HR-8806-119
Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means.
What it does
This bill would create a new federal tax credit of $2,000 for each child born during the tax year, available to qualifying parents. The credit would phase out for higher-income taxpayers and is capped at 20% of the parent's earned income. Parents could elect to receive the credit as an advance payment within six weeks of registering their child's Social Security number, or apply it to the prior tax year. The credit amount would be adjusted annually for inflation starting in 2027.
Who benefits
Parents of newborns, particularly low- and middle-income families who would receive the most benefit relative to their income. Parents who elect the advance payment option would receive funds quickly after birth, helping cover immediate costs. Families with multiple births in a single year would receive the credit for each child. Tax preparers and financial advisors who assist families navigating the credit's election options may see increased demand. Hospitals and Social Security Administration offices that process newborn SSN applications would become a key delivery point for the credit.
Who is hurt
Higher-income families would receive a reduced or no credit due to the phase-out provision. Parents with little or no earned income would receive a reduced credit due to the 20%-of-earned-income cap, potentially limiting the benefit for the lowest-income families. Parents who overestimate their income for the advance payment and receive too large an advance would owe the difference back at tax time. The IRS and Social Security Administration would bear implementation and administrative costs. Taxpayers broadly may bear the fiscal cost of the credit through future revenue offsets or deficit effects.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the immediate costs of a newborn — medical bills, supplies, lost wages during parental leave — create a concentrated financial burden that a timely, targeted credit directly addresses. They contend that the advance payment mechanism, triggered by Social Security number registration, delivers funds within six weeks of birth when families need them most, unlike credits claimed months later at tax filing. The bipartisan sponsorship (including members from both parties) reflects broad agreement that supporting new parents is a shared national priority, and the inflation adjustment ensures the credit's value does not erode over time.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the earned income cap means the credit provides the least help to the most financially vulnerable new parents — those with no or very low earnings, such as stay-at-home parents or those who left work due to pregnancy complications. They contend that the advance payment reconciliation mechanism creates a repayment trap: parents who overestimate income could face unexpected tax bills at a financially stressful time, a problem documented with the Advance Child Tax Credit payments under the American Rescue Plan. Critics may also argue the bill adds to the federal deficit without a specified offset, shifting costs to future taxpayers.