'America's Next Top Model' contestant says show 'was a cult' with strict rules, threats

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  • 'America's Next Top Model' contestant says show 'was a cult' with strict rules, threats</p>

<p>Clare Mulroy, USA TODAY July 8, 2025 at 11:27 PM</p>

<p>One "America's Next Top Model" alum is taking the reality TV show's famous slogan to memoir, revealing what she says it was really like behind the smize.</p>

<p>Sarah Hartshorne, the only plus-size model in ANTM Cycle 9, is sharing her story in "You Wanna Be On Top," out now from Penguin Random House. Part memoir and part analysis, Hartshorne interviews fellow contestants and production crews to deep dive into what she calls an "iconic but deeply flawed" show.</p>

<p>In this excerpt provided to USA TODAY, Hartshorne recalls her first day in what she deems the "cult" of Tyra Banks' ANTM.</p>

<p>Exclusive excerpt from 'You Wanna Be on Top?' by Sarah Hartshorne</p>

<p>Sarah Hartshorne is a model and the author of "You Wanna Be On Top?: A Memoir of Makeovers, Manipulation, and Not Becoming America's Next Top Model."</p>

<p>Before boarding the cruise ship SS Adventure, the contract the show had sent me seemed huge. There were hundreds of pages of legalese that I barely understood. But by the time we docked in Saint Martin, it felt like an albatross.</p>

<p>A few days in, the shine had worn off a little, and the show started to feel like a cult, from the undisclosed filming locations in international waters to not being allowed to speak for days at a time. The language that they hammered into us over and over again urged us to be grateful for this opportunity. And the reality is ... it was a cult. I got suckered into a cult.</p>

<p>Negotiating never even occurred to me. But if it had, all the lawyers I interviewed for this book agreed: It's not an option. Either you sign or you don't. You're in or you're out. "You are not going to get control over how you are represented" under any circumstances, said one lawyer. And yet we all signed it. I didn't care how I was represented as long as I was represented on TV.</p>

<p>Early in the morning on our first full day aboard the cruise ship, we were led into some kind of conference room and told to wait for five minutes, which turned into hours. The room was hotel fancy: a lot of shiny fake wood paneling and inoffensive carpeting. It was a stark visual contrast to our tropical cruise wear: jean shorts, espadrilles, and spaghetti strap tank tops. We shivered in the harsh air-conditioning. There weren't enough chairs, so some of us sat on the ground. We started upright and alert, trying to blend into the professional-looking background, but as the minutes dragged on, we slowly drooped and slouched toward the ground like neglected houseplants. Finally, a team of mostly men and a few women barged through the door. Their suits and intense businesslike energy sliced through the air. They were like vaguely corporate alien invaders to our lush, listless planet.</p>

<p>They introduced themselves, but I couldn't pick any of them out of a lineup. They were just so … grown up, and I felt like a child sitting crisscross applesauce on the ground and staring up at them, patiently and nervously waiting. There were lawyers from the production company and executive producers. They were the top of the production pecking order; everyone else in the crew deferred to them.</p>

<p>They began a group presentation that was clearly well rehearsed. One would speak and then seamlessly cede the floor to another. After all, we were Cycle 9. They'd had eight other audiences to hone these performances with and really find the best way to sell it. It felt repetitive to the point of tedium to me, but they never wavered.</p>

<p>"America's Next Top Model is sitting inside this room," they said. "Really think about that. Look around. This is your competition. You are the select few. Does anyone know how many girls tried out for this show?"</p>

<p>We all shook our heads. They all smiled.</p>

<p>"A lot. Thousands upon thousands. Ten thousand tried out in Boston alone."</p>

<p>I looked at the few other girls whom I recognized from the Boston tryouts with wide eyes.</p>

<p>"And it wasn't just the auditions. Thousands upon thousands sent in audition tapes from all over the country. Every single state. We had casting scouts all over looking for candidates. And you guys are the ones who made it. You're here. And it's not just your looks. You all know that being a top model is more than that. It's who you are. And one of you … is America's Next Top Model. This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity."</p>

<p>They kept going. And going. I was uncomfortable with this level of flattery. In "Cultish: The Language of Fanaticism," Amanda Montell describes this tactic used by cult leaders: "When you convince someone that they're above everyone else, it helps you both distance them from outsiders and also abuse them, because you can paint anything from physical assault to unpaid labor to verbal attacks as 'special treatment' reserved only for them."</p>

