The OBBBA created a new above-the-line deduction of up to $6,000 per person age 65 or older for tax years 2025 through 2028. It stacks on the standard deduction and also applies to itemizers. It phases out beginning at $75,000 MAGI for single filers and $150,000 MAGI for married filing jointly. Married filing separately filers are ineligible. The deduction expires after December 31, 2028.
- The OBBBA §70103 enhanced senior deduction is $6,000 per eligible person age 65 or older ($12,000 for MFJ couples both 65+).
- It is separate from the standard deduction age add-on ($2,000 single / $1,600 married per IRC §63(f)).
- Both standard deduction takers and itemizers can claim the $6,000.
- Phase-out: $75,000 MAGI single/HOH; $150,000 MAGI MFJ. Rate: $60 per $1,000 excess. Eliminated: $175,000 single; $250,000 MFJ.
- Married filing separately filers are ineligible for the $6,000 deduction.
- The deduction expires after TY 2028. The standard deduction and age add-ons are permanent.
What Is the Enhanced Deduction for Seniors?
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (Pub. L. 119-21, signed July 4, 2025) created a new federal tax deduction specifically for older Americans. Under §70103 of the Act (codified in IRC), each person who is age 65 or older by December 31 of the tax year may claim up to $6,000 as an additional deduction.
On a married filing jointly return where both spouses are 65 or older, the combined deduction can reach $12,000. This is not a standard deduction adjustment. It is a separate above-the-line deduction claimed on Schedule 1-A (Additional Deductions), the same schedule used for the OBBBA tip, overtime, and auto loan interest deductions.
The deduction is phased out at higher incomes and is ineligible for married filing separately filers. It applies for tax years 2025 through 2028, after which it expires unless extended by Congress.
| Item | Value | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Amount per eligible person | $6,000 | Confirmed |
| Maximum for MFJ (both 65+) | $12,000 | Confirmed |
| Age requirement | 65 or older by December 31 of tax year | Confirmed |
| MFS eligibility | Ineligible | Confirmed |
| Phase-out threshold: single/HOH | $75,000 MAGI | From P.L. 119-21 §70103 |
| Phase-out threshold: MFJ | $150,000 MAGI | From P.L. 119-21 §70103 |
| Phase-out rate | $60 reduction per $1,000 excess MAGI | From P.L. 119-21 §70103 |
| Fully eliminated at (single/HOH) | $175,000 MAGI | Derived from phase-out rate |
| Fully eliminated at (MFJ per person) | $250,000 MAGI | Derived from phase-out rate |
| Applies to itemizers | Yes | Confirmed |
| Claimed on | Schedule 1-A (Form 1040) | Confirmed |
| Tax years | 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028 | Confirmed |
How the $6,000 Bonus Deduction Works
The OBBBA enhanced senior deduction is distinct from the standard deduction and its add-ons. Understanding the three layers helps clarify how large a deduction a senior taxpayer can claim.
Layer 1: Base Standard Deduction
The 2025 base standard deduction is $15,750 for single filers, $31,500 for married filing jointly, and $23,625 for head of household. These amounts were raised by the OBBBA (P.L. 119-21 §70102) above the pre-OBBBA inflation figures under IRC §63(c). Married filing separately filers also receive $15,750. These figures are confirmed by IRS Rev. Proc. 2025-32 §3.
Layer 2: Age and Blind Add-Ons under IRC §63(f)
In addition to the base, taxpayers taking the standard deduction receive an extra amount for age 65+ and/or legal blindness. The amount is $2,000 per condition for single filers and heads of household, and $1,600 per condition per person for married filers. These add-ons stack: a single filer who is 65 and legally blind gets $4,000 in add-ons above the $15,750 base, for a total of $19,750 before the OBBBA $6,000.
These add-ons only apply when taking the standard deduction. They do not apply to itemizers.
Layer 3: OBBBA $6,000 Enhanced Senior Deduction (§70103)
This is the new provision. Each person 65 or older by December 31 can claim up to $6,000. Unlike Layers 1 and 2, this deduction is not part of the standard deduction calculation. It is claimed on Schedule 1-A and reduces income above the line. Both standard deduction takers and itemizers can use it.
The combined effect for a single filer age 65 or older with MAGI below $75,000: $15,750 (base) + $2,000 (age add-on) + $6,000 (OBBBA) = $23,750 total deduction. For a married couple both 65 or older with MAGI below $150,000: $31,500 + $3,200 + $12,000 = $46,700.
