New Income Tax Act 2025: India's Biggest Tax Reform in 65 Years
Effective from 1 April 2026 — Replacing the Income Tax Act, 1961 | Key Changes, Analysis & MCQs
The Income Tax Act, 2025 officially came into force on 1 April 2026, replacing the Income Tax Act, 1961 — a legislation that had governed India's direct tax system for over six decades. Announced by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman in the Union Budget 2026, this reform is the most comprehensive restructuring of India's tax law in recent history. Importantly, tax rates remain unchanged — the focus is entirely on simplification, modernisation, and ease of compliance.
(down from 819)
+ 16 Schedules
Act of 1961
🏛️ Background: Why the Old Act Was Replaced
The Income Tax Act, 1961 was enacted with only 298 sections. Over six decades of frequent amendments, it grew to 819 sections, filled with overlapping provisions, outdated clauses (e.g., Section 10A for Free Trade Zones became redundant after FY 2012–13 but stayed in the Act for years), archaic legal language like "notwithstanding," and a dual-year system (Previous Year + Assessment Year) that confused millions of taxpayers.
The government initiated a comprehensive review in Budget 2024. The Income-tax Bill, 2025 passed in Lok Sabha on 11 August 2025, received Rajya Sabha approval the next day, and Presidential assent on 21 August 2025.
📌 Three Guiding Principles of the New Act
- Textual & Structural Simplification: Plain language replacing complex legalese; logical regrouping of provisions.
- No Major Policy Changes: Continuity and certainty for taxpayers — same deductions, same exemptions.
- No Changes to Tax Rates: Rates are decided annually through the Finance Act; the new Act is revenue-neutral.
🔑 Key Structural Changes Under Income Tax Act 2025
- "Tax Year" Concept Introduced: The dual system of "Previous Year" and "Assessment Year" is replaced with a single unified term — Tax Year (April–March, 12-month period). This aligns India with global tax practices followed by the US, UK, Australia, and New Zealand.
- Sections Reduced from 819 to 536: Redundant, outdated, and overlapping provisions removed. The Act is now a cleaner, 23-chapter, 16-schedule document.
- Plain Language Throughout: Complex terms like "notwithstanding" replaced with simple phrases. Easier referencing format adopted.
- Digital Tax Administration: Virtual Digital Assets (VDAs/crypto) specifically recognised in relevant sections; provisions updated for digital transactions, records, and assets.
- TDS Provisions Consolidated: All Tax Deducted at Source (TDS) provisions clubbed under a single Section 393, instead of being scattered across multiple sections as in the 1961 Act.
- Salary Provisions Consolidated: HRA, gratuity, leave encashment, perquisites all brought under one section for clarity.
- Simplified Return Forms: Redesigned ITR forms for improved usability and reduced compliance friction.
- Extended ITR Deadlines: Due date for filing ITR-3 and ITR-4 (non-audit taxpayers) extended to 31 August from 31 July.
- Presumptive Scheme for SMEs: Businesses with turnover under ₹10 crore and cash receipts below 5% exempt from maintaining books and tax audit (Section 63).
- HRA City Expansion: 50% HRA exemption now extended to 8 cities — Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai, Bengaluru, Pune, Hyderabad, and Ahmedabad.
💰 Income Tax Slabs for Tax Year 2026-27
Tax slabs remain unchanged from the previous year. The new tax regime continues as the default regime under Section 202 of the new Act.
