Bill

BILL • US SENATE

S 4119

Student Loan Marriage Penalty Elimination Act of 2026

119th Congress
Introduced by Michael Bennet, James Lankford, Cynthia Lummis and 1 other co-sponsors

S‑4119 lets married couples file joint returns to deduct up to $5,000 in student‑loan interest, reducing tax burden for dual‑debt households.

Introduced in Senate
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Bill Summary • S 4119

Summary of S 4119 – Student Loan Marriage Penalty Elimination Act of 2026

1. Purpose and Intent

S 4119 seeks to eliminate the “marriage penalty” that currently limits the amount of student‑loan interest a married couple can deduct on a joint tax return. Under the Internal Revenue Code (IRC) §221(b)(1), married taxpayers may claim only $2,500 of student‑loan interest in total. The bill would let each spouse claim the full $2,500 deduction separately, effectively raising the combined limit to $5,000 for couples who both have qualifying student‑loan debt. The amendment is aimed at reducing the tax burden for married couples with student‑loan debt and restoring a “fairness” principle to the deduction rules.

2. Key Provisions

  • Amendment to IRC §221(b)(1): The language “for indebtedness incurred by an individual” is clarified to apply to each spouse independently when filing jointly.
  • Conforming changes:
    • Subsection (b) is re‑headlined “Dollar Limitations.”
    • Subsection (e) is updated to clarify that no double benefit exists; a deduction under this section cannot be taken if the same amount is already deductible elsewhere.
  • Effective date: The changes take effect for taxpayers filing after December 31 2026, covering taxable years beginning in 2027 onward.

3. Who Is Affected

  • Married couples filing jointly who have student‑loan interest payments.
  • Taxpayers with combined interest above $2,500 (but still below $5,000) will see a higher allowable deduction.
  • The changes do not affect single filers or married couples who file separately (since they already benefit from the separate limits).

4. Potential Impact

Scenario Before S 4119 After S 4119
Combined interest ≤ $2,500 Full amount deductible by the couple (under either spouse) Same as before
Combined interest > $2,500 & ≤ $5,000 Only $2,500 deductible (limited to one spouse) Full amount deductible up to $5,000
Combined interest > $5,000 Only $2,500 deductible Still $2,500 (the new limit is per spouse)
  • Tax savings: Roughly $1,000 for a couple in the 20% marginal tax bracket (since they may claim an extra $2,500 deduction).
  • Broader economic effect: Encourages more rapid repayment of student debt for married couples and may improve household financial planning.

5. Legislative Status

  • Introduced: March 17 2026, Senate.
  • Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance.
  • No further actions (vote, amendment, or committee report) yet.

6. Sponsors & Partners

  • Primary sponsors: Senators Raphael Warnock, Michael Bennet, Cynthia M. Lummis, and James Lankford.
  • Companion bill: HR 3285 (House passage sought to match Senate action).

Bottom line: S 4119 would allow married couples to claim a student‑loan interest deduction for each spouse separately, potentially doubling the deduction available to couples who have debt on both incomes. The bill is under review by the Senate Committee on Finance and, if passed, would take effect for tax returns filed beginning in 2027.

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