New Income Tax Act 2025 vs Old Income Tax Act 1961: Complete Essential Guide

new income tax act 2025 vs old income tax act 1961
New Income Tax Act 2025 vs Old Income Tax Act 1961: Every Change That Affects You from 1 April 2026
Income Tax · Direct Tax Reform 2026

New Income Tax Act 2025 vs Old Income Tax Act 1961: Every Change That Affects You from 1 April 2026

India’s biggest direct tax overhaul in 65 years — explained section by section for salaried employees, businesses, and CAs

On 1 April 2026, India’s Income Tax Act, 1961 — a law that had governed direct taxation for 65 uninterrupted years — was formally repealed. In its place stands the Income Tax Act, 2025: a re-codified, restructured, and reader-friendly statute that reorganises over 800 old sections into a cleaner framework of 536 sections across 23 chapters.

Here is the single most important thing you need to understand: the new Income Tax Act 2025 does not impose any new tax, nor does it change slab rates. What it changes is the architecture — how the law is organised, how sections are numbered, how key concepts like “Tax Year” replace the old “Previous Year” and “Assessment Year” terminology, and how certain specific provisions around HRA, children’s allowances, TDS, and penalty timelines have been updated.

Whether you are a salaried employee wondering if your Form 16 will look different, a business owner updating your ERP’s TDS mapping, or a CA advising clients on pending appeals — this guide explains every material change between the new Income Tax Act 2025 vs old Income Tax Act 1961, in plain language, with practical action points you can act on today.

Why Was the Income Tax Act 1961 Replaced After 65 Years?

The Income Tax Act, 1961 was a remarkably durable piece of legislation. Introduced at the dawn of India’s post-independence economy, it governed direct taxation through six and a half decades of liberalisation, globalisation, and digital transformation. But that longevity came at a cost.

By the 2020s, the Act had been amended hundreds of times. It had accumulated over 800 sections, thousands of provisos and sub-clauses, countless explanations added as patches, and a body of case law that sometimes contradicted itself. Taxpayers needed a lawyer to understand a tax return. CAs needed cross-references across dozens of sections to answer a basic question. Even tax officers found interpretation inconsistent.

The government’s stated objectives in replacing the 1961 Act were:

  • Simplify and restructure the law into a logical, reader-friendly format
  • Remove redundant provisions, obsolete sections, and overlapping explanations
  • Eliminate confusing terminology (Previous Year vs Assessment Year)
  • Align the tax system with digital administration — faceless assessments, online filing, automated processing
  • Reduce litigation by making provisions clearer and less open to multiple interpretations
  • Align India’s tax framework with contemporary global standards
📌 Key Principle — The New Act Does NOT Change Your Tax Burden: The Income Tax Act, 2025 does not impose any new tax. It does not increase rates, remove existing deductions, or alter the fundamental structure of how income is classified. The official FAQ released by the Income Tax Department confirms: “The Income Tax Act 2025 does not impose any new tax. The intent is to simplify laws, make them easier to understand, interpret, and comply with.”

At a Glance: New Income Tax Act 2025 vs Old Income Tax Act 1961

536
Sections in New Act 2025
700+
Sections in Old Act 1961
23
Chapters in New Act
65 Yrs
Old Act’s Reign (1961–2026)
Aspect Income Tax Act 1961 (Old) Income Tax Act 2025 (New) Status
Effective from1 April 19621 April 2026 (Tax Year 2026-27)Change
Number of sections700+ (with alphabets — 80C, 194J)536 (purely numeric, sequential)Change
ChaptersMultiple, non-sequential23 structured chaptersChange
Year terminologyPrevious Year + Assessment YearSingle “Tax Year” conceptChange
Tax slab ratesAs per Budget 2025Same — unchangedSame
Basic exemption limit₹4,00,000 (new regime)₹4,00,000 — unchangedSame
TDS provisionsSec 192 to 194T (scattered)Section 393 (consolidated)Change
HRA metro cities4 cities (Del, Mum, Kol, Chen)8 cities (+ Bang, Pune, Hyd, Ahm)New
Children’s education allow.₹100/month/child₹3,000/month/childNew
ITR filing — AY 2026-27Filed under 1961 ActOld Act governs — sameSame
Tax Year 2026-27 ITRNot applicableFiled under new 2025 ActNew
Pending assessments/appealsContinue under 1961 ActOld Act governs — no disruptionSame
SGB redemption (secondary mkt)Capital gains exemptTaxable as capital gainsChange
Buyback proceeds to shareholdersTaxed in company’s handsTaxed as capital gains in shareholders’ handsChange
Section 194F (MF repurchase)Omitted (w.e.f. 2020)No equivalent — omittedRemoved

Structural Overhaul — How the New Income Tax Act 2025 Is Organised

The most immediately visible change in the Income Tax Act 2025 is its organisational structure. Where the old Act felt like a dense legal document with centuries of incremental amendments layered on top of each other, the new Act reads more like a well-designed compliance manual.

