explain consumer risks in plain language and help you build safer payment habits.

Friday, January 30, 2026

Trump Accounts (530A) — Parent Guide & FAQ

YebboTax — Trump Accounts (530A) Parent Guide & FAQ

YebboTax — Trump Accounts (530A) Parent Guide

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Call: 619-255-5530 Email: info@yebbo.com Call Now Email Questions
Updated guide: Trump Accounts (IRC 530A) — what parents need to know

This page summarizes official information from trumpaccounts.gov and IRS/Treasury guidance, written in parent-friendly language.

One page that answers the questions parents actually ask

A Trump Account is a new type of traditional IRA created for children under 18. It includes special rules during the “growth period” (before January 1 of the year the child turns 18).

$1,000 pilot deposit may apply (births 2025–2028)
Launch: July 5, 2026
Up to $5,000/yr extra contributions (limits apply)
Important: Some operational details (which banks/brokers participate, final enrollment steps, portal workflow) may change as regulations finalize. This page focuses on official guidance.

Need help enrolling or understanding the rules?

We can explain the steps, help you prepare, and answer parent questions.

Call YebboTax

If you’re a parent and want help understanding eligibility, the $1,000 pilot deposit, or the election process (Form 4547), contact us.

YebboTax — A division of Yebbo Communication Network • Serving clients since 1999

What to have ready when you call:
  • Child’s full name + date of birth
  • Child’s SSN status (issued?)
  • Whether child was born between Jan 1, 2025 and Dec 31, 2028
  • Whether you use a tax preparer or file yourself

Basics: what a Trump Account is

Simple explanation first — then details.

Who owns it?

The child owns the account. A parent/guardian acts as custodian until the child turns 18.

What makes it different?

Special rules apply during the “growth period,” including investment and withdrawal restrictions.

Is it tax-advantaged?

Yes — built on traditional IRA mechanics. Taxes depend on timing and withdrawal rules.

Official definition (high-level): IRS guidance describes a Trump Account as a traditional IRA established for an eligible child and designated as a Trump Account at establishment, with special rules during the growth period.

Timeline & key dates

What happens when — and what parents should do.

Date / Age What it means Parent action
Before Jul 4, 2026 Extra contributions can’t be made before this date (per IRS guidance). Get ready to enroll; keep child SSN available.
Jul 5, 2026 Public launch target on trumpaccounts.gov (“Launching July 5, 2026”). Watch the portal for the enrollment workflow and participating institutions.
Tax filing time Portal indicates you “enroll your child by making an election when you file your taxes.” IRS guidance references Form 4547. Tell your preparer: “Add Trump Account election (Form 4547).”
Before Jan 1 of year child turns 18 This is the “growth period.” Distributions are generally prohibited (narrow exceptions). Plan for long-term savings, not short-term use.
Jan 1 of year child turns 18+ Account generally follows traditional IRA rules (possible tax + 10% additional tax if early distribution and no exception). Consult a tax pro before withdrawals.

Eligibility: who qualifies?

Two separate questions: eligible to open, and eligible for the $1,000 pilot deposit.

1) Eligibility to establish a Trump Account

Generally, IRS guidance indicates the child must:

  • Be under 18 for the year the election is made.
  • Have a valid SSN issued before the election date.
  • Have a Trump Account election made (generally by a parent/guardian).

2) Eligibility for the $1,000 pilot deposit

Portal highlights the pilot deposit for children who:

  • Are born between Jan 1, 2025 and Dec 31, 2028
  • Are U.S. citizens
  • Have a valid SSN and a proper election/account setup
Parent note: the pilot deposit is tied to eligibility and the proper election/setup process.

Money rules: contributions & investments

How much can be added, who can add it, and where it can be invested.

Annual limit (most contributions)

During the growth period, employer contributions + other-source contributions are capped at an aggregate $5,000 per year (indexed after 2027).

Employer contributions (special cap)

Employers can contribute up to $2,500/year for an employee or dependent (counts toward the $5,000 annual cap).

Investment restrictions

Growth-period investments are limited to eligible index-tracking mutual funds or ETFs focused primarily on U.S. companies, with constraints like no leverage and very low fees.

Contribution types (plain list)

(1) $1,000 pilot program contribution (Treasury/IRS) (2) Qualified general contributions (gov’t entities / certain nonprofits for a qualified class) (3) Section 128 employer contributions (up to $2,500/year; counts toward $5,000 cap) (4) Qualified rollover contributions (trustee-to-trustee transfer of entire balance) (5) Other-source contributions (parents/child/any person) — included in $5,000 cap

Parent takeaway: contributing is optional, but the earlier the money is invested, the more time it has to grow.

Withdrawals & taxes

Most important: “Can I take the money out?” and “What tax happens?”

Before age 18 (growth period)

During the growth period, distributions are generally not allowed, with limited exceptions. Treat this as long-term savings.

At/after age 18

Starting January 1 of the year the child turns 18, the account generally follows traditional IRA rules. Distributions may be taxed as ordinary income, and the 10% additional tax may apply if it’s an early withdrawal and no exception applies.

YebboTax tip: Before your child withdraws money, confirm the exception (if any) and the reporting rules. We can walk you through the “what happens if…” scenarios.

Parent FAQ (searchable)

Use the search bar above to find keywords inside these answers.

Is the $1,000 pilot deposit automatic?

The official portal highlights the $1,000 for eligible births (2025–2028), but it is tied to proper enrollment and election/setup steps. Watch trumpaccounts.gov for the exact workflow.

My child was born outside 2025–2028. Can we still open a Trump Account?

The pilot deposit is limited to eligible births, but IRS guidance describes Trump Accounts as a new IRA type for children under 18 (with valid SSN) when the election is made. That suggests many children could still open an account even without the pilot deposit, subject to final rules.

Do parents have to contribute any money?

No. The official portal states no contributions are necessary. Contributions are optional (within limits) if you want the account to grow more.

How much can we contribute each year?

During the growth period, employer contributions plus other-source contributions are capped at an aggregate $5,000/year (indexed after 2027). Employers are capped at $2,500/year (counts toward the $5,000).

What can it be invested in?

During the growth period, investments are limited to eligible index-tracking mutual funds/ETFs focused primarily on U.S. companies, with constraints like no leverage and very low fees.

Can we withdraw money before 18 for school or emergencies?

Generally no — growth-period distributions are generally prohibited, with narrow exceptions. Plan as if funds are locked until the year the child turns 18.

Is there a tax deduction for contributions?

IRS guidance indicates no individual deduction is allowed for contributions to a Trump Account during the growth period.

How do we enroll?

trumpaccounts.gov indicates enrollment happens by making an election when you file taxes. IRS guidance references Form 4547 (Trump Account Election(s)) as the election form (draft then final).

Official sources

Primary references used to build this guide.

YebboTax — A division of Yebbo Communication Network • Serving clients since 1999

Last updated:

Questions about Trump Accounts (530A)? Call YebboTax: 619-255-5530 • Email: info@yebbo.com

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