<p>"You Wanna Be On Top?" by Sarah Hartshorne</p>

<p>On the one hand, I desperately wanted to feel special. I was one of the select few! On the other hand, this whole process had felt so random, it had never once felt like I was actually doing anything particularly special.</p>

<p>"This experience can only be what you make of it," they said, for the first time of many.</p>

<p>Suddenly their tones and demeanor shifted. They had been serious and kind, and now there was something else in the air. One of them stepped out from the line they'd been in.</p>

<p>"That information is worth more than you know. If you do anything to put that information at risk, we will sue you for five million dollars." He paused for effect. The NDA section of the contract carried, famously, a fine of five million dollars if violated, as Janice Dickinson once bemoaned in a red-carpet interview.</p>

<p>A gorgeous, long-limbed bartender from Boston with a lazy eye and an accent so thick I wanted to cut into it like it was a rib eye broke the silence. "Yeah, but, like … I don't have five million dollahs."</p>

<p>"We know you don't. We know all about all of your financial information. None of you have five million dollars. None of your families have five million dollars either."</p>

<p>We looked around at one another as we all realized that, yes, of course, that was true. We'd given them detailed accounts of our personal financial information as well as our families' before we'd even received our plane tickets.</p>

<p>"What you need to understand is we won't just sue you. We'll sue your entire family. And I don't just mean your parents. We'll sue your kids..."</p>

<p>Boston opened her mouth to say something, presumably that she didn't have any kids, that none of us did.</p>

<p>"... by which I mean your future kids. We'll sue your children, we'll sue your children's children, we'll sue your children's children's children."</p>

<p>I swallowed the lump in my throat. How would that even work? I wondered.</p>

<p>"Sorry, but ... how would that even work?" a girl asked, and I was so relieved.</p>

<p>"Great question," said the producer sincerely. "Here's how it would work: we would sue you and win. And the judge will decide how much we get to dock your pay for the rest of your life. For the rest of your life, every dollar you earn, we will get a cut. We will garnishee your wages for the rest of your life. And after you die, we'll get a percentage of every dollar your children earn, and their children, and on and on, until we get five million dollars plus interest. If you say anything to anyone, you will be paying us back long after you are dead. You will never achieve any level of success without us taking a huge chunk of it. Buying a house, putting your kids through college, finishing college yourself – all of that will be impossible."</p>

<p>Kids and a house felt impossibly out of reach already. And the meeting just kept going: hours of them hammering the same point over and over. I desperately wanted them to know that I would be one of the "good ones" who would do what she was told and wouldn't cause them any trouble. But I knew that there was no way to make them see that. There was no way to make them see me at all. They weren't performing for us; they were performing for the contract and for the money that it guaranteed them. They were performing for the promise of good TV. And unlike my hypothetical kids and house, it wasn't out of reach. They knew what they wanted and exactly how to get it.</p>

<p>"There's a million girls that would happily take your place," they kept saying. "And we have their phone numbers. They're ready and willing to meet us on the next island."</p>

<p>That night at dinner, I sat pushing the food around on my plate, still stunned into silence. As a kid, I was painfully shy. Every report card I brought home from elementary school said that I was smart and capable but never spoke up in class. I had one friend, which I thought was more than enough. After years of badgering me to invite people to my birthday parties, my mom finally asked me what I really wanted to do. I told her I wanted to spend the night at a hotel. So she got us a room at the local Motel 6 for the night. I swam in the pool for hours; we ate cake in bed and watched all the late-night talk shows. I loved seeing the comedians do stand-up. It was my favorite birthday ever.</p>

<p>In fifth grade, I discovered that I could do more than just watch comedy on late-night shows: I could use it to overcome my crippling social anxiety. I slowly came out of my shell. Making people laugh was the only way I really knew how to connect with people, but after the lecture that day, I didn't feel very funny. So I reverted to my childhood self: Shy. Silent.</p>

<p>That's why Ebony and I were perfect cruise ship roommates: we were both introverts who could fake it when we had to. When I met Ebony, my first thought was: She's going to win. In a group of the most beautiful girls I'd ever seen, she stood out head and shoulders above the rest. Literally: she was over six feet tall and wore her hair in a big, messy bun on top of her head that made her even taller. When we first got to our room, she seemed shy, sweet, guarded, and deeply insecure. Then we went to dinner, and I watched her become a different person for the camera.</p>

<p>"I didn't come here to make friends," she said in the van. "I'll start remembering y'all's names when we make it to the house."</p>

<p>But in our room, she was different.</p>

<p>"I want to be smart about this. I'm trying to be, like, the b---- or whatever, but it's harder than I thought," she told me.</p>

