Significant Changes by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act to the Qualified Small Business Stock Provisions of Section 1202
After weeks of intense negotiation, Congress passed—and President Donald Trump signed into law on July 4, 2025—a comprehensive reconciliation package referred to as the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” (the Act). The Act expands the tax benefits available under Section 1202 of the Internal Revenue Code (the Code).
Generally, Section 1202 of the Code permits non-corporate taxpayers to exclude some or all of the gain realized on the sale of Qualified Small Business Stock (QSBS) that is held for more than five years. While the QSBS exclusion had its inception in 1993, the exclusion became a more powerful tax planning tool in 2010 when the QSBS gain exclusion percentage was raised to 100% from the previous percentages of either 50% or 75%. Section 70431 of the Act changes Section 1202 of the Code in several significant ways and has the potential to make QSBS gain exclusion even more “big” and “beautiful” than it has become post-2010.
Some of the principal changes to Section 1202 contained in the Act, and discussed in this Update, are as follows:
Each of these items is discussed in greater detail below.
As noted above, depending on when a taxpayer acquired qualifying QSBS, prior law under Section 1202 of the Code granted either a 50%, 75%, or—if the stock was acquired after September 27, 2010—100% gain exclusion upon a sale or exchange of the stock. Such exclusions were available only if the taxpayer held the QSBS for more than five years prior to the applicable sale or exchange. New Section 1202(a)(5)-(6) of the Code introduces the following tiered gain exclusion structure for QSBS acquired after July 4, 2025, which is Post-Enactment QSBS.
| Holding period | Prior law | Exclusion percentage |
| > 3 years and < 4 years | 0% | 50% |
| ≥ 4 years and < 5 years | 0% | 75% |
| ≥ 5 years | 100% | 100% |
The five-year 100% gain exclusion remains unchanged for qualifying QSBS acquired on or before July 4, 2025—which is Pre-Enactment QSBS. Moreover, the tiered gain exclusion windows generally should apply only to Post-Enactment QSBS; taxpayers cannot “restart” the holding period on Pre-Enactment QSBS to access the shorter windows. Specifically, the Act incorporates tacking principles under Section 1223 of the Code for purposes of determining when a taxpayer has “acquired” QSBS, which generally should mean that stock-for-stock exchanges—such as in a tax-free reorganization—will not allow taxpayers holding Pre-Enactment QSBS to convert such stock into Post-Enactment QSBS.
Section 1202(b) caps the amount of gain a taxpayer may exclude with respect to any single issuer in any taxable year at the greater of:
The Act raises the per-issuer dollar limit from $10 million to $15 million for Post-Enactment QSBS and provides for annual inflation adjustments beginning in 2027. Coordination rules prevent taxpayers from double-dipping across the old and new limits:
The long-standing 10-times-basis limitation is unchanged. The Act also halves the per-issuer dollar limit—i.e., to $7,500,000 for Post-Enactment QSBS—for married individuals filing separate returns, consistent with the treatment under prior law.
For stock to qualify as QSBS, the issuing corporation must be a “qualified small business,” which, among other tests, requires that the corporation’s “aggregate gross assets” not exceed a statutory threshold at any time before and immediately after the stock issuance. The Act increases this “aggregate gross assets” threshold from $50 million to $75 million for stock issued after July 4, 2025, with inflation adjustments beginning in 2027.
There are several points that issuers of potential QSBS should be aware of given this change effected by the Act:
Under pre-existing law, QSBS gain excluded under the 100% rule for stock acquired after September 27, 2010, was not an AMT preference item—i.e., an increase in calculating a taxpayer’s AMT. The Act extends this approach by amending Section 57(a)(7) of the Code to remove any AMT preference for gain excluded under the new 50% and 75% gain exclusion tiers, as well as for future 100% exclusions on Post-Enactment QSBS. As a result, taxpayers should not face AMT leakage when relying on the revised Section 1202 rules.
The Act represents a potentially significant expansion of Section 1202’s QSBS benefits. Further QSBS guidance may be forthcoming to the extent that the U.S. Department of Treasury and the Internal Revenue Service issue interpretive guidance on QSBS and the changes implemented under the Act. In the interim, corporations, or investors considering issuing or acquiring, respectively, QSBS should consult with tax counsel to ensure that transactions are structured to capture, to the extent possible, the Act’s expanded QSBS benefits.
Please reach out to any member of our Federal Income Tax team if you have questions about how the revised Section 1202 rules may affect your specific situation.
The information provided is not intended to be a comprehensive review of all developments in the law and practice, or to cover all aspects of those referred to.
Readers should take legal advice before applying it to specific issues or transactions.
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Originally published before the Ashurst Perkins Coie combination. See disclaimer.