What Changed for Small Business Taxes in 2026

What Changed for Small Business Taxes in 2026?

The biggest 2026 changes for small business owners come from the One Big Beautiful Bill: 100% bonus depreciation and expanded Section 179 expensing are now permanent, the Qualified Business Income (QBI) deduction gained long-term clarity, 1099 reporting thresholds reverted, and several credits phased out after 2025.

The changes that matter most: After years of temporary and expiring provisions, 2026 brings a more stable framework — which makes proactive planning more valuable, not less. The headline items:

  • 100% bonus depreciation is permanent again. Qualifying equipment placed in service in 2026 can be fully deducted in the year you put it to use.
  •  Section 179 expensing limits expanded, giving more room to immediately deduct equipment and property purchases.
  • QBI deduction clarity. The pass-through deduction is now on stable footing for long-term planning, though income thresholds and service-business limits still apply.
  • 1099 thresholds reverted. The planned $600 Form 1099-K rule was reversed; the threshold returns to $20,000 and 200 transactions.
  • Some credits ended after 2025. Several incentives are phasing out, so timing matters if you were counting on them.

The practical takeaway: 2026’s stability rewards owners who plan around these rules early rather than discovering them at filing time.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are these 2026 tax changes permanent?

Several key provisions — including 100% bonus depreciation and expanded Section 179 — were made permanent by federal law passed in 2025, which is what makes 2026 a planning turning point.

Do these changes help or hurt small business owners?

Mostly they create opportunity. Permanent expensing and QBI clarity reward intentional planning, but a few expiring credits mean some owners need to adjust strategy.

When should I review how these affect my business?

Before year-end, not at tax time. Decisions about equipment purchases and income timing have to be made during the year to capture the benefit.

Talk to Campbell & Sherbondy: We help small business owners across Mercer County and the Pittsburgh area plan ahead instead of scrambling at filing time. 

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