AARP Hearing Center

America’s working family caregivers may get better access to paid time off to care for their loved ones under new provisions in the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act,” the sweeping tax and domestic policy law signed by President Donald Trump earlier this month.
The new law expands and makes permanent a federal tax credit that provides incentives to businesses, particularly small ones, to offer workers up to 12 weeks of paid time off for family and medical leave. The paid leave can be used for personal medical issues or to help care for certain family members who have serious health conditions.
The changes are a win for many of the nation’s 63 million family caregivers. Seventy percent of working-age caregivers are navigating the dual responsibilities of paid employment and caregiving, according to a new joint report by AARP and the National Alliance for Caregiving. Balancing those responsibilities often presents significant challenges, with implications for both caregivers’ economic security and their ability to provide quality care. But half of working caregivers don’t have access to paid family and medical leave, the report found.
AARP has long championed policies that expand paid family and medical leave. It pushed Congress to bolster this federal tax credit, which was signed into law on July 4 as part of the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” (the legislation’s formal title before Democrats filed an amendment to strip out the name).
Join AARP’s Fight for Caregivers
Here's how you can help:
- Sign up to become part of AARP’s online advocacy network and help family caregivers get the support they need.
- Find out more about how we're fighting for you every day in Congress and across the country.
- AARP is your fierce defender on the issues that matter to people 50-plus. Become a member or renew your membership today.
“This provision offers meaningful support for working family caregivers and helps create workplace policies that recognize the growing need to balance work and family obligations,” wrote Bill Sweeney, AARP’s senior vice president of government affairs, in a letter to House leadership. The increased applicability and improved flexibility of this tax credit “is a good step forward,” he added.
The “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” includes an array of federal budgetary changes related to taxes, health care, food assistance, border security and more. On the tax front, the legislation extends the tax cuts enacted during Trump’s first term and implements dozens more changes to the tax code, many of which affect older Americans.
Here's what to know about the paid family and medical leave (PFML) tax credit.
What is the PFML tax credit?
This federal tax credit is a business tax credit available to employers that voluntarily offer paid family and medical leave to their employees. To qualify for the credit, the employer must offer certain workers at least two weeks of this type of paid leave annually (adjusted accordingly for part-time workers) and must pay at least 50 percent of the worker’s regular wages during the leave.
More From AARP
How ‘Big Beautiful Bill’ Affects Older Adults
Taxpayers ages 65-plus get a new deduction, but SNAP, Medicaid cuts loom for millions
Combating Hidden Travel, Ticket Fees
AARP endorses bills that push for transparency in pricing
AARP and Vatican Team Up for Summit on Aging
Pope Francis' mission to protect older adults continues at a conference convened by the Vatican and AARP