The White House in Washington, D. C. on a sunny day.Takeaways

The Passage of the OBBBA

On July 4, flanked by cheering supporters and with military jets soaring overhead, President Donald Trump signed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) into law.

The signing ceremony, part of the Independence Day festivities at the White House, culminated in a fireworks show. But the biggest fireworks may still be ahead as key provisions of the law come into force. From ending the looming gift and estate tax exemption limits to slashing Medicaid funding, OBBBA brings changes that directly — and indirectly — impact estate and financial planning.

Continue reading for a breakdown of several top-level takeaways from this “once-in-a-generation” legislation that is poised to shape generational wealth and family plans for decades to come.

The Estate Tax Exemption Gets a Boost — But Planning Is Still Essential

For years, estate planners and high-net-worth families were racing the clock. The 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), passed during Trump’s first administration, doubled the federal estate and gift tax exemption, along with the generation-skipping transfer (GST) tax exemption, but only temporarily.

Without action, the exemptions were set to drop back to pre-2017 levels (adjusted for inflation) at the start of 2026 due to a TCJA “sunset” provision that had many scrambling to lock in wealth transfers.

The OBBBA rewrites that narrative. Beginning in 2026, the federal estate, gift, and GST tax exemptions will increase to $15 million per individual (and $30 million per married couple), with inflation adjustments starting in 2027.

The bottom line: The higher federal limits buy time, but they don’t “sunset” the need for a thoughtful, up-to-date estate plan. Now is a good time to review your existing plan to ensure it still aligns with your goals.

While the new exemption limits will probably only impact around 1 to 2 percent (or fewer) of households, they’re just one small part of a sweeping, hundreds-of-pages-long law. Whenever tax laws change — and the OBBBA is full of tax changes it’s recommended that you revisit your plan.

Medicaid Reductions and Long-Term Care Plans

One of the more controversial parts of the OBBBA is the estimated $1 trillion in Medicaid cuts over the next decade.

Much of the debate has focused on work requirements for Medicaid — provisions that could result in more than 5 million adults losing coverage. But most Medicaid adults under age 65 are already working.

Less attention has been paid to how Medicaid cuts could impact the long-term care of millions of Americans, many of whom need these services due to disabling conditions and chronic illnesses.

In the United States, Medicaid is the primary payer for long-term care services, including institutional care like nursing homes and care provided in a person’s home or community. According to KFF, in 2020, 4.2 million people used these services, with Medicaid covering over half of spending.

States rely heavily on federal Medicaid funding, which generally covers 50 to 77 percent of traditional Medicaid populations and 90 percent of expanded Medicaid populations under the Affordable Care Act (ACA). In 2024, the federal government covered approximately two-thirds of total Medicaid costs. About one-third of Medicaid spending goes directly to long-term care services.

Reducing Medicaid spending (about 9 percent of the federal budget) could help offset the costs of extending TCJA tax cuts. But these reductions — including rollbacks to ACA Medicaid expansion funding — may lead to cuts or shifts in long-term care services and other Medicaid services.

The bottom line: Medicaid funds nearly half of U.S. long-term care spending and, by default, has become the nation’s long-term care program. But under OBBBA, and with ACA expansion funding rolled back, how — and how much — Medicaid covers will depend on your state.

Reviewing your long-term care plan now can help avoid gaps if future changes reduce eligibility or available services. Tools such as irrevocable trusts or private long-term care insurance could help protect your assets and secure care options if coverage rules change in your state. For those using a Medicaid “spend down” strategy, OBBBA’s changes, such as the new home equity cap, may require a fresh look at long-term care planning options to maintain eligibility.

Time for “One Big Beautiful” Plan Review

The OBBBA has been called a “tax bill” and a “budget reconciliation bill” but it’s really a sweeping overhaul of financial, health care, and estate planning rules. In addition to long-term care and estate tax changes, the legislation:

These are just a few of the changes tucked into the OBBBA’s hundreds of provisions, each of which can ripple into others, affecting everything from gifting strategies and philanthropic plans to business succession and real estate transactions.

The bottom line: With so many moving parts, reviewing your estate plan, tax strategies, and long-term care arrangements has never been more important. A trusted advisor can help you evaluate your current circumstances and plans, understand how the OBBBA might affect them, and adjust strategies if needed.

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