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From NBC News:
The child tax credit is a partially refundable tax credit available to taxpayers with children or dependents under age 17. Parents and guardians earning $200,000 a year or less are eligible to claim the full $2,000 credit per child through tax year 2025. Without new legislation, that limit will revert to $1,000 per qualifying child after the expiration of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act in 2025.
Congress is trying to increase the maximum credit amount through its budget reconciliation process, but the chambers differ on proposed maximum amounts. The House proposal would increase the maximum credit to $2,500 per child, while the Senate’s version provides up to $2,200 per qualifying dependent.
Under the House’s plan, the $2,500 limit would remain in place until 2028, then drop to an estimated $2,100 and be indexed for inflation in subsequent years, according to the Tax Policy Center. The Senate’s plan would also adjust the maximum credit amount for inflation after 2026. Both proposals keep the maximum refundable portion of the credit at $1,700.
An estimated 17 million children would not qualify for the full child tax credit benefit because it’s not fully refundable. The 2025 rules state that families who don’t owe income taxes and earn less than $2,500 cannot claim any portion of the credit. Those earning more may qualify for a portion of the credit.
The child tax credit could be worth over $2,000 under Republicans' spending plan—but millions of families wouldn't benefit https://t.co/lXVfHAuNvv pic.twitter.com/4KVHhQsjqc
— The Last Word (@TheLastWord) June 26, 2025
Fact: The child tax credit was doubled from $1,000 to $2,000—providing a real boost to America's working families.
TAX CUTS season is in full swing! pic.twitter.com/eMPmzVkGHa
— The White House 45 Archived (@WhiteHouse45) April 13, 2019
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