Sequential Section Numbering — No More Alphabets

Under the old Act, section numbers with alphabets proliferated as new provisions were inserted into existing numbering gaps — Section 80C, 80CCC, 80CCCD, 80CCD(1), 80CCD(1B), 194J, 194JA, 194JB, and so on. The new Act eliminates all alphabetical suffixes. Every section carries a clean numeric identity. Old Section 80C becomes part of Schedule XV read with Section 123. Old Section 194J becomes part of Section 393(1)[6(iii)].

This appears to increase complexity at first glance — but it actually reduces it. Once you have a cross-reference table, navigation becomes far more logical than the old Act’s patchwork of insertions.

Table-Based Structure for Grouped Provisions

One of the most practical improvements is the table-based structure for provisions that apply to multiple categories. TDS, for example, is now presented as a structured table within Section 393, with rows for each payment type and columns for rate, threshold, and applicability. Under the old Act, finding the TDS rate for technical services required cross-referencing Section 194J with CBDT circulars and Finance Act amendments — often spread across multiple documents.

STRUCTURAL COMPARISON Income Tax Act 2025 vs 1961 — Architecture at a Glance 📘 Income Tax Act, 1961 — Old Framework 📌 700+ Sections (with alphabets) • Sec 1 to 298 — Income & Tax Computation • Sec 80A to 80U — Deductions Chapter VI-A • Sec 192 to 194T — TDS (25+ scattered sections) • Sec 206AA, 206AB — PAN/non-filer TDS rules • Sec 139 to 158 — Returns and Assessments • Sec 246 to 264 — Appeals and Revisions • Sec 270A to 275 — Penalties • Schedules — Rates, Depreciation, Securities + Hundreds of provisos, explanations, sub-clauses layered over decades of amendments ⚠ Pain Points of the Old Act Section numbers with alphabets (80C, 194JA) — confusing to navigate Dual year system: Previous Year ≠ Assessment Year — causes errors 700+ sections across non-sequential chapters Governed India’s direct taxes: 1962 – 31 March 2026 📗 Income Tax Act, 2025 — New Framework ✅ 536 Sections — 23 Chapters (Sequential) • Chapters 1-3 — Basics, Charge, Residential Status • Chapter 4 — Heads of Income (Salary, HP, Business) • Chapter 5 — Capital Gains (restructured, clearer) • Chapter 8 — Deductions (Schedule XV replacing 80C etc.) • Chapter 17 — TDS: Sec 392 (Salary) + Sec 393 (Others) • Chapter 18 — TCS: Section 394 • Chapter 20 — Returns and Assessments (unified) • Chapter 22 — Penalties (clearer, structured) ✅ Improvements in New Act Pure numeric sections — no alphabets, table-based structure Single “Tax Year” concept — no more dual-year confusion 536 sequential sections across 23 structured chapters Effective from 1 April 2026 — Tax Year 2026-27 onwards cleartaxadvisors.in | Source: Income Tax Act 2025 | Income Tax Act 1961 | Income Tax Department FAQs
Image 1 ALT: Income Tax Act 2025 vs Income Tax Act 1961 structural comparison — 536 sequential sections and 23 chapters in the new Act vs 700+ scattered sections with alphabets in the old Act. Source: cleartaxadvisors.in

The “Tax Year” Concept — Goodbye to Previous Year and Assessment Year

If there is one conceptual change in the new Income Tax Act 2025 that will save more confusion than any other, it is the abolition of the separate “Previous Year” and “Assessment Year” nomenclature. For 65 years, India’s tax system asked taxpayers to think in two simultaneous years — income earned in the Previous Year was assessed in the Assessment Year — creating endless scope for error in return filing, TDS challans, and compliance notices.

The new Act replaces both with a single unified concept: the Tax Year.

Old System — Act 1961
  • Income earned in Previous Year (e.g. FY 2025-26 = April 2025–March 2026)
  • Assessed and taxed in a separate Assessment Year (e.g. AY 2026-27 = the next year)
  • ITR for FY 2025-26 income had to be filed mentioning AY 2026-27 — a separate year label
  • Challans, TDS returns, notices all required specifying AY — a constant source of errors
  • Two year references for the same income created systemic confusion in software, courts, and compliance
VS
New System — Act 2025
  • Income earned and assessed in the same Tax Year — one unified reference
  • Tax Year 2026-27 = FY 2026-27 = income earned from 1 April 2026 to 31 March 2027
  • No separate “Assessment Year” label — everything referenced by the single Tax Year
  • Challans, returns, and notices all use Tax Year — matching the actual income period
  • Eliminates the leading source of year-related errors in ITR filing and TDS challans
⚡ No Year Is Missing: A common worry is whether there is a “missing year” between AY 2026-27 (old Act) and Tax Year 2026-27 (new Act). There is none. Income earned in FY 2025-26 is assessed in AY 2026-27 under the old Act. Income earned from 1 April 2026 is assessed in Tax Year 2026-27 under the new Act. These are sequential, non-overlapping periods.