<p>Oftentimes, we wouldn't talk much in the room: we both needed quiet and space (at least as much quiet and space as possible in a forty-eight-square-foot room). That night, we said even less than usual.</p>

<p>"That was ... pretty crazy," I said.</p>

<p>"Dinner?" she asked.</p>

<p>"No, the talk about the contract," I answered.</p>

<p>"(Expletive), yeah! That was crazy! I didn't know how to act at dinner after all that."</p>

<p>"Oh my god, me too!" I said, relieved again. "I didn't even know how to be a normal person!"</p>

<p>We agreed that it was wild and way too long and we were glad it was over. None of us were going to be forgetting any of that anytime soon—surely that was the end of it.</p>

<p>The Very Scary Producers and Lawyers gave us the Talk AGAIN in which we were threatened with defamation, disembowelment, and death if we breathed a peep of anything to anyone. They are, let me say, not at all (expletive) around, and I (expletive) GET IT, I wrote in my journal several long, repetitive days later.</p>

<p>Over and over, we heard that "America's Next Top Model is in this room," "this is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity," "this experience is only what you make of it," and "we will garnishee your wages for the rest of your life." These phrases started rattling around in my mind, like a song that gets stuck in your head.</p>

<p>Of course, it wasn't just our contracts that we were dealing with; there was also the deal between the cruise line and the network, and, on that front, there was some tension. Specifically, between the show and the passengers, who hated us. One day, we were divided into three groups and led to a part of the ship we'd never been to before. One group was taken to the climbing wall, one to the skating rink, and my group was brought to the hot tub. A production assistant arranged us around the hot tub, some girls sitting with just their feet in the water, and a few of us, including me, sitting in the water. I was in the middle, submerged almost to my neck.</p>

<p>"I hope we can go in the pool after this," I said, slowly cooking in the water.</p>

<p>"No talking yet," said one of the cameramen.</p>

<p>"Sorry," I said. "Oh, and sorry for saying sorry. (Expletive)."</p>

<p>Eventually, they got the angles and lighting right and called action, and we were allowed to talk. Allowed to talk and contractually obligated to look like we were having the time of our lives.</p>

<p>From the book "You Wanna Be On Top?: A Memoir of Makeovers, Manipulation, and Not Becoming America's Next Top Model" by Sarah Hartshorne. Copyright © 2025 by Sarah Hartshorne. Published in the United States by Crown, an imprint of the Crown Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House LLC.</p>

<p>This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: 'America's Next Top Model' was 'a cult,' former contestant says</p>

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'America's Next Top Model' contestant says show 'was a cult' with strict rules, threats

<p>- 'America's Next Top Model' contestant says show 'was a cult' with strict rules, threats<...

Sean 'Diddy' Combs due in court today, seeking expedited sentencing

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  • Sean 'Diddy' Combs due in court today, seeking expedited sentencing</p>

<p>AARON KATERSKY and MASON LEIBJuly 8, 2025 at 10:46 PM</p>

<p>Defense attorneys and federal prosecutors have agreed to a Sept. 22 sentencing hearing for Sean "Diddy" Combs, according to a letter filed with the court ahead of a hearing set for Tuesday afternoon.</p>

<p>It will be up to Judge Arun Subramanian during today's remote hearing, scheduled for 2 p.m. ET, to accept the accelerated schedule and ask the Probation Office to expedite the pre-sentencing investigation.</p>

<p>Combs was convicted on July 2 on federal charges of transportation to engage in prostitution.</p>

<p>Attorneys for Combs will try to convince Subramanian to accept the Sept. 22 date, citing "exceptional circumstances." The judge last week tentatively scheduled sentencing for October.</p>

<p>Juror in Sean 'Diddy' Combs trial pushes back on claim that celebrity influence played a role in verdict</p>

<p>Subramanian agreed to hear arguments for an expedited sentencing following a split verdict that acquitted Combs of racketeering conspiracy and sex trafficking but convicted him on the two counts of prostitution-related charges he faced.</p>

<p>The defense argued in court last week that "exceptional circumstances" that warrant an expedited sentencing include the 2018 death of Combs' romantic partner, Kim Porter.</p>

<p>"The mother of some of his children had passed away many years ago. These kids, the two daughters here sitting in the middle of your honor's second row, don't have a parent," defense attorney Marc Agnifilo said in court last week.</p>

