Does the ‘Big, Beautiful Bill’ Really Eliminate Taxes on Social Security

When President Trump signed the “big, beautiful bill” into law, headlines claimed it would eliminate federal income taxes on Social Security benefits. But does it really?
Here’s what’s actually happening:
The bill creates a $6,000 temporary tax deduction for seniors 65+, doubling to $12,000 for couples. It applies to total income, not just Social Security — and only if you earn under $75,000 (or $150,000 for joint filers).
But this isn’t a repeal of Social Security taxes. The taxation rules for Social Security haven’t changed. Policy experts warn the deduction is modest, and many low-income seniors already pay no tax, meaning they see little or no benefit.
Who actually benefits?
Higher-income seniors will gain the most. According to the Tax Foundation, the wealthiest retirees will receive the largest tax breaks, while lower earners — who already fall below the taxable threshold — get little or nothing.
And there’s another problem:
This deduction could hurt the long-term stability of Social Security. Experts like Bobby Kogan at the Center for American Progress warn the change will reduce revenue going into the Social Security Trust Fund — already projected to run dry by 2034.
According to the Penn Wharton Budget Model, eliminating Social Security taxes entirely (as some headlines suggested) would increase the national debt by $1.5 trillion over 10 years.
Bottom line:
This is not a repeal — it’s a deduction. For most seniors, the tax system on Social Security remains the same. And for many who don’t meet the income threshold, the deduction won’t change their bottom line.
Summary:
$6,000 senior deduction (expires 2028)
Only benefits seniors earning under $75K
Doesn’t eliminate Social Security taxes
May weaken long-term Social Security funding
Don’t fall for the headline — here’s the real breakdown of what passed, who qualifies, and what it means for the program’s future.

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