Big Tax Relief for Seniors in 2026: Your Social Security May Go Untaxed
Millions of Americans relying on Social Security could see major tax changes starting in 2026.
Nearly 74 million people receive benefits, and many depend on Social Security for more than half of their income.
Read: Get Your 2025 Social Security Disability Benefits Quicker With Compassionate Allowances
Here’s a quick breakdown of the key updates that matter most.
1. New $6,000 Senior Deduction Through 2028
A new provision under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act introduces a $6,000 bonus deduction for taxpayers 65+.
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$6,000 per individual
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$12,000 for married couples filing jointly
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Available 2026–2028
According to the White House Council of Economic Advisors, this deduction could increase the share of seniors who owe no federal tax on Social Security from 64% to 88%, meaning millions may pay less or nothing at all.
2. Possible End to Federal Taxes on Social Security
Lawmakers continue pushing for broader tax relief.
Rep. Angie Craig’s You Earned It, You Keep It Act (reintroduced in 2025) proposes eliminating federal taxes on Social Security entirely starting with 2026 tax returns (filed in 2027). Lost revenue would be offset by raising the payroll tax cap.
SSI benefits remain fully untaxed.
3. How Social Security Is Taxed Today
Federal taxation depends on combined income, calculated as:
AGI + tax-exempt interest + 50% of Social Security benefits
Example:
$30,000 AGI + $1,000 tax-exempt interest + $7,500 (half of $15,000 benefits)
= $38,500 combined income (up to 85% of benefits taxable)
Estimations vary:
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White House says 36% of recipients pay taxes
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SSA says closer to 50%
4. States That Tax Social Security
Nine states still tax benefits (rules vary): Colorado, Connecticut, Minnesota, Montana, New Mexico, Rhode Island, Vermont, Utah, West Virginia
Seniors can request withholding of 7%, 10%, 12%, or 22% through their SSA account or 800-772-1213.
5. IRS Direct File Removed for 2026
Nearly 300,000 Americans who used IRS Direct File in 2025 will lose access next season.
A FOIA request confirmed 296,531 returns were filed through the program in 2025. The Trump Administration has now halted development for 2026.
As of Nov. 5, 2025, the IRS notice reads: “Direct File is closed. More information will be available at a later date.”
Officials argue private companies can manage e-filing more effectively.
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