<p>Jane Rosenberg/Reuters - PHOTO: Sean "Diddy" Combs reacts after verdicts are read of the five counts against him, during Combs' sex trafficking trial in New York City, New York, July 2, 2025 in this courtroom sketch.</p>

<p>Federal prosecutors appeared to oppose anything other than the usual course, including a pre-sentence report from probation officials that would require Combs to sit for an interview.</p>

<p>"The only things exceptional about this defendant are his wealth, his violence and his brazenness," prosecutor Maurene Comey said. She also said that the government plans to pursue "significant incarceration" for Combs on the prostitution charges.</p>

<p>Cassie Ventura's lawyer releases statement on 'Diddy' split verdict: 'She paved the way'</p>

<p>Combs faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison on the two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution, though it's possible that he will receive less than that for a first-time conviction. Any sentence would include credit for time served, which so far totals roughly 10 months.</p>

<p>Combs' split verdict last week followed six weeks of testimony that saw the prosecution present 34 witnesses and the defense present none. The jury of eight men and four women deliberated just over two days before reaching their decision.</p>

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Sean 'Diddy' Combs due in court today, seeking expedited sentencing

<p>- Sean 'Diddy' Combs due in court today, seeking expedited sentencing</p> <p>AARON KATE...

Candace Cameron Bure Makes Bombshell Revelation About Her Marriage

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<p>Alex GurleyJuly 8, 2025 at 9:30 PM</p>

<p>Steve Zak/Getty Images</p>

<p>Candace Cameron Bure Makes Bombshell Revelation About Her Marriage originally appeared on Parade.</p>

<p>Candace Cameron Bure is getting candid about the hard times she's faced in her marriage to husband Valeri Bure — and how their son saved them during a particularly low moment.</p>

<p>The 49-year-old actress recently opened up about a rough patch she went through with Val on an episode of her eponymous podcast, explaining that she thought it might have been the end of their marriage.</p>

<p>"Val and I went through a really, really rough season in our marriage. And we were like, 'I don't know, don't think...we're gonna make it through,'" Candace admitted on the July 8 episode of the podcast.</p>

<p>Looking back on the low point, she shared that it was their son Levi that ended up being a big part of why they worked through the situation.</p>

<p>🎬 SIGN UP for Parade's Daily newsletter to get the latest pop culture news & celebrity interviews delivered right to your inbox 🎬</p>

<p>"At one point, Lev preached, like, a 45-minute sermon on marriage to us. Just had his Bible open on the couch and just talked about it," Candace shared.</p>

<p>She continued, "And I'll never forget, 'cause he said, 'You know, I know I haven't been married. I'm just a young kid. And so it's probably hard to take marriage advice from someone this young [who] never experienced it before. But I don't need to be married to know what the word of God says.'"</p>

<p>Candace added that Levi provided a "calm voice that had so much wisdom behind it" during a turbulent time for the couple. It made them realize that together they had raised some "pretty good kids."</p>

<p>Candace didn't share exactly when she and Val went through the rough patch or what caused their relationship trouble — but they have since reconciled.</p>

<p>The couple, who tied the knot back in 1996, just celebrated their 29th anniversary. Cameron commemorated the moment with a series of throwback photos on Instagram.</p>

<p>"31 years ago we went on our first official date at his practice rink in Fredericton, New Brunswick. @dcoulier introduced us at a charity hockey game in Los Angeles 4 months earlier. 30 years ago on June 20th, we got engaged in Paris. 29 years ago today, June 22nd, we got married. We grew a beautiful family. Happy anniversary to my love and best friend forever," she wrote on her account.</p>

<p>Candace Cameron Bure Makes Bombshell Revelation About Her Marriage first appeared on Parade on Jul 8, 2025</p>

<p>This story was originally reported by Parade on Jul 8, 2025, where it first appeared.</p>

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Candace Cameron Bure Makes Bombshell Revelation About Her Marriage

<p>- Candace Cameron Bure Makes Bombshell Revelation About Her Marriage</p> <p>Alex GurleyJuly 8, ...