Major Section Renumbering: Old vs New — Essential Reference for CAs and Taxpayers

Every section in the Income Tax Act 2025 carries a new number. For CAs, accountants, and businesses, this creates an immediate practical challenge: updating ERP systems, legal templates, compliance forms, and internal SOPs. Below is the essential cross-reference for the provisions most frequently encountered in day-to-day compliance.

Subject / Provision Old Section (Act 1961) New Section (Act 2025) Change?
SALARY & EMPLOYMENT INCOME
TDS on SalarySec 192Sec 392(1)Renumbered
EPF Premature Withdrawal TDSSec 192ASec 392(7)Renumbered
New Tax Regime (default)Sec 115BACSec 202Renumbered
Standard Deduction (salaried)Sec 16(ia)Sec 63Renumbered
DEDUCTIONS
Deductions (replacing Chapter VI-A)Sec 80A–80USchedule XV read with Sec 123Restructured
Life insurance premium / 80CSec 80CSchedule XV Sl. No. 1Restructured
Health insurance premium / 80DSec 80DSchedule XV Sl. No. 7Restructured
NPS deduction / 80CCD(1B)Sec 80CCD(1B)Schedule XV Sl. No. 5Restructured
TDS PROVISIONS
Interest on SecuritiesSec 193Sec 393(1)[5(i)]Renumbered
DividendsSec 194Sec 393(1)[7]Renumbered
Interest — Bank DepositsSec 194ASec 393(1)[5(ii/iii)]Renumbered
Contractor PaymentsSec 194CSec 393(1)[6(i)]Renumbered
Professional FeesSec 194J(b)Sec 393(1)[6(iii)]Renumbered
Commission / BrokerageSec 194HSec 393(1)[1(ii)]Renumbered
Rent — BuildingSec 194I(b)Sec 393(1)[2(ii)]Renumbered
Property Sale TDSSec 194IASec 393(1)[3(i)]Renumbered
Purchase of GoodsSec 194QSec 393(1)[8(ii)]Renumbered
VDA / Crypto TDSSec 194SSec 393(1)[8(vi)]Renumbered
Partner Payments TDSSec 194TSec 393(3)[6]Renumbered
Non-Resident PaymentsSec 195Sec 393(2)[17]Renumbered
TCS — All provisionsSec 206CSec 394Renumbered
Lower TDS CertificateSec 197 (Form 13)Equivalent in Act 2025 (Form 128)Renumbered
RETURNS, ASSESSMENTS & APPEALS
Filing of Income Tax ReturnSec 139Sec 263 (equivalent)Renumbered
Updated Returns (ITR-U)Sec 139(8A)Equivalent in Act 2025Renumbered
Self-Assessment / Advance TaxSec 140A / 207Equivalent provisionsRenumbered
Carry Forward of LossesSec 70–80Equivalent — seamless transitionSame
MAT CreditSec 115JAAEquivalent — seamless transitionSame
TDS credit (26AS / AIS)Form 26ASForm 168 (for Tax Year 2026-27)Renamed
Business Loss Disallowance (TDS)Sec 40(a)(ia)Sec 35(b)Renumbered

Tax Slab Rates Under Income Tax Act 2025 — What Changed and What Stayed

Let us address the question every taxpayer asks first: will I pay more tax under the new Act? The answer is no — not because of the new Act itself. The Income Tax Act 2025 carries forward the same slab rates and threshold limits as announced in Union Budget 2025, applicable for Tax Year 2026-27.

Income Slab (Tax Year 2026-27)New Tax Regime RateOld Tax Regime RateStatus
Up to ₹4,00,000NilNil (up to ₹2.5L)New limit
₹4,00,001 to ₹8,00,0005%5% (₹2.5–5L)Same rate
₹8,00,001 to ₹12,00,00010%20% (₹5–10L)Lower in new regime
₹12,00,001 to ₹16,00,00015%30% (above ₹10L)Lower in new regime
₹16,00,001 to ₹20,00,00020%30%Lower in new regime
₹20,00,001 to ₹24,00,00025%30%Lower in new regime
Above ₹24,00,00030%30%Same

The new tax regime remains the default regime under the Act 2025 (Section 202, equivalent to old Section 115BAC). Taxpayers who wish to opt for the old regime with its deductions (80C, 80D, HRA, etc.) must proactively choose it. The rebate under Section 87A effectively makes income up to ₹12,00,000 tax-free under the new regime for resident individuals.

