Craig Lundquist and Kristin Becker photo
Ideal Wealth Advisors logo

Craig Lundquist, MBA, ChFC®, CRPC®

VP of Wealth Management

clundquist@idealcu.com

651-773-2757

 

Kristin Becker

Senior Administrative Assistant

kbecker@idealcu.com

651-773-2821

 

Ideal Wealth Advisors

Located at Ideal Credit Union

8499 Tamarack Road

Woodbury, MN 55125

 

CRPC conferred by College for Financial Planning

January/February 2026

OBBBA and Businesses

Receptionist taking payment for the customers. African American barber, black small business owner, African American business. Barbershop and happy barber.

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), enacted on July 4, 2025, introduces significant tax and financial changes that reshape the landscape for small business owners. This legislation offers opportunities for growth but also presents challenges, requiring strategic planning to maximize benefits.


Qualified Business Income (QBI)
A cornerstone of the OBBBA is the permanent extension of the 20% Qualified Business Income (QBI) deduction for pass-through entities like sole proprietorships, partnerships, and LLCs. With increased income phase-out thresholds ($75,000 for single filers, $150,000 for joint) and a $400 minimum deduction for businesses earning at least $1,000 in QBI, this provision enhances tax savings, provided 75% of gross receipts come from qualifying activities.


Expensing
The act also boosts investment through enhanced Section 179 expensing, raising the deduction limit to $2.5 million with a $4 million phase-out, and reinstating 100% bonus depreciation for assets acquired after January 19, 2025. These measures enable small businesses to deduct equipment and property costs upfront, improving cash flow for expansion.


Research-focused businesses benefit from immediate expensing of domestic Research & Experimental costs starting in 2025, with retroactive relief for 2022–2024 for firms with under $31 million in receipts. The state and local tax (SALT) deduction cap increases to $40,000 through 2029, aiding owners in hightax states, while pass-through entities can leverage Pass-Through Entity Taxes to bypass individual caps.


Compliance
Compliance burdens ease with simplified reporting. The 1099-MISC and 1099-NEC threshold rises to $2,000 starting in 2026, and third-party payment reporting reverts to a $20,000/200-transaction threshold, reducing administrative tasks for small businesses and gig workers.


Qualified Small Business Stock
The OBBBA enhances Qualified Small Business Stock (QSBS) exclusions (50% at three years, 100% at five) and offers credits for employerprovided childcare (up to $600,000 for small businesses) and paid family leave, benefiting service industries. However, challenges include stricter 1099 compliance, the rollback of clean energy credits, and potential cost increases from tariffs, which could strain supply chains. Social program cuts may also raise healthcare costs.


Small business owners should consult tax professionals to navigate the OBBBA's complexities, optimize tax benefits, and prepare for economic shifts.

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Securities and advisory services are offered through LPL Financial (LPL), a registered investment advisor and broker-dealer (member FINRA/SIPC). Insurance products are offered through LPL or its licensed affiliates. Ideal Credit Union and Ideal Wealth Advisors are not registered as a broker/dealer or investment advisor. Registered representatives of LPL offer products and services using Ideal Wealth Advisors, and may also be employees of Ideal Credit Union. These products and services are being offered through LPL or its affiliates, which are separate entities from and not affiliates of Ideal Credit Union or Ideal Wealth Advisors. Securities and insurance offered through LPL or its affiliates are:

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