Trump supporters angry over Justice Department's Epstein memo

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  • Trump supporters angry over Justice Department's Epstein memo</p>

<p>WILL STEAKINJuly 9, 2025 at 2:30 AM</p>

<p>President Donald Trump's MAGA base has erupted in outrage over the Justice Department and FBI's memo stating they found no evidence that notorious deceased financier Jeffrey Epstein kept a "client list," with many of the president's most loyal allies blasting the administration's leadership.</p>

<p>Some of Trump's most die-hard supporters have spent the past day blasting FBI Director Kash Patel and Deputy Director Dan Bongino, both one-time MAGA-world darlings themselves, over the Epstein memo. However, the harshest backlash seems to be focused on Attorney General Pam Bondi, with many pro-Trump voices criticizing her over her mixed messaging regarding the Epstein files and multiple supporters calling for her to resign.</p>

<p>MORE: DOJ, FBI review finds no Jeffrey Epstein 'client list,' confirms suicide: Memo</p>

<p>New York State Sex Offender Registry via AP - PHOTO: This photo provided by the New York State Sex Offender Registry shows Jeffrey Epstein, March 28, 2017.</p>

<p>Bondi had previously promised the public release of scores of records associated with federal probes into Epstein, though in recent interviews she has claimed the delay was attributed to "tens of thousands" of videos within FBI's possession showing potential pornography of minors.</p>

<p>During a Fox News interview in February, Bondi suggested an alleged Epstein "client list" was sitting on her desk -- though no "client list" has been disclosed, and multiple sources have told ABC News that no such list has ever surfaced.</p>

<p>Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images - PHOTO: Attorney General Pam Bondi speaks during a news conference with President Donald Trump in the Brady Briefing Room of the White House, June 27, 2025, in Washington.</p>

<p>Asked about Bondi's comments about the list, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt claimed Bondi wasn't referring to any "client list."</p>

<p>"She was saying the entirety of all of the paperwork, all of the paper in relation to Jeffrey Epstein's crimes. That's what the attorney general was referring to," Leavitt said during the White House press briefing Monday.</p>

<p>On Tuesday, Bondi said she was referring to a file on Epstein.</p>

<p>"In February, I did an interview on Fox, and it's been getting a lot of attention because I said I was asked a question about the client list, and my response was, it's sitting on my desk to be reviewed, meaning the file along with the JFK, MLK files as well. That's what I meant by that," Bondi said during a Cabinet meeting.</p>

<p>In late February, Bondi handed out binders with Epstein case files to pro-Trump social media influencers at the White House -- files that ultimately contained little new information. As ABC News reported at the time, the move caught White House officials off guard and outraged some supporters of the president, who had been promised that more details would be made public.</p>

<p>Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images, FILE - PHOTO: In this Feb. 27, 2025, file photo, Rogan O'Handley, Chaya Raichik, Scott Presler, Liz Wheeler and Chad Prather carry binders as they walk out of the West Wing of the White House in Washington, D.C.</p>

<p>Now, Trump supporters are voicing their frustrations with Bondi -- and others saying the Trump administration is involved in a cover-up.</p>

<p>Far-right activist Laura Loomer has called for Bondi to resign. Former Trump adviser Steve Bannon spoke at length about the memo on his popular "War Room" show on Monday, even questioning if the administration is as transparent as it claims it would be. Conspiracy theorist Alex Jones has accused the Trump administration of being part of a "cover-up" and at one point posted a video from his car where he broke down in tears talking about it.</p>

<p>MORE: AG Bondi faces heat from White House, Trump allies over Epstein files release</p>

<p>Loomer isn't the only MAGA world voice calling for Bondi to resign. Pro-Trump influencers the Hodgetwins also called on Trump to fire Bondi -- and so did American conservative political commentator Liz Wheeler. Mike Cernovich, a past Pizzagate conspiracy pusher, posted that "No one is believing the Epstein coverup, @realDonaldTrump. This will be part of your legacy. There's still time to change it!"</p>

<p>Michael Flynn, who served in Trump's first administration and was pardoned by the president, called the Trump administration's memo "another brutal and stark example of the two different standards we appear to adhere to in the United States" in a social media post on Monday -- adding, "This has to change and quickly."</p>

<p>The response from MAGA influencers who feel betrayed by the Justice Department memo marks some of the most vocal backlash Trump's administration has faced from his own loyal supporters during his second term.</p>

<p>The Epstein files for years have been the subject of widespread speculation and conspiracy theories that the government was covering up information and a supposed "client list" to protect powerful businessmen and politicians.</p>

<p>Now, Trump's administration -- being led by some of the same MAGA voices such as Patel, who once pushed the idea of a cover-up -- is trying to explain that no such evidence exists.</p>

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Trump supporters angry over Justice Department's Epstein memo

<p>- Trump supporters angry over Justice Department's Epstein memo</p> <p>WILL STEAKINJuly 9, ...