Senior Standard Deduction Amounts by Filing Status (2025-2026)
| Filing Status / Situation | Base | Age/Blind Add-Ons | OBBBA $6K | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single, age 65+ | $15,750 | $2,000 | $6,000 | $23,750 |
| Single, age 65+, blind | $15,750 | $4,000 | $6,000 | $25,750 |
| HOH, age 65+ | $23,625 | $2,000 | $6,000 | $31,625 |
| MFJ, one spouse 65+ | $31,500 | $1,600 | $6,000 | $39,100 |
| MFJ, both spouses 65+ | $31,500 | $3,200 | $12,000 | $46,700 |
| MFJ, both 65+, both blind | $31,500 | $6,400 | $12,000 | $49,900 |
| MFS, age 65+ | $15,750 | $1,600 | Ineligible | $17,350 |
OBBBA column assumes MAGI below phase-out threshold ($75,000 single/HOH; $150,000 MFJ). Use the Senior Standard Deduction Calculator to get a result for your specific MAGI.
MAGI Phase-Out Rules for the Senior Deduction
The $6,000 OBBBA enhanced senior deduction phases out for higher-income taxpayers. The phase-out affects only the $6,000 OBBBA deduction. The base standard deduction and age/blind add-ons are not reduced by the phase-out.
$75,000 Threshold for Single Filers and HOH
For single filers and heads of household, the deduction begins phasing out at $75,000 MAGI. For every $1,000 of MAGI above $75,000, the $6,000 deduction is reduced by $60. The deduction reaches zero at $175,000 MAGI.
Example: A single filer at $110,000 MAGI has $35,000 of excess MAGI above the $75,000 threshold. The reduction is 35 increments × $60 = $2,100. The remaining OBBBA deduction is $6,000 minus $2,100 = $3,900.
$150,000 Threshold for Married Filing Jointly
For married filing jointly filers, the phase-out threshold is $150,000 MAGI. Each eligible spouse's $6,000 deduction phases out at the same rate: $60 per $1,000 of joint MAGI above $150,000. Both deductions are fully eliminated at $250,000 MAGI.
Example: A couple both age 65 or older with $180,000 joint MAGI. Excess: $30,000. Reduction per spouse: 30 × $60 = $1,800. Each spouse retains $6,000 minus $1,800 = $4,200. Combined OBBBA deduction: $8,400 (instead of the maximum $12,000).
Married Filing Separately: Ineligible
Married filing separately filers cannot claim the $6,000 OBBBA enhanced senior deduction at any income level. They still receive the base standard deduction of $15,750 and the age/blind add-on of $1,600 per condition. The MFS disqualification is identical to the treatment of other OBBBA deductions (tips, overtime, auto loan interest).
Does the Senior Deduction Eliminate Social Security Taxes?
The OBBBA $6,000 senior deduction does not change the Social Security benefit taxability rules. Those rules were set in 1983 and 1993 and have not been adjusted for inflation since. The provisional income thresholds remain: $25,000 and $34,000 for single filers, $32,000 and $44,000 for married filing jointly.
The $6,000 deduction reduces your AGI, which is one component of the provisional income formula (AGI + tax-exempt interest + 50% of Social Security benefits). A lower AGI can, in some cases, reduce the taxable portion of Social Security benefits. But the deduction does not change the statutory thresholds themselves.
For a taxpayer exactly at the phase-in threshold, reducing MAGI by $6,000 through the OBBBA deduction can shift a meaningful portion of Social Security income from taxable to non-taxable status. This is an indirect benefit, not a direct exemption. The interaction depends on individual income composition. Use the Social Security Tax Calculator to model how the deduction affects your taxable benefit amount.
How to Claim the Enhanced Senior Deduction on Your Return
The OBBBA $6,000 enhanced senior deduction is claimed on Schedule 1-A (Additional Deductions), which attaches to Form 1040. Schedule 1-A was created by the IRS specifically for OBBBA above-the-line deductions.
The base standard deduction and age/blind add-ons continue to be reported on Form 1040 line 12. There is no interaction between that line and Schedule 1-A. If you take the standard deduction, you report the full standard deduction on line 12 and separately claim the $6,000 on Schedule 1-A. If you itemize, you report your itemized deductions on line 12 and still claim the $6,000 on Schedule 1-A.
To document eligibility, you need to confirm your age as of December 31 of the tax year. For tax year 2025, you must be 65 or older by December 31, 2025. No separate certification is required. Your date of birth on your return is sufficient.
Your MAGI for the phase-out is calculated before the $6,000 deduction is applied. Most taxpayers can use their AGI as a reasonable approximation of MAGI for this calculation, though MAGI adds back certain deductions (like IRA deductions and student loan interest).
Sunset Date: The OBBBA Senior Deduction Expires After 2028
The $6,000 enhanced senior deduction expires after December 31, 2028. It applies to tax years 2025, 2026, 2027, and 2028 only. For tax year 2029 and beyond, the deduction will not be available unless Congress enacts new legislation to extend it.
