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No.

Americans who earn less than $18,000 are estimated to see a slight federal tax cut under President Donald Trump’s big bill, but the net effect of the bill is likely to lead to a loss in household resources.
The average federal tax change from current levels for the bottom 20% of American earners is a reduction of $150 by 2026 and a reduction of $160 by 2030, according to estimates from the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center. In contrast, the average income earner will receive a $2,860 cut while the top 1% of earners will see a $75,410 cut on average.
Lower income earners already pay little in taxes. Reductions in Medicaid and SNAP benefits are likely to affect lower income earners disproportionately, resulting in a projected net decline of 2.9% in their household resources.
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Sources
- Tax Policy Center: T25-0231 – Reconciliation Bill, One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), As Passed by the House and Senate, Distribution by ECI Percentile, 2026
- The Budget Lab at Yale: Tax Provisions in the Reconciliation Bill: Combined Distributional Impacts
- Penn Wharton Budget Model: President Trump-Signed Reconciliation Bill: Budget, Economic, and Distributional Effects
- The Budget Lab at Yale: Distributional Effects of Selected Provisions of the House and Senate Reconciliation Bills