INCOME TAX ACT 2025 — SLAB COMPARISON New Tax Regime vs Old Tax Regime — Tax Year 2026-27 New Tax Regime (Default from 1 April 2026) Old Tax Regime (Must opt-in explicitly) Nil Up to ₹4,00,000 ₹2.5L limit in Old Nil 5% ₹4L – ₹8,00,000 5% 10% ₹8L – ₹12,00,000 20% 15% ₹12L – ₹16,00,000 30% 20% ₹16L – ₹20,00,000 30% 25% ₹20L – ₹24,00,000 30% 30% Above ₹24,00,000 30% ★ Rebate u/s 87A: Tax-free income up to ₹12,00,000 under New Regime | New Regime = Default under Act 2025 (Section 202) Rates exclude surcharge and 4% Health & Education Cess | Both regimes available under Income Tax Act 2025 cleartaxadvisors.in | New Income Tax Act 2025 vs Old Act 1961 | Tax Year 2026-27
Image 2 ALT: Income Tax Act 2025 vs 1961 new tax regime vs old regime slab rate comparison chart for Tax Year 2026-27 — showing significantly lower rates in middle slabs under new regime. Source: cleartaxadvisors.in

Changes Affecting Salaried Employees — HRA, Children’s Allowance, and More

While the Act 2025 carries over most salary provisions structurally unchanged, the Income Tax Rules 2026 — notified on 20 March 2026 and effective from 1 April 2026 — introduce several specific changes that directly impact salaried employees’ take-home calculations and tax planning.

HRA Exemption — Eight Metro Cities Now

One of the most impactful practical changes for salaried individuals is the expansion of the list of cities qualifying for the 50% HRA exemption. Under the old Act and Rules, only four cities qualified for the 50% limit: Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, and Chennai. All other employees were restricted to 40% of basic salary as the HRA limit.

Under Income Tax Rules 2026, four additional cities join the 50% bracket:

CityHRA % Limit (Old Rules)HRA % Limit (New Rules 2026)Benefit
Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai50% of Basic50% of BasicSame
Bangalore40% of Basic50% of BasicUpgraded
Pune40% of Basic50% of BasicUpgraded
Hyderabad40% of Basic50% of BasicUpgraded
Ahmedabad40% of Basic50% of BasicUpgraded
All other cities40% of Basic40% of BasicSame
💡 Action for Bangalore/Pune/Hyderabad/Ahmedabad employees: If you are a salaried employee in one of these four newly upgraded cities and you pay rent, update your Form 12BB investment declaration with your employer before the first salary of Tax Year 2026-27. The increased HRA exemption reduces your taxable salary and therefore your TDS for the year. Missing this update means excess TDS is deducted and you must claim the refund in your ITR.

Children’s Education Allowance — 30x Jump to ₹3,000 per Month

The children’s education allowance exemption has been revised from a laughably outdated ₹100 per month per child to a far more realistic ₹3,000 per month per child under Income Tax Rules 2026. This exemption is available for a maximum of two children. The practical impact: a salaried parent with two school-going children now gets an annual exemption of ₹72,000 (₹3,000 × 2 children × 12 months) instead of just ₹2,400 per year.

Leave Travel Concession (LTC) — Conditions Updated

The tax exemption for Leave Travel Concession continues under the new Act and Rules, restricted to actual travel costs incurred for travel within India. The conditions around eligible family members and frequency of claims are updated under Income Tax Rules 2026 (Rule 278), but the fundamental structure of the exemption remains intact.

TDS and TCS Provisions — Complete Consolidation Under Section 393

The consolidation of TDS provisions is one of the most substantively important structural changes in the new Income Tax Act 2025. Under the old Act, TDS was governed by over 25 separately numbered sections (Section 192, 192A, 193, 194, 194A, 194B … all the way to 194T), each with its own threshold, rate, and compliance regime. A single professional services payment could trigger confusion about whether it fell under 194J(a) for technical services or 194J(b) for professional fees.

The new Act consolidates all resident TDS provisions into a structured Section 393, with sub-clauses organised by payment type. Section 392 handles salary and EPF. Section 394 handles TCS (replacing old Section 206C).

⚠️ Dual-Track TDS Obligation — Critical for April 2026: For TDS on payments relating to FY 2025-26 and earlier — even if the physical payment or challan deposit happens after 1 April 2026 — you must cite the old sections (192 to 194T) in your TDS return and challan. Only for Tax Year 2026-27 payments onwards do you use the new Section 393 references and TRACES payment codes (1001–1092). Mixing the two is the single most likely source of TDS return errors during the transition.

We covered the complete TDS rate chart under the new Act — including all TRACES payment codes — in our dedicated post: TDS rates under the new Income Tax Act 2025. That post includes a free downloadable Excel rate chart with old-to-new section mapping.

Capital Gains, Buybacks, and SGB Taxation — Substantive Changes to Note

While most of the Income Tax Act 2025 is a re-codification, there are a handful of genuinely substantive changes — changes in what is taxed, not just how the law is numbered. Capital gains is one such area.

Buyback Proceeds — Now Taxed in Shareholders’ Hands

Under the old Income Tax Act 1961, tax on share buybacks was collected from the company at a flat rate. Shareholders received buyback proceeds tax-free in their hands. This changed with the Finance Act 2024 amendment and is now codified in the new Act: buyback proceeds received by shareholders are taxable as capital gains in the hands of the shareholder. The cost of acquisition is the cost at which the shares were originally acquired, and the capital gain is computed accordingly.

