The Child Tax Credit is $2,200 per qualifying child for tax years 2025 through 2028 under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. The credit phases out at $200,000 AGI for single filers and $400,000 for married filing jointly. The refundable portion (Additional Child Tax Credit) is 15% of earned income above $2,500, up to the remaining unused credit. Returns claiming the ACTC are held by the IRS until after February 15 under the PATH Act.
- The OBBBA increased the CTC from $2,000 (TCJA) to $2,200 per qualifying child for TY 2025–2028.
- Phase-out: $200,000 AGI single/HOH/MFS; $400,000 AGI MFJ. Reduction: $50 per $1,000 over threshold.
- The ACTC (refundable portion) equals 15% of earned income above $2,500, capped at unused CTC.
- Qualifying child must be under age 17 at year-end with a valid Social Security number.
- ACTC filers face a PATH Act hold: the IRS cannot release refunds before February 15.
- If you also pay for daycare or after-school care, the CTC stacks with the Child Care Tax Benefit Calculator and the new $7,500 Dependent Care FSA limit under OBBBA. See the Dependent Care FSA vs Credit Guide for the stacking strategy.
What Did the OBBBA Change About the Child Tax Credit?
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (Pub. L. 119-21, signed July 4, 2025) increased the maximum Child Tax Credit from $2,000 to $2,200 per qualifying child. This change is effective for tax years 2025 through 2028.
The CTC was originally $400 per child, then $1,000, then raised to $2,000 by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017. The TCJA increase was set to expire after 2025. The OBBBA extended and increased it to $2,200.
For tax year 2025, the increase is $200 per qualifying child compared to the prior $2,000 limit. A family with two qualifying children gains $400 in additional credit under the OBBBA. A family with three children gains $600.
The credit is governed by IRC §24. The phase-out structure ($200,000 / $400,000 thresholds, $50 per $1,000 reduction) was retained from the TCJA framework.
| Item | TCJA (TY 2024) | OBBBA (TY 2025–2028) |
|---|---|---|
| Maximum CTC per child | $2,000 | $2,200 |
| Max ACTC per child | $1,700 (TY 2024) | Up to $1,700 per child |
| Phase-out: single/HOH | $200,000 AGI | $200,000 AGI (unchanged) |
| Phase-out: MFJ | $400,000 AGI | $400,000 AGI (unchanged) |
| Phase-out rate | $50 per $1,000 | $50 per $1,000 (unchanged) |
| ACTC formula | 15% of earned income above $2,500 | 15% of earned income above $2,500 |
| Qualifying child age | Under 17 | Under 17 (unchanged) |
| SSN required | Yes | Yes (unchanged) |
| Sunset | December 31, 2025 (pre-OBBBA) | December 31, 2028 |
Who Is a Qualifying Child for the CTC?
The qualifying child tests are defined in IRC §24 and IRC §152. A child must meet all of the following to count for the Child Tax Credit:
- Age: Under age 17 at the end of the tax year. A child who turns 17 during 2025 does not qualify for the 2025 CTC.
- Relationship: Your child, stepchild, foster child placed by an authorized agency, sibling, step-sibling, half-sibling, or a descendant of any of these (e.g., grandchild, niece, nephew).
- Residency: Lived with you for more than half of the tax year. Temporary absences for school, medical care, or detention count as living with you.
- Support: Did not provide more than half of their own financial support during the year.
- Dependent: Claimed as your dependent on your return. You cannot claim a child as a dependent if someone else already claimed them.
- Citizenship: U.S. citizen, U.S. national, or U.S. resident alien.
- Social Security number: Must have a valid SSN issued by the Social Security Administration before the due date of the return (including extensions). An ITIN is not sufficient for the CTC.
For tax year 2025, a child born January 1, 2025 through December 31, 2025 is under age 17 at year-end and meets the age test. A child born in 2025 may also qualify for the $1,000 Trump Account federal seed, which is a separate OBBBA benefit.
How the Phase-Out Works
The CTC is reduced for higher-income taxpayers. The phase-out is calculated based on your modified adjusted gross income (MAGI), which for most taxpayers equals AGI from line 11 of Form 1040.
The phase-out begins at:
- $200,000 MAGI for single filers, heads of household, and married filing separately
- $400,000 MAGI for married filing jointly
For each $1,000 (or fraction thereof) of MAGI above the applicable threshold, the credit is reduced by $50. The credit cannot be reduced below zero.
Example: A single filer with $215,000 AGI and one qualifying child. AGI excess: $215,000 minus $200,000 = $15,000. Number of $1,000 increments: 15. Phase-out: 15 × $50 = $750. Net CTC: $2,200 minus $750 = $1,450.
The credit is fully eliminated for single filers at approximately $244,000 AGI with one child ($2,200 ÷ $50 = 44 increments × $1,000 = $44,000 above threshold). With two children, elimination occurs at approximately $288,000 AGI.
How the Additional Child Tax Credit (ACTC) Works
The ACTC is the refundable portion of the Child Tax Credit. It matters most to lower-income families whose CTC exceeds their income tax liability.
The ACTC equals the lesser of:
- The amount of the CTC that exceeds your federal income tax liability (the unused credit)
- 15% of your earned income above $2,500
For tax year 2025, "earned income" for ACTC purposes includes wages, salaries, tips, and net self-employment income.
Example: A single parent with one child. Net CTC: $2,200. Federal income tax before credits: $800. Non-refundable CTC applied: $800 (reduces tax to $0). Unused CTC: $1,400. Earned income: $38,000. ACTC formula: 15% × ($38,000 − $2,500) = 15% × $35,500 = $5,325. ACTC (capped at lesser of unused CTC $1,400 and $1,700 cap): $1,400. Total CTC benefit: $800 (non-refundable) + $1,400 (refundable) = $2,200.
