SALT Agreement Near as Lawmakers Eye Two-Year Repeal of Limit

A key Democratic lawmaker said a detailed, final agreement to restore the federal deduction for state and local taxes could be reached this week, with another advocate flagging a temporary repeal of the break’s limit as the likely proposal.

The SALT deduction is one of the final tax details to be worked out in the House version of an up-to-$3.5-trillion tax and social spending bill. The House Ways and Means Committee, the panel responsible for writing the tax portion of the bill, failed to reach agreement about how to address SALT earlier this month.

“This is all going to come to a head this week,” Representative Tom Suozzi of New York told reporters on a conference call Monday. “I think it’s sooner than we all expected.”

Later in the day, New Jersey Representative Bill Pascrell said a two-year repeal of the $10,000 cap would “probably” be the agreed-on solution for SALT.

The SALT deduction changes are likely to be added by the House Rules Committee, just before the bill goes to the House floor for a vote. That panel could consider the legislation as soon as Tuesday, though a meeting has not yet been scheduled.

Raising or repealing the $10,000 limit on the SALT deduction, a change imposed by the 2017 Republican tax overhaul, is one of the most politically charged aspects of the negotiation.