This is a material change for retail investors and promoter groups. If you hold shares in companies that regularly conduct buybacks, consult your CA on the tax treatment of buyback proceeds received from Tax Year 2026-27 onwards.

Sovereign Gold Bond (SGB) Redemption — Secondary Market Purchase No Longer Exempt

Under the old regime, capital gains on redemption of SGBs at RBI maturity were exempt from tax. The new Act restricts this exemption: only SGBs purchased in the initial/primary issuance by the RBI are eligible for the capital gains exemption on redemption. SGBs purchased from the secondary market (NSE/BSE) are now taxable as capital gains upon redemption. This has significant implications for investors who accumulate SGBs through the stock exchange.

SUBSTANTIVE CHANGES — NEW INCOME TAX ACT 2025 What Actually Changed: Income Tax Act 2025 vs 1961 🏙 HRA Metro Cities Expanded Old: 4 cities at 50% (Del, Mum, Kol, Chen) New: 8 cities — adds Bangalore, Pune, Hyderabad, and Ahmedabad at 50% Impact: More salaried employees get higher HRA exemption → Lower taxable salary in 4 new cities 👶 Children’s Education Allowance Old: ₹100/month per child (max 2 children) New: ₹3,000/month per child (30x increase — now ₹72,000/year for 2 children) Impact: Meaningful tax relief for working parents with school-going children from 2026-27 📅 Tax Year Concept Old: Previous Year + Assessment Year (dual) New: Single Tax Year (e.g. 2026-27) Income period = Reporting period = One label Impact: Eliminates year-label confusion in ITR, TDS challans, and compliance notices 📉 Buyback — Taxed in Shareholder Hands Old: Tax collected from company at flat rate New: Taxable as capital gains in shareholder’s hands (cost = original acquisition cost) Impact: Retail investors & promoters must track buyback proceeds as CG from Tax Year 2026-27 🥇 SGB — Secondary Market Not Exempt Old: All SGB redemptions at maturity exempt New: Only primary issuance SGBs exempt SGBs bought on NSE/BSE → taxable CG Impact: Review your SGB portfolio — secondary market holdings now taxable 📋 TDS Consolidated — Section 393 Old: 25+ scattered sections (192 to 194T) New: One section (Section 393) — table-based 4-digit TRACES codes replace old section IDs Impact: Update ERP, payroll, TDS return software with new section refs + TRACES codes Changes That Remain the Same ✅ Same slab rates under both old and new act ✅ Same basic exemption limit (₹4L new regime) ✅ Carry forward of losses — seamless transition ✅ MAT/AMT credits carry forward uninterrupted ✅ PAN, Aadhaar, GSTIN linkage continues ✅ Old deductions (80C etc.) still available via old regime cleartaxadvisors.in | Income Tax Act 2025 vs 1961 | Source: CBDT, Income Tax Department FAQs, IT Rules 2026
Image 3 ALT: Income Tax Act 2025 vs Old Act 1961 key substantive changes — HRA city expansion, children’s education allowance increase, Tax Year concept, buyback taxation, SGB exemption change, and TDS consolidation. Source: cleartaxadvisors.in

The Dual-Track System — Which Act Applies to You Right Now?

The most practically confusing aspect of the transition to the Income Tax Act 2025 is what the Income Tax Department itself calls the “dual-track compliance system”. Both Acts coexist during the transition period, each governing different types of transactions and different years simultaneously.

Compliance ActionWhich Act Governs?Section / Form Reference
ITR for FY 2025-26 income (AY 2026-27)Income Tax Act, 1961Old ITR forms | AY 2026-27
ITR for income earned from 1 Apr 2026 onwardsIncome Tax Act, 2025New ITR forms | Tax Year 2026-27
TDS on payments for FY 2025-26 (even if paid after 1 Apr 2026)Income Tax Act, 1961Old sections 192–194T
TDS on Tax Year 2026-27 paymentsIncome Tax Act, 2025Section 393 + TRACES codes 1001–1092
Pending assessment for AY 2024-25Income Tax Act, 1961Old sections cited — no change
Assessment for Tax Year 2026-27 incomeIncome Tax Act, 2025New section numbers
Appeal filed after 1 Apr 2026 for AY 2025-26 orderIncome Tax Act, 1961Old provisions govern disposal
Carry forward of business lossesSeamless — no reset of original yearTransitional provision in new Act
MAT/AMT credit carryforwardContinues under new Act — no disruptionEquivalent section in Act 2025
TDS credit for FY 2025-26 (old Act AY 2026-27)Appears in Form 26AS (AIS for AY 2026-27)Old Act section numbers shown
TDS credit for Tax Year 2026-27Appears in Form 168 (new AIS for TY 2026-27)New Act section numbers
✅ The Golden Rule for the Transition: Ask yourself one question — which financial year did the income relate to? If FY 2025-26 or earlier → old Act applies. If FY 2026-27 (Tax Year 2026-27) or later → new Act applies. This single rule resolves most dual-track dilemmas.

