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FDIC bank deposit rules just changed. Here’s what savers need to know

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If you have more than $250,000 in deposits at a bank, you may want to check that all of your money is insured by the federal government.

The Federal Insurance Deposit Corporation, or FDIC, implemented new requirements for deposit insurance for trust accounts starting April 1.

While the FDIC’s move is intended to make insurance coverage rules for trust accounts simpler, it may push some depositors over FDIC limits, according to Ken Tumin, founder of DepositAccounts and senior industry analyst at LendingTree.

As part of its National Financial Literacy Month efforts, CNBC will be featuring stories throughout the month dedicated to helping people manage, grow and protect their money so they can truly live ambitiously.

The FDIC is an independent government agency that was created by Congress following the Great Depression to help restore confidence in U.S. banks.

FDIC insurance generally covers $250,000 per depositor, per bank, in each account ownership category.

If you have $250,000 or less deposited in a bank, the new changes will not affect you.

How FDIC coverage of trust accounts has changed

Under the new rules, trust deposits are now limited to $1.25 million in FDIC coverage per trust owner per insured depository institution.

Each beneficiary of the trust may have a $250,000 insurance limit for up to five beneficiaries. However, if there are more than five beneficiaries, the FDIC coverage limit for the trust account remains $1.25 million.

“For those who do go above $1.25 million under the old system, they definitely should be aware that changed,” Tumin said.

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That may cause coverage reductions for certain investments that were established before these changes. For example, investors with certificates of deposit that are over the coverage limit may be locked into their investment if they do not want to pay a penalty for an early withdrawal.

“If you’re in that kind of shoes, you have to work with the bank, because you might not be able to close the account or change the account until it matures,” Tumin said.

The FDIC is also now combining two kinds of trusts — revocable and irrevocable — into one category.

Consequently, investors with $250,000 in a revocable trust and $250,000 in an irrevocable trust at the same bank may have their FDIC coverage reduced from $500,000 to $250,000, according to Tumin.

“That has the potential of causing loss of coverage, too,” Tumin said.

The agency is also revising requirements for informal revocable trusts, also known as payable on death accounts. Previously, those accounts had to be titled with a phrase such as “payable on death,” to access trust coverage limits. Now, the FDIC will no longer have that requirement and instead just require bank records to identify beneficiaries to be considered informal trusts.

“The bank no longer has to have POD in the account title or in their records as long as the beneficiaries are listed somewhere in the bank records,” Tumin said.

To amplify FDIC coverage beyond $250,000, depositors have several other options in addition to trust accounts.

That includes opening accounts at multiple FDIC-insured banks; opening a joint account for two people, which would bring the total coverage to $500,000; or opening accounts with different ownership categories, such as a single account and joint account.

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Child tax credit could change under Republicans’ big beautiful bill

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Oscar Wong | Moment | Getty Images

As Senate Republicans race to pass President Donald Trump‘s “big beautiful” spending bill, key provisions, including the child tax credit, could change amid Senate-House negotiations.

The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, or TCJA, of 2017, temporarily boosted the maximum child tax credit to $2,000 from $1,000, which will expire after 2025 without action from Congress.  

If enacted, the Senate bill would permanently increase the biggest credit to $2,200 starting in 2025, according to a draft of the text released on Monday. The measure would also index this figure for inflation after 2025.

By comparison, the House-approved bill would boost the top child tax credit to $2,500 from 2025 through 2028. After that, the credit’s highest value would drop to $2,000 and be indexed for inflation.

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It’s unclear how the final provision may change before Trump signs the package into law. However, in either version, the changes wouldn’t benefit the lowest-earning families, some policy experts say.

“It’s extremely disappointing,” said Kris Cox, director of federal tax policy with the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities’ federal fiscal policy division. “The [child tax credit] increase will go to families with middle and upper incomes.”

Here’s how the tax break works and who could benefit if Congress enacts the updates.

How the child tax credit works

For 2025, the tax break is worth up to $2,000 per qualifying child under age 17 with a valid Social Security number. Up to $1,700 is “refundable” for 2025, which provides a maximum of $1,700 once the credit exceeds taxes owed.  

“If you have very low income, you can’t access the full $2,000 credit,” and the tax break phases out for “very high-income families,” said Elaine Maag, senior fellow in the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center.

After your first $2,500 of earnings, the child tax credit value is 15% of adjusted gross income, or AGI, until the tax break reaches that peak of $2,000 per child. The tax break starts to phase out once AGI exceeds $400,000 for married couples filing together or $200,000 for all other taxpayers.   

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The ‘central problem’ with the child tax credit

Under current law, 17 million children don’t receive the full child tax credit, according to Cox from the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. The reason is many families earn too little and they don’t owe taxes.  

The Senate and House proposals don’t change that “central problem,” she said. 

In 2024, the House passed a bipartisan bill to address this issue by boosting the refundable portion of the credit, but the legislation later failed in the Senate.

The proposed higher child tax credit comes as the U.S. fertility rate hovers near historic lows, which has troubled lawmakers, including the Trump administration.

Some research suggests financial incentives, like a bigger child tax credit, could boost U.S. fertility. But other experts say it won’t solve the issue long-term.

