Senate Finance Chairman Circulates Draft Tax Legislation as Senate Prepares for Reconciliation Debate
June 20, 2025
The Senate Finance Committee released the draft legislative text and a section-by-section summary of its portion of the budget reconciliation bill, encompassing tax cuts, extensions of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), and an overhaul of Medicaid. The draft Senate bill has several differences compared to the House-passed One, Big, Beautiful Bill Act.
Why it Matters
The 549-page proposal would permanently extend the 20% pass-through business income deduction (Section 199A), 100% bonus depreciation, and the Opportunity Zone tax incentives. (Bisnow, June 16)
The Senate bill would also increase the debt ceiling to $5 trillion instead of the $4 trillion that passed the House. (Axios, June 18)
The legislation should continue to evolve through upcoming manager’s amendments, as negotiations among Senate Republicans and the White House continue.
Senate Finance Committee Chair Mike Crapo (R-ID) confirmed on Tuesday that his panel will not formally take up the sprawling tax package.
CRE Provisions in Senate Bill
Key provisions under Senate consideration include:
Section 899 “Revenge Tax” Provisions: Includes retaliatory tax measures on foreign companies and investors similar to the House bill but delaying the effective date until 2027. The draft clarifies that certain lending would be exempt under the portfolio interest exception, but it does not exempt all passive investment in U.S. real estate—an area of continued concern. (Bloomberg, June 17)
Opportunity Zones: Permanently extends OZ incentives, establishes recurring 10-year census tract designations, a rolling reset of deferral windows, new Rural OZs, and a phase-in of the 10% basis step-up for reinvested gains. (The Hill, June 16 | BisNow, June 17)
Low-Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC): Permanently increases state LIHTC allocations by 12% and lowers the private activity bond threshold from 50% to 25%—in line with the House bill.
Bonus Depreciation: Permanently extends 100% bonus depreciation for property acquired and placed in service after Jan. 19, 2025.
Business Interest Deductibility: Permanently modifies section 163(j) to allow interest deductions based on earnings before depreciation and amortization (EBITDA), effective for tax years after Dec. 31, 2024.
Factory Expensing: Provides four years of 100% expensing for factories that begin construction after Jan. 19, 2025, and are placed in service by Dec. 31, 2030.
New Markets Tax Credit: Permanently extends the NMTC, which currently expires on Dec. 31, 2025.
SALT Cap: Permanently extends the $10K SALT deduction cap for individuals, with negotiations on a larger increase ongoing. The bill retains full deductibility for business property taxes paid by pass-throughs, but limits the amount of state and local income taxes that pass-through owners can deduct through SALT workaround laws enacted in various states.
Energy Tax Incentives: Maintains House-passed foreign entity rules and includes a phasedown of the clean electricity investment tax credit. The clean electricity investment tax credit is phased out over three years (100% if construction begins in 2025, 60% if construction begins in 2026, 20% in 2027, and terminated thereafter). Unlike the House bill, the Senate version terminates section 179D for property constructed 12 months after enactment.
Immigration – Gold Card Proposal
Last week, President Donald Trump launched TrumpCard.gov for individuals to register for a proposed “gold card" that would grant U.S. permanent residency to eligible applicants for $5 million (Axios, June 11)
Announced in February, the plan aims to sell up to 1 million cards, an effort President Trump claims could generate enough revenue to retire the national debt. The website currently only collects basic contact information. (USA Today, June 11)
The administration says the program would replace the EB-5 visa, but legal questions remain about whether a new visa program can proceed without congressional approval. (CBS News, June 12)
In March, RER sent a letter to Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, expressing support for pairing the "Gold card" proposal with the existing EB-5 framework, offering a powerful, dual-track approach that would reform America’s visa system, attract top global talent, and drive foreign investment into strategic, job-creating projects. (Letter, March 11 | RW, March 14)
State of Play
Republican leaders are pushing for swift negotiations to revise the Senate tax bill as White House officials hold firm on the July 4 deadline despite mounting GOP skepticism. (Bloomberg, June 17)
“We first get 51 senators together and then we’ll see what the House can do,” Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) said Tuesday, referring to the legislation released this week as “an initial draft.” (PoliticoPro, June 17)
Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD) said Wednesday that the chamber is aiming to begin consideration of the GOP’s party-line megabill by mid-next week. (Axios, June 18)
RER remains closely engaged with policymakers on the Hill and the administration on several high-stake policy issues, such as the retaliatory tax measures and the Opportunity Zone provisions.