Your 8-Point Action Plan for the New Income Tax Act 2025

Understanding the differences between the Income Tax Act 2025 vs 1961 is only half the job. The other half is converting that understanding into concrete, dated actions. Here is what you need to do right now, depending on your profile.

For Salaried Employees

Step 1: Update your Form 12BB investment declaration with your employer for Tax Year 2026-27. Reference new section numbers for deductions (Schedule XV instead of Section 80C). If you live in Bangalore, Pune, Hyderabad, or Ahmedabad, claim HRA at 50% — not 40%.

Step 2: If you have children in school, ensure your employer includes the updated ₹3,000/month children’s education allowance in your TDS calculation for Tax Year 2026-27.

Step 3: File your ITR for AY 2026-27 (FY 2025-26 income) using the old Act provisions, old section numbers, and the old ITR form before the due date — this is still governed by Income Tax Act 1961.

For Business Owners and Finance Teams

Step 4: Update your ERP/accounting software with the new Section 393 TDS references and TRACES payment codes (1001–1092) for all Tax Year 2026-27 payments. Do not use old section numbers for new-year TDS returns.

Step 5: Maintain dual-track records — separate files and ledgers for FY 2025-26 (old Act) transactions vs Tax Year 2026-27 transactions. Your chartered accountant will need both clearly labelled during the next audit cycle.

Step 6: Review your SGB portfolio. Any SGBs acquired from the secondary market (NSE/BSE) will attract capital gains tax on redemption going forward. Plan accordingly.

For CAs and Tax Professionals

Step 7: Build a section cross-reference document for your practice. Every draft notice, appeal, or return must correctly cite the Act and section that governed the relevant year. Citing a 2025 Act section in a 2023-24 appeal is an error that can complicate proceedings.

Step 8: Advise partnership firm clients to ensure their accounting software deducts TDS on partner payments under new Section 393(3)[6] (replacing old Section 194T) at 10% where aggregate payments exceed ₹20,000 per year — this provision was already active from 1 April 2025 under the old Act and now continues under the new one. For detailed guidance, refer to the complete TDS rate chart under the new Act on this site.

For investors holding mutual funds, refer to our complete mutual fund guide for how Fund of Fund and dividend taxation intersects with the new Act’s capital gains framework. External reference: Income Tax India official portal for the full text of the new Act and CBDT notifications. Also see SEBI’s investor guidelines for the impact on equity and SGB investments.