This sunset applies only to the OBBBA $6,000 deduction. The standard deduction, the age and blind add-ons under IRC §63(f), and the broader standard deduction structure are permanent provisions of the tax code and are not affected by the OBBBA sunset.
The OBBBA senior deduction shares the same 2025-2028 window as the tip deduction (IRC §224), overtime deduction (IRC §225), and auto loan interest deduction (IRC §163(h)(4)). The SALT deduction cap increase runs one year longer, through 2029.
Real-World Example
Margaret is 73 years old, single, and retired. Her income for 2025 consists of Social Security benefits and IRA distributions. Her MAGI is $82,000.
- Base standard deduction: $15,750
- Age add-on (single, 65+): $2,000
- MAGI $82,000 vs. $75,000 threshold: $7,000 excess
- OBBBA phase-out: 7 increments × $60 = $420 reduction
- Remaining OBBBA deduction: $6,000 minus $420 = $5,580
- Total deduction: $15,750 + $2,000 + $5,580 = $23,330
At a 22% marginal rate, the $5,580 OBBBA deduction alone reduces her federal tax bill by approximately $1,228. If she were to make a $7,000 Qualified Charitable Distribution from her IRA this year, that distribution would reduce her MAGI to $75,000, eliminating the phase-out and restoring the full $6,000 OBBBA deduction. The additional $420 of deduction recovered would save $92 in federal taxes at 22%.
Practitioner Insight (LMN Tax Inc.)
At LMN Tax Inc., we see the OBBBA senior deduction as the most underappreciated provision in the entire bill for our client base. The majority of our retired clients have MAGI in the $50,000 to $120,000 range, which means many are in or near the phase-out zone. Unlike the CTC or earned income provisions, this deduction applies to taxpayers who by definition are likely to have lower earned income and higher unearned income. For clients who itemize due to significant medical expenses or remaining mortgage interest, the $6,000 stacks on top of their itemized total. Most do not realize this. The two most common mistakes we see: first, clients who think the $6,000 replaces the age add-on rather than stacking on it. Second, clients at $76,000 or $80,000 MAGI who do not realize they can recover the full deduction with a modest QCD. We run the MAGI reduction scenario for every retired client in the phase-out range before year-end.
When This Deduction May Not Apply
- Married filing separately: MFS filers are fully disqualified from the $6,000 OBBBA senior deduction at any income level. The standard deduction and age/blind add-ons still apply.
- Under age 65: The age cutoff is 65 by December 31 of the tax year. A taxpayer who turns 65 on January 1, 2026 does not qualify for the 2025 deduction.
- High MAGI: The deduction is zero for single/HOH filers with MAGI at or above $175,000, and for MFJ filers with MAGI at or above $250,000. The base standard deduction and age/blind add-ons still apply even when the OBBBA $6,000 is fully phased out.
- State conformity: Most states have not conformed to the OBBBA senior deduction. The deduction reduces federal taxable income but may not reduce state taxable income. Check your state's department of revenue for current conformity rules.
- After 2028: The deduction expires after December 31, 2028. It will not apply to tax year 2029 without new legislation.
Frequently Asked Questions
What To Do Next
Use the Senior Standard Deduction Calculator to get a precise estimate for your situation. Enter your filing status, age and blind flags, and MAGI to see your total deduction broken down by layer: base, age/blind add-ons, and OBBBA $6,000.
If your MAGI is near the $75,000 (single/HOH) or $150,000 (MFJ) threshold, consider MAGI-reducing strategies before year-end. Qualified Charitable Distributions from an IRA are one of the most effective because they do not appear in AGI at all. A $10,000 QCD by a single filer at $85,000 MAGI recovers the full OBBBA deduction at a fraction of the tax cost.
If you also pay significant state and local taxes, estimate your SALT deduction using the SALT Deduction Calculator. Under the OBBBA, the SALT cap increased to $40,000 for TY 2025. For some seniors in high-tax states, this means itemizing for the first time in years. The OBBBA $6,000 deduction applies on top of your itemized deductions in that case.
For a full overview of all OBBBA provisions and how they interact, see the OBBBA Tax Changes Guide.
Related Tools and Guides
- IRS.gov — Tax Topic 551: Standard Deduction (2025 age and blind add-on amounts)
- IRS.gov — 2025 Tax Inflation Adjustments (base standard deduction amounts)
- IRS.gov — Publication 501 (Enhanced Deduction for Seniors)
- One Big Beautiful Bill Act (H.R. 1, 119th Congress) — §70103 Enhanced Senior Deduction