Trump says he will impose 50% tariff on copper imports on Tuesday

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  • Trump says he will impose 50% tariff on copper imports on Tuesday</p>

<p>Andrea Shalal and Jarrett RenshawJuly 9, 2025 at 2:29 AM</p>

<p>By Andrea Shalal and Jarrett Renshaw</p>

<p>WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Donald Trump said he will announce a 50% tariff on imported copper on Tuesday, an effort to boost U.S. production of a metal critical to electric vehicles, military hardware, the power grid and many consumer goods.</p>

<p>U.S. Comex copper futures jumped more than 10% after the announcement.</p>

<p>Trump told reporters at a White House cabinet meeting that he planned to make the copper tariff announcement later in the day but he did not say when the tariff would take effect.</p>

<p>The Trump administration announced a so-called Section 232 investigation into U.S. imports of the red metal in February. The deadline for the investigation to conclude is in November.</p>

<p>The National Mining Association and the American Critical Minerals Association did not immediately respond to requests for comment.</p>

<p>Freeport-McMoRan, the largest U.S. copper producer, did not immediately respond to request for comment.</p>

<p>(Reporting By Andrea Shalal and Jarrett Renshaw; Editing by Franklin Paul and Cynthia Osterman)</p>

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Trump says he will impose 50% tariff on copper imports on Tuesday

<p>- Trump says he will impose 50% tariff on copper imports on Tuesday</p> <p>Andrea Shalal and Ja...

Is there still tax on Social Security in Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill?' What to know

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  • Is there still tax on Social Security in Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill?' What to know</p>

<p>Kinsey Crowley, USA TODAYJuly 9, 2025 at 1:36 AM</p>

<p>President Donald Trump signed the Republican megabill dubbed the "Big Beautiful Bill" into law on the Fourth of July in a White House signing ceremony complete with a flyover from military planes.</p>

<p>The bill delivers on several campaign promises, including higher spending on immigration enforcement and tax breaks on tips and overtime.</p>

<p>He has also long vowed to eliminate taxes on Social Security benefits, and the White House has said the bill fulfills that promise. The Social Security Administration also sent out an unusually political email applauding the House's passage of the bill on July 3.</p>

<p>But what does the nearly 900-page bill actually say about Social Security benefit taxes?</p>

<p>What is BRICS? Trump threatens more tariffs for countries with 'Anti-American' policies</p>

<p>Is 'no tax on Social Security' part of the bill Trump signed?</p>

<p>No, the bill does not eliminate taxes on Social Security benefits.</p>

<p>Doing so wouldn't have been possible because of congressional restrictions on what kinds of things can be included in a budget reconciliation like this bill, CBS MoneyWatch reported.</p>

<p>However, the bill includes a tax break for seniors, which Republicans have promoted alongside other campaign promises like no tax on tips and no tax on overtime.</p>

<p>'Big Beautiful Bill' includes a tax deduction for seniors 65 and older</p>

<p>The bill passed creates a $6,000 federal income tax deduction for Americans 65 and older. (That amount has increased from the House's previously passed version of the bill, which slated a $4,000 deduction.)</p>

<p>As Social Security can be a big part of seniors' income, that deduction could make part of those benefits tax-exempt. But the break won't be universal to all beneficiaries. For example, some beneficiaries are younger than 65 or already earn too little to pay income taxes at all. Also, the deduction dwindles for individuals earning more than $75,000 ($150,000 if filing jointly).</p>

<p>A June analysis of the bill by Trump's Council of Economic Advisers estimated 88% of seniors will not pay taxes on their benefits under the new law.</p>

<p>"It's been marketed as tax relief for seniors, but a lot of seniors are going to be surprised when they find out it doesn't apply to them," Garrett Watson, a senior policy analyst at the Tax Foundation, a center-right think tank, previously told USA TODAY. "I'm getting asked all the time by folks what this actually means for their tax situation."</p>

<p>When does the deduction for seniors go into effect?</p>

<p>The deduction is in effect for the 2025 tax year. However, it is a limited benefit that is only in effect through the end of 2028, just before Trump is slated to leave office.</p>

<p>Contributing: Ben Adler and Zac Anderson, USA TODAY</p>

<p>Kinsey Crowley is the Trump Connect reporter for the USA TODAY Network. Reach her at [email protected]. Follow her on X and TikTok @kinseycrowley or Bluesky at @kinseycrowley.bsky.social.</p>

<p>This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Trump claims no more tax on Social Security. The bill doesn't say that</p>

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Is there still tax on Social Security in Trump’s ‘Big Beautiful Bill?’ What to know

<p>- Is there still tax on Social Security in Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill?' What to know</p> ...

 

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