Complete Comparison Infographic — New Income Tax Act 2025 vs Old Act 1961

INFOGRAPHIC — DIRECT TAX REFORM 2026 Income Tax Act 2025 vs Old Income Tax Act 1961 — Complete Guide 01 · THE BIG PICTURE India’s biggest direct tax overhaul in 65 years Old Act: 700+ sections with alphabets (80C, 194J) — fragmented over decades New Act: 536 sequential sections, 23 structured chapters — clean architecture ✅ No new tax imposed. No rate change. Pure structural simplification. 02 · WHAT ACTUALLY CHANGED 🔄 “Previous Year” + “Assessment Year” → Single “Tax Year” concept 🏙 HRA 50% cities: 4 → 8 (adds Bangalore, Pune, Hyderabad, Ahmedabad) 👶 Children education allowance: ₹100/month → ₹3,000/month per child 📋 All TDS sections (192–194T) → Consolidated in Section 393 📉 Buyback proceeds: taxable in shareholder’s hands as capital gains 🥇 SGB secondary market redemption: no longer exempt from capital gains 🔢 Section numbers: no alphabets — all purely numeric and sequential 📄 New TDS return forms: 138, 140, 143, 144 (replace 24Q, 26Q, 27Q, 27EQ) 📊 New AIS: Form 168 for Tax Year 2026-27 (replaces old Form 26AS) 03 · WHAT STAYED THE SAME ✅ Tax slab rates — identical to Budget 2025 announcement ✅ Basic exemption (₹4L new regime), standard deduction (₹75,000) ✅ All deductions — 80C, 80D, NPS, HRA — available via old regime ✅ Carry forward of losses — no reset of original timing ✅ MAT/AMT credits — seamless transition, no disruption ✅ PAN, Aadhaar, GSTIN — all continue under new Act ✅ Section 87A rebate — income up to ₹12L tax-free (new regime) 04 · THE DUAL-TRACK TRANSITION RULE ITR for FY 2025-26 income → Filed under OLD Income Tax Act 1961 ITR for Tax Year 2026-27 income → Filed under NEW Income Tax Act 2025 TDS on FY 2025-26 payments (even if paid after 1 Apr 2026) → Old sections TDS on Tax Year 2026-27 payments → Section 393 + TRACES codes 1001-1092 Pending assessment / appeal for AY 2024-25 → Old Act governs entirely ⚠ Golden Rule: Income year = which Act applies 05 · YOUR ACTION PLAN 🟡 SALARIED: Update Form 12BB with new section references (Schedule XV) 🟡 SALARIED: Claim HRA at 50% if in Bangalore, Pune, Hyderabad, or Ahmedabad 🟡 SALARIED: Claim ₹3,000/month children’s education allowance for 2 children 🟢 BUSINESS: Update ERP/payroll with Section 393 TDS references + TRACES codes 🟢 BUSINESS: Maintain dual records — FY 2025-26 vs Tax Year 2026-27 separately 🟢 BUSINESS: File ITR for AY 2026-27 under old Act before due date 🔴 INVESTOR: Review SGB holdings — secondary market SGBs now taxable on redemption 🔴 INVESTOR: Buyback proceeds taxable as capital gains — compute cost of acquisition 🔵 CAs: Build old-to-new section cross-reference — never cite Act 2025 for old AYs 🔵 CAs: Advise firms on TDS on partner payments → Section 393(3)[6] at 10% 🔵 CAs: GSTAT appeal deadline 30 June 2026 for all pre-April 2026 orders 06 · KEY TRANSITION DATES 1 April 2026 — Income Tax Act 2025 takes effect (Tax Year 2026-27) 1 April 2026 — Income Tax Act 1961 repealed (but governs past years) 1 April 2026 — Income Tax Rules 2026 notified (replacing Rules 1962) July 2026 — ITR filing for AY 2026-27 (FY 2025-26 income, old Act) 30 June 2026 — Final GSTAT appeal deadline for all pre-April 2026 orders Tax Year 2026-27 onwards — All new compliance under Income Tax Act 2025 cleartaxadvisors.in Your trusted income tax and GST compliance partner in India Source: Income Tax Act 2025 | IT Rules 2026 | Income Tax Department FAQs | CBDT Information as of April 2026 | Always verify with incometaxindia.gov.in before filing
Infographic ALT: New Income Tax Act 2025 vs Old Income Tax Act 1961 complete comparison infographic — structural changes, Tax Year concept, HRA expansion, children’s allowance, TDS consolidation, transition rules, and 8-point action plan for Indian taxpayers. Source: cleartaxadvisors.in

📌 Key Takeaways

  • No new tax, no rate increase: The Income Tax Act 2025 is a re-codification of the 1961 Act — it does not impose any new tax or change slab rates. The same rates and thresholds announced in Budget 2025 continue.
  • 536 sequential sections replacing 700+: The new Act eliminates alphabetical suffixes (80C, 194J) and organises all provisions into 23 structured chapters with purely numeric section references.
  • “Tax Year” replaces Previous Year + Assessment Year: Tax Year 2026-27 = FY 2026-27. No missing year, no overlap. Income earned from 1 April 2026 is assessed for Tax Year 2026-27.
  • HRA now 50% for 8 cities: Bangalore, Pune, Hyderabad, and Ahmedabad join Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, and Chennai in the 50% HRA exemption bracket under Income Tax Rules 2026.
  • Children’s education allowance jumps from ₹100 to ₹3,000 per month per child: Annual exemption for two children rises from ₹2,400 to ₹72,000.
  • TDS consolidation under Section 393: All 25+ old TDS sections are now a single structured table in Section 393. Businesses must update ERP systems with new TRACES codes (1001–1092).
  • Buyback proceeds taxable in shareholders’ hands: Companies no longer bear the buyback tax — shareholders compute capital gains on proceeds received.
  • SGB secondary market exemption removed: Only primary issuance SGBs retain capital gains exemption on redemption. Secondary market SGB holdings are now taxable.
  • Dual-track compliance applies now: ITR for AY 2026-27 (FY 2025-26) is still filed under the old Act. Only Tax Year 2026-27 income is governed by the new Act.
  • Pending assessments and appeals under old Act continue: The repeal of the 1961 Act does not disturb any proceedings, orders, or assessments for years prior to 1 April 2026.

