New Income Tax Law From April 1: India will usher in a major tax reform tomorrow (April 1, 2026), as the Income-tax Act, 2025, replaces the six-decade-old Income Tax Act, 1961. The new framework does not change tax rates but fundamentally simplifies the structure, language, and compliance architecture of the country’s direct tax system.
The new Income Tax Act, 2025, passed by Parliament in August 2025 and later approved by President Droupadi Murmu, aims to reduce legal complexity, cut litigation, and align tax administration with a digital-first economy.
One of the most significant structural changes is the removal of the long-standing distinction between ‘Previous Year’ and ‘Assessment Year’. From FY27 onwards, taxpayers will deal with a single concept — ‘Tax Year’ — simplifying return filing, timelines, and overall understanding, especially for first-time filers.
The new law is revenue-neutral. Tax rates will continue to be decided through the annual Finance Act. As per Budget 2026-27, income tax slabs remain unchanged, with the new regime continuing as the default system.
A key relief remains intact — individuals earning up to Rs 12 lakh continue to pay zero tax due to rebate under Section 87A.
In a taxpayer-friendly move, refunds of TDS will now be allowed even if returns are filed after the due date. This is expected to benefit late filers who earlier faced practical difficulties in claiming refunds.
The new framework significantly expands the scope of PAN usage to improve financial tracking and compliance.
PAN will now be mandatory for:
Annual cash deposits or withdrawals of Rs 10 lakh or more
Property transactions above Rs 20 lakh
Vehicle purchases above Rs 5 lakh (including two-wheelers)
Hotel or event payments exceeding Rs 1 lakh
All insurance premium payments (no minimum threshold)
This marks a shift from transaction-based limits to annual financial behaviour tracking.
Cash reporting norms have been simplified but made stricter in scope.
Instead of tracking daily transactions, the new rules introduce an annual aggregate threshold of Rs 10 lakh for deposits and withdrawals, enabling better monitoring of high-value activity while reducing compliance burden for small users.
The draft rules propose expanding the metro category for HRA benefits.
Cities likely to be added include Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Pune and Ahmedabad.
Taxpayers in these cities can claim 50% of salary as HRA exemption instead of 40%, reducing taxable income. At the same time, compliance becomes stricter, with mandatory landlord PAN disclosure in specified cases.
The new law updates outdated limits on employer-provided benefits.
Key changes include meal allowance exemption raised to Rs 200 per meal, gift and voucher exemption increased to Rs 15,000 annually, revised valuation of company cars and driver benefits, and enhanced children’s education and hostel allowances.
These changes align tax-free benefits with current cost structures.
Crypto transactions will come under stricter reporting requirements. Exchanges will have enhanced obligations to share transaction data with tax authorities, aimed at curbing tax evasion and improving transparency in digital asset markets.
The draft rules formally recognise the Digital Rupee (CBDC) as a valid electronic payment mode under tax laws. This integrates central bank digital currency into mainstream tax compliance and reporting systems.
Reporting thresholds for immovable property transactions have been revised upward from Rs 10 lakh to Rs 20 lakh. It now includes gifts, joint development agreements, and stamp-duty-based valuations. This aligns tax reporting with current real estate price levels.
A major highlight of the reform is administrative simplification.
Total rules reduced from 511 to 333
Forms cut from 399 to 190
Provisions have been consolidated into topic-based structures, reducing redundancy and improving clarity.
TR Deadlines Tweaked For Some Taxpayers
While salaried individuals will continue to file returns by July 31, deadlines for non-audit cases (ITR-3, ITR-4) have been extended to August 31. This provides additional time for professionals and self-employed taxpayers.
Trading in derivatives becomes more expensive due to an increase in Securities Transaction Tax (STT):
Options premium: 0.1% → 0.15%
Options intrinsic value: 0.125% → 0.15%
Futures: 0.02% → 0.05%
This may impact high-frequency and retail derivatives traders.
Several investment-related tax provisions have been streamlined. Stock buybacks will now be taxed as ‘capital gains’ instead of ‘deemed dividend’. No deduction will be allowed for interest expenses on dividend/mutual fund income. There will be a simplified TDS declaration across multiple income sources.
Tax Collected at Source (TCS) has been rationalised. TCS on foreign travel has been reduced to a flat 2%, while education and medical remittances abroad have also been cut to 2%. This lowers upfront tax burden on international spending.
The window for filing revised returns has been extended from December 31 to March 31. This gives taxpayers more time to correct filings, though late fees will apply after December.
The new Income-tax Act, 2025, also introduce a comprehensive renumbering and restructuring of sections. Key changes include renumbering Section 80C to 123, Form 16 to Form 130, and Form 26AS to 168. The objective is to reduce excessive cross-referencing and improve readability.
The 1961 Act was drafted for a very different economy. Over 60 years, hundreds of amendments, provisos, and cross-references made it bulky and difficult to interpret. As business models evolved and technology reshaped finance, the government decided a structural overhaul was necessary rather than incremental changes.
The new Act removes obsolete provisions, consolidates applicable ones, and cuts text volume and section count by nearly 50%, making it leaner and easier to navigate.
Source: News18