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How Senate, House GOP ‘big beautiful’ bill plans differ

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Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD), left, listens to Sen. Mike Crapo (R-ID), center, chair of the Senate Finance Committee, speak to reporters outside of the West Wing of the White House on June 4, 2025.

Anna Moneymaker | Getty Images News | Getty Images

Republicans proposed offering a tax break to tipped workers, as part of a package of tax cuts the Senate Finance Committee unveiled Monday. GOP lawmakers are trying to pass their multitrillion-dollar megabill in coming weeks.

The Senate measure — which aims to fulfill a “no tax on tips” campaign pledge by President Donald Trump — is broadly similar to a provision that House GOP lawmakers passed in May as part of a domestic policy bill.

In both versions, the tax break is structured as a deduction available on qualified tips. The Senate legislation defines such tips as ones that are paid in cash, charged or received as part of a tip-sharing arrangement.

Taxpayers — both employees and independent contractors — would be able to claim it from 2025 through 2028. Filers could take advantage whether they itemize deductions on their tax returns or claim the standard deduction.

Key differences in ‘no tax on tips’ proposals

However, the Senate proposal is different from the House version in two key ways, Matt Gardner, senior fellow at the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, wrote in an e-mail.

First, the Senate legislation would cap the tax deduction at $25,000 per year, while it is uncapped in the House bill, Gardner wrote.

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Few workers would benefit from ‘no tax on tips’

A “no tax on tips” proposal seems to have bipartisan appeal in the Senate, which unanimously passed a similar standalone measure last month. Former Vice President Kamala Harris also supported a tax break on tips during her 2024 presidential campaign.

However, the tax break wouldn’t benefit many workers, tax experts said.

There were roughly 4 million workers in tipped occupations in 2023, about 2.5% percent of all employment, according to an analysis last year by Ernie Tedeschi, director of economics at the Budget Lab at Yale and former chief economist at the White House Council of Economic Advisers during the Biden administration.

Additionally, a “meaningful share” of tipped workers already pay zero federal income tax, Tedeschi wrote. In other words, a proposal to exempt tips from federal tax wouldn’t help these individuals, who already don’t owe federal taxes.

“More than a third — 37 percent — of tipped workers had incomes low enough that they faced no federal income tax in 2022, even before accounting for tax credits,” Tedeschi wrote. “For non-tipped occupations, the equivalent share was only 16 percent.”

Tax deductions reduce the amount of income subject to tax (or, taxable income) and are generally more valuable for high-income taxpayers relative to tax credits.

The Economic Policy Institute, a left-leaning think tank, said it believed a better way to help workers would be to raise the federal minimum wage.

A “no tax on tips” provision “gives the illusion of helping lower-income workers — while the rest of the legislation hands huge giveaways to the rich at the expense of the working class,” EPI economic analysts wrote Thursday.

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Senate ‘big beautiful’ tax bill has $1,000 baby bonus

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Sen. Ron Johnson on reconciliation bill: We don't have time to get this right by July 4

How Trump accounts work

Not unlike a 529 college savings plan, Trump accounts come with a tax incentive. Earnings grow tax-deferred, and qualified withdrawals are taxed as long-term capital gains.

Under both the House and Senate versions of the bill, withdrawals could begin at age 18, at which point account holders can tap up to half of the funds for education expenses or credentials, the down payment on a first home or as capital to start a small business.

At 25, account holders can use the full balance for expenses that fall under those same guidelines and at 30, they can use the money for any reason. Distributions taken for qualified purposes are taxed at the long-term capital-gains rate, while distributions for any other purpose are taxed as ordinary income.

$1,000 baby bonus: Who is eligible

Young family with a baby boy going over finances at home.

Pekic | E+ | Getty Images

For children born between January 1, 2024, and December 31, 2028, the federal government will deposit $1,000 into the Trump account, funded by the Department of the Treasury, as part of a “newborn pilot program,” according to the Senate Finance Committee’s proposed text released on Monday.

To be eligible to receive the initial seed money, a child must be a U.S. citizen at birth and both parents must have Social Security numbers.

If a parent or guardian does not open an account, the Secretary of Treasury will establish an account on the child’s behalf. Parents may also opt out.

Trump account pros and cons

The White House and Republican lawmakers have said these accounts will introduce more Americans to wealth-building opportunities and the benefits of compound growth. But some experts say the Trump accounts are also overly complicated, making it harder to reach lower-income families.

Universal savings accounts, with fewer strings attached, would be a simpler alternative proposal at a lower price tag, according to Adam Michel, director of tax policy studies at the Cato Institute, a public policy think tank.

“I’m disappointed the Senate did not take the opportunity to improve these accounts,” Michel said. Still, “provisions that remain in both the House and Senate text, we should expect them to become law, and this provision fits that criteria.” 

Mark Higgins, senior vice president at Index Fund Advisors and author of “Investing in U.S. Financial History: Understanding the Past to Forecast the Future,” said the key is “if the benefits comfortably exceed the cost.”

According to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, Trump accounts would add $17 billion to the deficit over the next decade.

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