New Tax Regime (Default) — FY 2026-27:
| Annual Income | Tax Rate |
|---|---|
| Up to ₹4,00,000 | Nil |
| ₹4,00,001 – ₹8,00,000 | 5% |
| ₹8,00,001 – ₹12,00,000 | 10% |
| ₹12,00,001 – ₹16,00,000 | 15% |
| ₹16,00,001 – ₹20,00,000 | 20% |
| ₹20,00,001 – ₹24,00,000 | 25% |
| Above ₹24,00,000 | 30% |
| ✅ Rebate u/s 87A: Up to ₹60,000 — Income up to ₹12 lakh = ZERO TAX ✅ Salaried: Standard Deduction ₹75,000 → effective tax-free limit = ₹12.75 lakh | |
⚖️ Old Regime vs New Regime — At a Glance
🏛️ Old Tax Regime
- Higher tax rates
- Allows Section 80C, HRA, LTA deductions
- Beneficial for those with high investments
- Suitable for senior citizens with multiple deductions
- More documentation required
🆕 New Tax Regime (Default)
- Lower tax rates; simpler
- Fewer deductions/exemptions
- Standard deduction of ₹75,000
- Zero tax up to ₹12 lakh (₹12.75L salaried)
- No investment proof needed
🔍 Detailed Analysis: What Does This Mean for India?
1. Structural Modernisation — Not a Tax Overhaul
The most critical point: this is a housekeeping exercise, not a tax revolution. The government has essentially taken the existing law, stripped the archaic language, removed redundant provisions, and reorganised it logically. Tax rates, deductions, and most policy provisions remain intact. This ensures zero disruption for existing taxpayers while making the system accessible for new ones.
2. Impact on Salaried Class (Relevant to J&K Government Employees)
For salaried individuals — including government servants who are the primary audience of JKPSC/JKSSB — the new Act consolidates salary-related provisions (HRA, gratuity, perquisites) under one section. The ₹75,000 standard deduction is now codified directly into the Act. The effective tax-free limit of ₹12.75 lakh for salaried individuals under the new regime represents significant relief, especially for junior and mid-level government employees.
3. Senior Citizens Get More Relief
The tax deduction limit for senior citizens has been doubled from ₹50,000 to ₹1 lakh, providing meaningful post-retirement financial security to a large section of the population.
4. Digital Economy Integration
The explicit recognition of Virtual Digital Assets (crypto, NFTs) within the tax framework reflects India's alignment with the digital economy. For exam purposes, note that VDAs are taxed at the same rate as before (30% flat) — the new Act only formalises their mention, not the taxation method.
5. Compliance Simplification — The Long-Term Goal
The real-world impact will unfold over years. By reducing litigation-prone language and consolidating TDS provisions under Section 393, the government aims to cut tax disputes and lower court burdens. The CBDT (Central Board of Direct Taxes) has also released a section-mapping utility to help taxpayers and practitioners transition smoothly from the 1961 Act to the 2025 Act.
6. Revenue Neutrality — Fiscal Continuity
The Finance Minister confirmed the Act is revenue-neutral. Tax rates are still determined annually through the Finance Act/Union Budget, not the Income Tax Act. This means the 2026-27 slabs are governed by Budget 2026, and future budgets will continue to set rates independently.
📚 Important Facts to Remember for JKPSC / JKSSB
- The new Act replaces the Income Tax Act, 1961, which served India for over 65 years.
- Passed in Lok Sabha on 11 August 2025; Presidential assent on 21 August 2025.
- Effective from 1 April 2026 (Tax Year 2026-27 onwards).
- Total sections: 536 (reduced from 819); 23 Chapters, 16 Schedules.
- "Assessment Year" and "Previous Year" replaced by single term: "Tax Year".
- New regime is the default regime under Section 202.
- Income up to ₹12 lakh is tax-free (₹12.75 lakh for salaried) under new regime via Section 87A rebate.
- All TDS provisions consolidated under Section 393.
- The body that drafted the new rules is the CBDT (Central Board of Direct Taxes).
- The reform was part of a process initiated in Budget 2024 by FM Nirmala Sitharaman.
📝 Practice MCQs — New Income Tax Act 2025
Q1. The Income Tax Act, 2025 came into effect from which date?
Q2. The Income Tax Act, 2025 replaced which legislation?
Q3. How many sections does the new Income Tax Act, 2025 contain?
Q4. What new terminology replaced "Assessment Year" and "Previous Year" under the Income Tax Act, 2025?
Q5. Under the new Income Tax Act, 2025, all TDS provisions are consolidated under which section?
Q6. Under the new tax regime effective April 2026, what is the maximum income up to which a salaried individual pays zero income tax?