
As part of recently enacted federal tax legislation, several important updates are taking effect over the next few years. Many of these changes impact retirees or those approaching retirement, and we wanted to highlight the provisions most relevant to our clients.
Overall, the new law makes many of the 2017 tax rules permanent, introduces a few temporary tax benefits, modifies itemized deductions, and significantly expands the federal estate tax exemption starting in 2026. Below is a summary of what’s changing and how it may affect your planning.
The new legislation makes the current tax bracket system permanent. This means:
What this means for you:
Most retirees will continue to fall within the same familiar tax brackets. The “scheduled” 2026 tax increase is no longer happening under current law.
A major change for retirees is the introduction of a new temporary senior deduction:
Why it matters:
For many retirees, this can reduce taxable income enough to lower Social Security taxation or offset IRA withdrawals.
Planning point:
We will continue to help you monitor your income levels to help you preserve this deduction where appropriate, using tools such as Qualified Charitable Distributions (QCDs), strategic IRA withdrawals, tax-advantaged accounts, and Roth conversion planning.
For clients who pay state income taxes, this change is meaningful.
Why it matters:
More clients will be able to itemize deductions again, especially those paying NYS income tax and property taxes. This may reduce overall federal tax liability in the coming years.
Two notable updates begin in 2026:
Why it matters:
Retirees who consistently donate—even without itemizing—will now receive some tax benefit. Larger donors may want to continue exploring donor-advised funds or gifting strategies.
While the new law does not change RMD ages or SECURE Act rules, it does influence retirement planning strategy:
Stable Tax Brackets = More Flexibility
With tax brackets now permanent under current law, Roth conversions no longer face a 2025 “deadline.” Instead, planning becomes more about optimizing brackets over many tax years and managing Medicare IRMAA thresholds.
QCDs Become Even More Valuable
QCDs remain one of the most effective tools for retirees to:
We will continue evaluating this strategy annually for eligible clients.
Beginning in 2026:
What this means:
Many families who were previously concerned about the projected 2026 reduction in the exemption will now fall well below the federal estate tax threshold.
However, New York State estate tax rules remain unchanged and still includes the “cliff,” so state-level estate tax planning remains important.
While the following updates may not apply to everyone, they are worth noting:
Tax-Free Tips (2025–2028)
Tax-Free Overtime Pay (2025–2028)
Car Loan Interest Deduction (2025–2028)
Wind-Down of Energy & EV Credits
New Government-Funded Child Accounts (2025–2028)
We will continue incorporating these tax-law changes into your financial plan. As always, if you have questions about how any of these updates may impact you, please reach out. We’re here to help you navigate these changes and make thoughtful, informed financial decisions.
Canty Financial Management
| Bill Canty, CFP®, CPA, Financial Planner
Ed Canty, CFP®, Financial Planner Joe Canty, CFP®, Financial Planner Tina Alteri, CPA, Tax Advisor |

