SALT: Here's how lawmakers could alter key contentious tax rule

Democrats and Republicans have dug in when it comes to the state and local tax (SALT) deduction and the upcoming budget reconciliation package.

On one side, you have lawmakers like Rep. Tom Suozzi (D., N.Y.) who has made “No SALT, No Deal” a mantra. In a recent statement, Suozzi (from the very highly-taxed North Shore of Long Island as well as some neighborhoods in Queens) said, “I will not support any changes to the tax code unless there is a restoration of the SALT deduction.”

On board with him are lawmakers from other parts of the country with high local taxes and high property values. They've banded together into a SALT caucus that boasts 32 members.

Then there are large swathes of the country that would see minimal benefits from a SALT restoration and lawmakers – both Democrats and Republicans – representing these areas are agnostic or hostile to bringing back the full deduction.

The SALT deduction let individual taxpayers who itemize their personal deductions to deduct their aggregated state and local taxes on their annual tax return. In 2017, the Republicans pushed through the Tax Cuts and Job Act, which capped that deduction at $10,000. It was seen by Democrats as a punitive move to hurt blue states, many of which have the highest local tax rates in the U.S.

There is also study after study after study finding the benefits of a SALT restoration almost exclusively go to the rich. According to the Tax Policy Center, a full repeal of the SALT cap would lead to almost 70% of the benefits going to people with annual incomes above $500,000.

U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) speaks with Rep. Tom Suozzi (D-NY) as she arrives for her weekly news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S. September 12, 2019.  REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
Rep. Tom Suozzi (D-NY) wth House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in 2019. He recently joked to Punchbowl News that party leaders “want a restraining order against me because no matter what we discuss, I bring up SALT.” (REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst) · Jonathan Ernst / reuters

“It is just mind-blowing they're even talking about this kind of tax policy,” Marc Goldwein, senior policy director for the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, told Yahoo Finance (video above). It's “not tax reform, it's tax deform," he added.

But the laws of politics suggest that negotiators will try to find something in the middle. A recent statement from leading House Democrats on the issue – including Suozzi – said they were “committed to enacting a law that will include meaningful SALT relief” in the bill, notably not calling for a full restoration of the cap.

Rejiggering SALT, rather than simply going back to how it was before – allowing for an unlimited tax deduction – is more complicated than it might seem.

Here are some of the options for what a compromise or “SALT relief” might look like.

‘There are ways to restructure SALT’

The state and local tax deduction gives taxpayers relief on their federal tax bill if they're dealing with a hefty local tax burden. Wealthier coastal states – like New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, and California – have the highest tax burdens and more wealthy Americans who have historically benefited from the deduction.