Married filing separately filers are generally not eligible for the ACTC.
PATH Act: Why ACTC Refunds Are Delayed
The Protecting Americans from Tax Hikes (PATH) Act requires the IRS to hold all refunds that include the Additional Child Tax Credit until after February 15 each year.
This rule applies regardless of when you file your return. Filing in January does not move your refund earlier if your return includes the ACTC.
Most ACTC refunds are released within 2 to 3 weeks after February 15. If you file after February 15, the PATH Act hold does not apply, and the standard processing window of 10 to 21 days applies to e-filed returns.
To estimate when your ACTC refund may arrive, use the Refund Date Estimator and select the "Includes EITC or Additional Child Tax Credit" return type for an accurate timeline projection.
How the CTC Interacts with Other OBBBA Provisions
The Child Tax Credit is one of several family-focused provisions in the OBBBA. Two others are closely related for parents of young children.
Trump Account (MAGA Account)
Children born after December 31, 2024 may be eligible for a Trump Account: a new savings vehicle created by the OBBBA that provides a $1,000 federal seed contribution and allows up to $5,000 in annual after-tax contributions. The Trump Account is a long-term savings tool invested in U.S. equity index funds, with distributions available beginning at age 18.
The CTC and a Trump Account operate independently. A parent may claim the CTC for the same child who has a Trump Account. Contributing to a Trump Account does not reduce your CTC, and the CTC does not affect the Trump Account's $1,000 federal seed or contribution limit. Use the Trump Account Calculator to project account growth to age 18.
Other OBBBA Deductions
The OBBBA also created above-the-line income deductions for tips (IRC §224), overtime (IRC §225), and auto loan interest (IRC §163(h)(4)), and expanded the SALT cap from $10,000 to $40,000 for itemizers. These deductions reduce your AGI and taxable income, which may reduce your income tax liability. A lower tax liability means more of your CTC may become refundable as ACTC rather than being absorbed by tax liability. They are calculated separately from the CTC.
Confirmed vs. Pending Guidance
The core CTC rules are set in statute. A small number of implementation details are still pending IRS guidance.
Who Benefits Most
Practitioner Insight (LMN Tax Inc.)
In practice, many clients with young children do not realize the $200 per child OBBBA increase flows through to the ACTC for lower-income families. For a family with two children and modest income, the additional $400 in CTC often converts entirely to a larger ACTC refund rather than reducing a tax bill that was already near zero. The PATH Act hold matters here: these families count on mid-February refunds for rent or bills. Setting the right expectation about the February 15 hold date is often the most practical thing we can communicate at intake.
Real-World Scenario
Family profile: Married filing jointly. Two qualifying children, ages 5 and 8. AGI: $110,000. Tax liability before credits: $8,400.
Pre-OBBBA (TY 2024): CTC = $2,000 × 2 children = $4,000 total. No phase-out (AGI below $400,000 MFJ threshold). Credit reduces tax liability from $8,400 to $4,400.
OBBBA (TY 2025–2028): CTC = $2,200 × 2 children = $4,400 total. Phase-out still does not apply. Credit reduces tax liability from $8,400 to $4,000. Net improvement: $400 in additional savings compared to prior law.
ACTC implication: This family has sufficient tax liability to absorb the full credit as a non-refundable offset. For a family with lower tax liability, say $2,000, the OBBBA increase adds $400 more credit, a larger portion of which becomes refundable ACTC (up to 15% of earned income above $2,500, capped at $1,700 per child for TY 2025).
When These Rules May Not Apply
- Child turns 17 in the tax year: The age cutoff is under 17 at December 31 of the tax year. A child who was 16 for most of 2025 but turns 17 before December 31 does not qualify.
- No valid SSN: A child with an Individual Taxpayer Identification Number (ITIN) instead of an SSN does not qualify for the CTC or ACTC. An ITIN is not a valid SSN for this purpose.
- Married filing separately: MFS filers can generally claim the non-refundable CTC against their tax liability but are not eligible for the refundable ACTC.
- Divorced or separated parents: The CTC goes to the custodial parent (the one with whom the child lived for more than half the year) unless the custodial parent releases the exemption to the non-custodial parent on Form 8332. The ACTC cannot be transferred to the non-custodial parent even with Form 8332.
- Child provided more than half their own support: A child who worked and provided more than half of their own support fails the support test. This is rare for children under 17 but can occur.
- State CTC conformity: Many states have not conformed to the OBBBA increase. Your state child tax credit, if any, may be based on the prior $2,000 federal amount or a separate state formula.
- After 2028: The OBBBA provisions sunset after December 31, 2028. The $2,200 amount, phase-out thresholds, and other changes revert without further legislation.
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Tools and Guides
What To Do Next
Use the Child Tax Credit Calculator to estimate your CTC, phase-out reduction, and refundable ACTC for tax year 2025. Enter your filing status, AGI, number of qualifying children, earned income, and estimated tax before credits to get a full breakdown.
If your return will include the ACTC, use the Refund Date Estimator to estimate when your IRS deposit will arrive. Select the ACTC return type in that calculator to account for the PATH Act hold.
If you have children born after December 31, 2024, review the Trump Account Guide to understand the $1,000 federal seed and $5,000 annual contribution limit that apply to those same children independently of the CTC.
The CTC increase is one of six OBBBA provisions for TY 2025–2028. If you also have tip income, overtime pay, or a new car loan, additional deductions may apply on the same return. See the OBBBA Tax Changes Guide for a complete comparison of all six provisions and how to coordinate them at filing.