Overview:
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), signed into law on July 4, 2025, is the most expansive federal legislation impacting employers since the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), signed into law on July 4, 2025, is the most expansive federal legislation impacting employers since the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.
This sweeping law includes retroactive provisions to January 1, 2025, and will have cascading compliance effects through 2028. At its core, the OBBBA creates complex new reporting, tax, and benefits obligations for employers-especially those in industries with tipped workers, hourly employees, or high-turnover staffing models.
Employers must now navigate new payroll deduction opportunities tied to employee qualified tips and overtime, requiring updates to payroll software, withholding procedures, and employee communications. The law also introduces mandatory reporting changes to W?2 forms, including new line items and occupational coding for tipped and overtime-eligible employees.
Additionally, the bill significantly alters the benefits landscape, including permanent telehealth HSA expansions, increased Dependent Care FSA limits, expanded employer-provided child care credits, and the option to facilitate “Trump Accounts” for employee family saving.
At the compliance level, employers face heightened enforcement risk, particularly in the area of immigration, with ICE audit expansion, new I?9 verification scrutiny, and the introduction of non-waivable per-hire immigration fees. These measures necessitate internal audits of hiring and verification practices to avoid steep penalties.
This session will decode the law’s complex provisions and focus exclusively on what HR, Payroll, Legal, and Operations professionals must do now to comply, adapt, and benefit.
Why you should Attend:
Areas Covered in the Session:
Who Will Benefit:
Jacquiline M. Wagner For more than twenty-five years, Jacquiline Wagner, Esq., the proud President of Wagner HR, has been representing, advising and training business owners, employers, supervisors and Human Resources professionals in all aspects of Employment Law. Stemming from her seasoned experience, Jacquiline has designed an effective four-point system tailored to cultivate the emotional intelligence of leadership, maximize the full potential of employees and effectively reduce the risk of Employment litigation