Former President Donald Trump said taxpayers could see refunds exceed 20% this year under a plan he called “One Big Beautiful Bill,” a package he said would eliminate taxes on tips, Social Security, and overtime pay. The pledge, delivered as a headline promise of fast relief, sets off a fresh debate over what is possible on taxes and how quickly change could reach paychecks and the IRS.
What Trump Is Promising
“Tax refunds could exceed 20% this year thanks to my One Big Beautiful Bill, eliminating taxes on tips, Social Security and overtime pay.” — Donald Trump
Trump framed the plan as a direct boost to workers who rely on tips and overtime and to retirees collecting Social Security. The message is simple: cut taxes on these incomes and money flows back to households quickly.
He also tied the plan to larger refunds, suggesting a surge above 20% for taxpayers. That link hints at both lower overall tax bills and changes to withholding that can shape year-end outcomes.
How Refunds Actually Work
Refunds reflect how much taxpayers had withheld during the year compared with what they owe at filing time. Bigger refunds usually come from either higher withholding or new credits and deductions. Lower taxes can also lead to bigger refunds, but only if withholding does not drop as fast as tax liability.
Changing refund sizes “this year” would require rapid policy shifts, swift updates to payroll systems, and IRS guidance. Even then, timing can be messy. Mid-year changes sometimes show up as larger take-home pay now and smaller refunds later.
Who Could Benefit
The pitch targets three groups that feel tax pressure in different ways.
- Service workers who report tips and often face irregular income.
- Hourly workers who log overtime during peak seasons or staffing shortages.
- Retirees who pay taxes on part of their Social Security benefits under current law.
For these taxpayers, removing federal taxes would raise net income. The effect would vary by bracket, filing status, and how employers adjust withholding.
Support, Skepticism, and the Price Tag
Supporters say cutting taxes on tips and overtime would reward hard work and simplify filing for people with unpredictable pay. Some labor advocates have long argued that taxes on tipped income are hard to calculate and enforce.
Skeptics point out that a refund spike depends on implementation. If employers quickly cut withholding on overtime or if retirees face lower estimated payments, refunds might not grow as promised. Instead, more cash would show up in paychecks during the year.
Budget analysts, meanwhile, would ask how much revenue the change would remove and whether other taxes or borrowing would fill the gap. Any sweeping change would likely need congressional approval and a clear funding plan.
Feasibility and Timeline
Major tax changes typically require legislation, followed by IRS rulemaking and employer payroll updates. Compressed timelines raise risks of confusion on forms, withholding tables, and estimated payments. Filing-season changes can also strain customer service and processing.
If enacted quickly, some workers might see higher take-home pay within weeks. Others could wait until the next filing season to see a full-year effect. Refund outcomes would hinge on whether withholding tables adjust in step with the new rules.
What to Watch
Clarity on the plan’s scope will matter. Would the tax break apply to all tips, or only those reported through payroll? Would overtime apply across industries or have caps? How would Social Security taxation rules change for joint filers and higher earners?
Answers to these questions could shape both the size of any household benefit and the federal revenue impact. They also determine how much of the change appears in weekly pay versus at refund time.
Trump’s pledge sets a bold marker: bigger refunds and tax relief for workers and retirees. The next steps depend on legislative details, timing, and how quickly payroll and the IRS can respond. Voters and taxpayers should watch for a bill text, revenue estimates, and a firm timeline. The promise is simple; the math and machinery that make it real are not.
