When millions of Americans filed their taxes this April, they almost certainly paid more to the federal government than one of the most profitable entertainment empires on earth. In 2025, The Walt Disney Company raked in an astounding $8.3 billion in U.S. pretax income. Its federal corporate income tax bill? Exactly zero dollars.

According to a bombshell 2026 report from the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy (ITEP), Disney’s zero-tax year is a perfectly legal maneuver—and it highlights a heavily engineered corporate tax system that leaves everyday citizens footing the national bill.
The $105 Billion “Zero-Tax” Club
Disney is not an outlier; it is simply one of the most visible names on a sprawling list. ITEP’s analysis of recent SEC filings reveals that at least 88 major, highly profitable U.S. corporations managed to dodge federal income taxes entirely in their most recent fiscal year.

Together, corporate titans like Disney, Tesla, United Airlines, and CVS Health generated over $105 billion in domestic profits last year. If these companies paid the standard 21% statutory corporate tax rate, they would have owed the U.S. Treasury a collective $22.1 billion. Instead, not only did they pay nothing, but the group actually received $4.7 billion in tax rebates.
How Disney Made $8.3 Billion Vanish
Because corporate tax returns remain private, the public rarely sees the exact math behind these vanishing tax bills. However, the new 2025 SEC disclosure rules force companies to list the major tax-reduction provisions they utilize. Based on Disney’s shareholder reports, the company relied heavily on a trio of massive legal loopholes:

- Supercharged R&D Write-Offs: The federal government incentivizes innovation through the research and experimentation (R&E) credit. Disney aggressively categorizes its vast investments in streaming technology, digital media, and theme park engineering as “research.” Thanks to a new retroactive law passed in 2025, companies can now immediately write off all R&D expenses in a single year rather than amortizing them, successfully sheltering billions.
- The FDDEI Export Deduction: As a global brand, Disney uses its international reach to shrink its domestic tax footprint. The Foreign-Derived Deduction Eligible Income (FDDEI) deduction lowers the tax rate on profits from “exports”—such as digital streaming subscriptions or merchandise sold overseas. Recently expanded, this deduction allows companies to shield a massive 33.34% of eligible profits from the IRS.
- Executive Stock Options: Federal tax law allows corporations to write off stock-option expenses at a much higher rate than what they report to their investors. When top Disney executives cash out their lucrative options, the company claims the difference between the initial grant price and the current market value as a tax deduction. This creates a massive “phantom loss” that wipes out taxable corporate income while simultaneously enriching the top brass.
A System Working as Designed
Disney did not break the law; it followed a blueprint carefully drafted by lawmakers in Washington. ITEP places the blame for this unprecedented era of tax avoidance squarely on two major legislative packages: the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) and the 2025 “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” (OBBBA).

By combining the permanent corporate rate cuts from 2017 with the aggressive new write-offs embedded in the 2025 law, Congress effectively handed mega-corporations the keys to the U.S. Treasury.
The Real-World Cost
When a company like Disney avoids federal taxes, the financial impact ripples downward. State tax rules generally mirror federal income definitions. As a result of claiming these federal deductions, ITEP found that the 88 zero-tax companies paid an effective state income tax rate of just 1.4% nationwide. This severely starves local governments of the funds required for public schools, road repairs, and emergency services.

Disney’s 2025 accounting was a spectacular, legally sound magic trick. But for the working-class taxpayers making up the difference, the illusion is rapidly losing its charm.