Loading
Loading
Your feedback directly shapes Sporos.
Sign in to track your feedback history
Family First Act This bill increases the child tax credit and provides a new tax credit for pregnant mothers. The bill also makes changes to the state and local tax (SALT) deduction, earned income tax credit (EITC), head of household filing status, tax exemption for dependents, and deduction for dependent care expenses. This bill increases the child tax credit to as much as $4,200 for each child (depending on the child’s age and the taxpayer's modified adjusted gross income) and makes the tax credit fully refundable. (Currently, a portion is refundable.) Under the bill, the child tax credit is limited to six children and phases out once a taxpayer’s modified adjusted gross income exceeds a certain threshold. The bill provides a new refundable tax credit for pregnant mothers of up to $2,800 for each unborn child whose gestational age is 20 weeks or more. The tax credit phases out once a taxpayer’s modified adjusted gross income exceeds a certain threshold. The bill permanently extends the $10,000 limit on the SALT deduction for individuals. (Currently, the SALT deduction limit for individuals expires in 2026.) The bill permanently eliminates the additional personal exemption for dependents. (Under current law, an exemption for dependents is available starting in 2026.) This bill also eliminates the • head of household filing status, • tax credit for dependent care expenses for children under 13 years old, and • different percentages that apply based on the number of qualifying children in the EITC calculation.
Introduced
Jan 13, 2025
Last Action
Jan 13, 2025
Session
119th Congress
Sponsors
1 primary · 1 co
Passage Probability
2% — Very Low
Introduced in House
Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means.
Get a plain-English explanation of what this bill does, who it affects, and why it matters.
2%
Estimate based on legislative signals
See what factors are driving this score — cosponsor support, bipartisan backing, committee progress, and more.
Upgrade to ProReferred to the House Committee on Ways and Means.