April 01, 2026
What RGV Business Owners Need to Know About 2026 Tax Changes
Running a business in the Rio Grande Valley means keeping one eye on daily operations and the other on what’s coming next. Tax changes aren’t just about what you owe at filing time, they shape how you invest, manage cash flow, and make decisions throughout the year.
The 2026 updates, driven by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), bring a mix of long-term certainty and new planning opportunities. Some provisions have been made permanent. Others expand what’s possible if you plan early.
The businesses that benefit most won’t be the ones reacting at year-end. They’ll be the ones aligning tax strategy with how their business actually runs, cash flow, financing, and growth plans included.
The Big Picture: What’s Changing and Why It Matters

The 2026 changes build on prior tax reform but go further in a few key areas:
- The Qualified Business Income (QBI) deduction is now permanent
- 100% bonus depreciation has been restored
- Section 179 expensing limits have increased
- Employer tax credits have been expanded and made permanent
- Income thresholds continue to adjust with inflation
- Filing processes are shifting, requiring a more organized approach
These aren’t just technical adjustments. They directly affect when you spend, how you finance purchases, and how much cash stays in your business.
1. Qualified Business Income Deduction (QBI)
For many RGV business owners, the QBI deduction remains one of the most valuable tools available.
What this means for your business
- Deduct up to 20% of qualified business income
- Applies to LLCs, S corporations, partnerships, and sole proprietors
- Limitations begin to phase in at higher income levels
- Starting around $201,750 (single) and $403,500 (joint filers)
Why this matters in practice
This isn’t just a tax line item. Lower taxable income can improve how your business performs financially:
- More cash available to reinvest
- Stronger financial position when applying for financing
- Greater flexibility during slower cycles
For many businesses, this deduction directly supports working capital stability, which is often the difference between reacting and planning.
Action to consider
Review how income flows through your business. Timing, compensation structure, and retirement contributions all play a role in maximizing this benefit while keeping your financials lender ready.
2. Expensing Equipment and Investments
The ability to invest in your business and recover those costs quickly remains one of the most useful planning tools available.
What’s available in 2026
- Section 179 expensing: approximately $2.5 million (inflation-adjusted)
- Phase-out begins around $4 million in total purchases
- 100% bonus depreciation fully restored
Why this matters for growing businesses
You can deduct the full cost of qualifying purchases in the same year, but that doesn’t mean you should pay for everything upfront.
The real opportunity comes from pairing tax strategy with financing.
Where financing fits in
Many businesses are choosing to:
- Finance equipment instead of using cash reserves
- Structure payments around revenue cycles
- Keep liquidity available for operations
This approach allows you to capture the tax benefit immediately while protecting cash flow.
Action to consider
Before making large purchases, align your tax planning with how you’ll pay for them. The structure matters just as much as the deduction.
3. Employer Tax Credits

What’s included
- Childcare credit:
- 40% of eligible expenses for larger businesses
- 50% for qualifying small businesses (with higher caps)
- Paid family and medical leave credit is now permanent
What these credits actually do
These are income tax credits, not payroll tax reductions.
That distinction matters because they directly reduce your overall tax liability.
Why this matters locally
In the Rio Grande Valley, hiring and retaining good employees is a real challenge. These credits help offset the cost of offering benefits that keep your team in place.
Action to consider
Take a closer look at your benefits structure. If you’re already offering support to employees, you may be leaving credits unclaimed.
4. Inflation Adjustments and Capital Gains
Inflation adjustments continue to shift how income and gains are taxed and influence important decisions.
What’s changing
- Income thresholds continue to rise with inflation
- Capital gains brackets adjust alongside them
Why this matters
These shifts can affect decisions such as:
- Selling part of the business
- Bringing in investors
- Planning ownership transitions
Even small adjustments in thresholds can change the timing of major decisions.
Action to consider
If you’re thinking about selling assets or restructuring ownership, plan ahead. Timing can make a measurable difference.
5. Estimated Taxes and Cash Flow Discipline
Quarterly estimated payments are nothing new but how you manage them can make or break your cash flow.
2026 payment deadlines
- April 15, 2026
- June 15, 2026
- September 15, 2026
- January 15, 2027
Why this matters day-to-day
Missing payments leads to penalties, but more importantly, it creates instability in your cash position.
Where better systems help
A structured approach allows you to:
- Set aside funds consistently
- Maintain visibility across accounts
- Avoid last-minute cash shortages
Action to consider
Treat tax reserves as part of your operating system, not an afterthought. Consistency matters more than precision.
6. R&D Expense Rules
For businesses investing in innovation, the rules are now more favorable, especially domestically.
What to know
- U.S.-based R&D can be fully expensed in the year incurred
- Foreign R&D must still be amortized over 15 years
Why this matters
There’s now a clear incentive to keep development work domestic. The tax treatment alone can influence where and how projects are structured.
Action to consider
Keep detailed records of qualifying activities. Proper classification makes a significant difference at filing time.
7. Filing Changes and Compliance
Filing processes are evolving, becoming less forgiving and more dependent on preparation.
What’s changing
- IRS Direct File will not be available for 2026
- Alternative free filing programs still exist, along with software and professional services
- Reporting requirements continue to expand
Why this matters
Delays, incomplete reporting, or disorganized records can slow refunds and create unnecessary issues.
Action to consider
Start earlier than you think you need to. Organization and timing matter more than ever.
Bringing It Together: Planning That Fits Your Business

For most RGV businesses, that means focusing on:
- Structuring income to benefit from QBI
- Timing purchases to take advantage of expensing rules
- Capturing credits tied to your workforce
- Managing cash flow with clear tax reserves
- Aligning financing decisions with tax strategy
- Tracking qualifying R&D activity
- Preparing early for filing and compliance
Each of these decisions ties back to one goal: keeping your business flexible and financially steady throughout the year.
A Local Approach That Makes a Difference
Tax planning works best when it reflects how your business actually operates.
That’s where working with a local banking partner matters.
Greater State Bank works with Rio Grande Valley businesses every day, helping owners think through not just the tax implications, but how those decisions affect cash flow, borrowing, and long-term growth.
That includes:
- Commercial lending and equipment financing structured around your needs
- Lines of credit that support working capital through seasonal cycles
- Treasury management tools that give you better visibility and control
- Day-to-day banking that keeps operations moving without friction
The focus is straightforward: help you make decisions that strengthen your business over time.
Start the Conversation Early
The businesses that benefit most from these changes won’t wait until year-end.
If you’re planning equipment purchases, reviewing your cash flow, or thinking about growth, now is the time to bring those conversations together.
Connect with Greater State Bank to talk through your plans and build a strategy that works for how your business actually runs, today and into 2026.