Frequently Asked Questions — New Income Tax Act 2025 vs Old Act 1961

Q1. What is the difference between the Income Tax Act 2025 and the Income Tax Act 1961?
The Income Tax Act 2025 replaces the 65-year-old Income Tax Act 1961 from 1 April 2026. The core difference is structural, not substantive — tax rates and slabs are unchanged. The new Act reduces sections from 700+ to 536, introduces the “Tax Year” concept, eliminates alphabetical section suffixes, consolidates all TDS provisions under Section 393, expands HRA metro cities from 4 to 8, and increases the children’s education allowance from ₹100 to ₹3,000 per month per child. The new Act does NOT impose any new tax.
Q2. Does the Income Tax Act 2025 change tax slab rates?
No. The Income Tax Act 2025 carries forward the exact same income tax slab rates as announced in Union Budget 2025. There is no change to the basic exemption limit (₹4,00,000 under the new regime), standard deduction, or surcharge rates. The Section 87A rebate making income up to ₹12 lakh effectively tax-free under the new regime also continues. The Act is a re-codification exercise — not a tax rate revision.
Q3. Which Act applies for filing ITR for FY 2025-26?
ITR for FY 2025-26 (Assessment Year 2026-27) will be filed under the Income Tax Act 1961 — the old Act. The new Income Tax Act 2025 applies only to income earned from 1 April 2026 (Tax Year 2026-27) onwards. Your CA and tax software should continue citing old section references for AY 2026-27 filings.
Q4. What is the “Tax Year” concept introduced by Income Tax Act 2025?
The Tax Year replaces the dual-year system of “Previous Year” (when income was earned) and “Assessment Year” (when it was taxed) under the old Act. Under the new Act, Tax Year 2026-27 refers to income earned from 1 April 2026 to 31 March 2027. The same period is the reporting and taxation period — no separate Assessment Year. This eliminates the leading source of year-reference errors in ITR filing and TDS challans. There is no missing year — income for FY 2025-26 is assessed under AY 2026-27 (old Act); income from 1 April 2026 is assessed under Tax Year 2026-27 (new Act).
Q5. Will my pending income tax appeal or assessment be affected by the new Act?
No. Pending assessments, appeals, rectifications, and proceedings under the Income Tax Act 1961 will continue to be governed by the old Act even after 1 April 2026. The repeal of the 1961 Act does not disturb anything relating to income years before 1 April 2026. Your old assessment for AY 2023-24 or appeal before the CIT(A) will proceed as if the old Act were never repealed — citing old section numbers throughout.
Q6. What are the HRA changes under the new Income Tax Rules 2026?
Under Income Tax Rules 2026 (effective 1 April 2026), the list of cities qualifying for the higher 50% HRA exemption has been expanded from 4 to 8 cities. Bangalore, Pune, Hyderabad, and Ahmedabad now qualify for 50% of basic salary as HRA exemption, on par with Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, and Chennai. Previously, employees in these four cities were restricted to the 40% limit. Salaried employees in these cities should update their Form 12BB declaration with their employer to claim the benefit.
Q7. How has the taxation of Sovereign Gold Bonds (SGBs) changed?
Under the new Act, the capital gains exemption on SGB redemption is restricted to SGBs purchased in the RBI’s primary/initial issuance. SGBs purchased from the secondary market — on NSE or BSE — are no longer eligible for the capital gains exemption on redemption. Gains on secondary market SGB redemption are now taxable as capital gains in the hands of the investor, computed based on the cost of acquisition from the exchange.
Q8. What is dual-track compliance and how does it affect businesses?
Dual-track compliance means that during the transition period, both the Income Tax Act 1961 and the Income Tax Act 2025 are simultaneously in operation — each governing different time periods. For businesses: TDS on FY 2025-26 payments (even if deposited after 1 April 2026) must cite old sections (192–194T). TDS on Tax Year 2026-27 payments must use new Section 393 and TRACES codes 1001–1092. ITR for AY 2026-27 uses old forms and sections; Tax Year 2026-27 returns use new forms. Most ERP systems and payroll software need to be updated to handle both references correctly.

Conclusion — Embracing India’s New Direct Tax Era

The shift from the Income Tax Act 1961 to the Income Tax Act 2025 is not the tax revolution that many feared — it is the structural clean-up that India’s direct tax system desperately needed. Sixty-five years of legislative patchwork, alphabetical section numbers, and confusing dual-year terminology have been swept away in favour of a cleaner, more logically organised framework.

For most salaried individuals, the practical changes are positive: expanded HRA eligibility, a meaningful increase in children’s education allowance, and a simpler single-year compliance reference. For businesses and CAs, the transition demands immediate system updates — ERP mappings, TDS return formats, and section-reference templates all need to be updated before the first Tax Year 2026-27 transaction is recorded. For investors, the changes to buyback taxation and SGB exemption eligibility require a review of existing portfolios.

The message from the Income Tax Department is clear: no new tax, simpler law, better compliance. Your responsibility is to ensure your systems, declarations, and filings reflect the right Act for the right year — starting today.

Need Help Navigating the New Income Tax Act 2025?

Our qualified CAs guide you through ERP section updates, Tax Year 2026-27 compliance, HRA restructuring, capital gains planning, and ITR filing under both Acts during the transition.

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Disclaimer: This article is published by ClearTax Advisors for general educational and informational purposes only. It is based on the Income Tax Act 2025, Income Tax Rules 2026, CBDT notifications, and Income Tax Department FAQs as available at the time of writing (April 2026). Tax laws are subject to change and individual circumstances vary. Nothing in this article constitutes legal or financial advice. Readers must consult a qualified Chartered Accountant or tax professional and verify all provisions with official sources — incometaxindia.gov.in — before making any compliance or investment decision.

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