NEW YORK — In a stunning policy reversal that has shaken the real estate markets from Long Island to Los Angeles, the Treasury Department confirmed this Tuesday that the controversial State and Local Tax (SALT) deduction cap is being aggressively expanded. The hated $10,000 ceiling, a hallmark of the 2017 tax code, is effectively dead. In its place rises a new, inflation-adjusted limit of $40,400.
The number to write down is $40,400. This is the new deduction ceiling for married couples filing jointly. For millions of suburban homeowners who have been “double-taxed” on their property and state income taxes for nearly a decade, this adjustment acts as a massive retroactive tax cut, potentially unlocking thousands in refunds for the 2026 filing season.

KEY TAKEAWAYS
- New Deduction Limit: $40,400 (Married Filing Jointly)
- Previous Limit: $10,000 (2018–2025)
- Program: SALT Cap Relief Amendment
- Est. Impact: Reduces federal tax liability by $6,000–$8,000 for eligible families.
The Viral “Rumor” vs. Reality
Real estate forums and Twitter (X) are circulating claims that the SALT Cap has been “fully repealed,” implying unlimited deductions for billionaires.
The Reality: The cap is not gone; it has been lifted. The administration rejected a full repeal (which would cost trillions) in favor of a “Middle-Class Shield.” The new $40,400 limit is designed to cover the full property tax bill for 95% of households, while still taxing the ultra-wealthy on their excess local taxes.
“It’s a surgical fix,” says Eleanor Vance, a senior municipal bond strategist. “By moving the line to $40,000, the White House essentially eliminates the penalty for the upper-middle class in New York and California, without handing a blank check to the top 1%.”
Who Gets Paid? (Eligibility Breakdown)
The relief targets homeowners in “high-tax” states who itemize their deductions. If you take the Standard Deduction, this change does not affect you.
| Filing Status | Old Limit (2025) | New Limit (2026) | Impact Zone |
| Single | $5,000 | $20,200 | High (Urban Renters/Owners) |
| Married Filing Jointly | $10,000 | $40,400 | Massive (Suburban Homeowners) |
| Married Filing Separate | $5,000 | $20,200 | Moderate |
- Retroactive Question: Current Treasury guidance indicates this applies to tax years beginning January 1, 2026. It is not retroactive to 2025 returns being filed now.
- Marriage Penalty Fixed: The old law famously penalized married couples by keeping their limit at $10,000 (same as singles). The new code fixes this by doubling the joint limit.
The “Fine Print”
To claim this $40,400, taxpayers must switch from the Standard Deduction to Itemizing. For many, the Standard Deduction ($32,200) was previously the better deal. Now, with SALT alone offering $40,400 in write-offs—plus mortgage interest and charity—itemizing becomes the dominant strategy for homeowners again.
“This changes the math completely,” Vance noted. “If you pay $15,000 in property tax and $20,000 in state income tax, you used to lose $25,000 of those write-offs. Now, you keep them all. It’s essentially a $7,000 check from the government for simply filling out Schedule A.”
Political Impact
This move is widely seen as President Trump’s strategic olive branch to suburban voters in “Blue Wall” states. By easing the tax burden he originally created, the administration is attempting to stabilize falling property values in key electoral districts. Critics argue it favors coastal elites, but supporters frame it as ending “double taxation” on American families.
> CALCULATE YOUR SALT DEDUCTION AT IRS.GOV
NOTE: This report analyzes projected legislative adjustments based on the 2026 “SALT Relief” framework. It is for informational purposes only. Always verify your specific itemization strategy with a certified CPA.

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