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Income Tax Slab FY 2025-26: Old vs New Regime | ITR 2025 Guide by CA Devesh Thakur

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Income Tax Slab FY 2025-26: Old vs New Regime | ITR 2025 Guide by CA Devesh Thakur
Income tax return fy 25-26
Income Tax Calculator FY 2025-26 | Old vs New Regime | CA Devesh Thakur

etaxsave.com · cadeveshthakur.com

Income Tax FY 2025-26
Old vs New Regime — Complete Guide

By CA Devesh Thakur  ·  AY 2026-27  ·  Finance Bill 2025

Live Calculator Rebate u/s 87A Surcharge & Cess All Age Groups New Regime Default

Interactive

Live Tax Calculator

Move the sliders — both regimes update instantly side by side

Total income (₹)
₹15,00,000
₹1L₹60L
Deductions 80C–80U (old regime only)
₹1,50,000
₹0₹3.5L
Age category (for old regime slabs)
New regime tax
Old regime tax
Tax saving
Tax comparison (proportional)
New Old
⚡ New Regime · 115BAC(1A) · Default
Total income
Standard deduction
Taxable income
Tax on slab
Rebate u/s 87A
Tax after rebate
Surcharge
Cess @ 4%
Total payable
Effective rate: —
📋 Old Regime · Opt-in required
Total income
Deductions 80C–80U
Taxable income
Tax on slab
Rebate u/s 87A
Tax after rebate
Surcharge
Cess @ 4%
Total payable
Effective rate: —
Note: Includes ₹75,000 standard deduction (new) / ₹50,000 (old) for salaried. Capital gains u/s 111A/112A are NOT eligible for rebate u/s 87A.
📚 Read the Full Tax Guide on etaxsave.com →

FY 2025-26 · AY 2026-27

Tax Slab Rates

New regime is the default. You must actively opt out to use the old regime when filing ITR.

⚡ New Tax Regime · Same for all ages

Standard deduction ₹75,000 allowed for salaried

Income slabRate
Up to ₹4,00,000Nil
₹4L – ₹8L5%
₹8L – ₹12L10%
₹12L – ₹16L15%
₹16L – ₹20L20%
₹20L – ₹24L25%
Above ₹24L30%
Zero tax up to ₹12L — via rebate u/s 87A (max ₹60,000) on normal slab income only
📋 Old Tax Regime · Opt-in required
Income slabRate
Up to ₹2,50,000Nil
₹2.5L – ₹5L5%
₹5L – ₹10L20%
Above ₹10L30%
Zero tax up to ₹5L via rebate u/s 87A (max ₹12,500)
Income slabRate
Up to ₹3,00,000Nil
₹3L – ₹5L5%
₹5L – ₹10L20%
Above ₹10L30%
Higher basic exemption of ₹3L for senior citizens
Income slabRate
Up to ₹5,00,000Nil
₹5L – ₹10L20%
Above ₹10L30%
No 5% slab — ₹5L exemption limit itself. No rebate needed.
Age categoryOld regime exemptionNew regime exemptionVerdict
Below 60 years₹2,50,000₹4,00,000New higher
60–80 years (senior)₹3,00,000₹4,00,000New higher
80+ years (super senior)₹5,00,000₹4,00,000Old higher
New regime gives a uniform ₹4L exemption for all ages — no age-based enhancement unlike old regime.

Section 87A

Rebate & Zero-Tax Limit

The biggest structural change in Finance Bill 2025 — new regime rebate limit tripled to ₹12L.

₹60,000
Max rebate — New regime
Income up to ₹12,00,000
₹12,500
Max rebate — Old regime
Income up to ₹5,00,000
ParticularsOld regimeNew regime
Income limit for rebateUp to ₹5,00,000Up to ₹12,00,000
Maximum rebate amount₹12,500₹60,000
Marginal relief availableYesYes
Special rate income eligible (111A/112A)?NoNo
Effective zero-tax limit₹5,00,000₹12,00,000
Critical: The ₹12L zero-tax benefit applies only to normal slab income. Capital gains taxed u/s 111A or 112A are NOT eligible for rebate — even if total income is below ₹12L.

Marginal relief — how it prevents tax anomalies

If income slightly exceeds ₹12L (new) or ₹5L (old), marginal relief ensures the incremental tax does not exceed the incremental income above the threshold.

Example: Income = ₹12,10,000 (new regime). Normal tax = ₹65,000. With marginal relief, tax is capped at ₹10,000 — the excess over ₹12L.

Finance Bill 2025 change: New regime rebate limit raised ₹7L → ₹12L. Max rebate enhanced ₹25,000 → ₹60,000.

Chapter VI-A

Deductions & Exemptions

Old regime allows most deductions. New regime restricts them — but compensates with lower slab rates.

Deduction / exemptionOld regimeNew regime
Standard deduction (salaried)✓ ₹50,000✓ ₹75,000
80C — PF, LIC, ELSS, PPF, principal✓ ₹1,50,000✗ Not allowed
80CCD(1B) — Additional NPS✓ ₹50,000✗ Not allowed
80D — Health insurance premium✓ ₹25K / ₹50K✗ Not allowed
HRA exemption✓ Allowed✗ Not allowed
LTA exemption✓ Allowed✗ Not allowed
24(b) — Home loan interest✓ ₹2L (self-occ.)✗ Not allowed
80E — Education loan interest✓ No limit (8 yrs)✗ Not allowed
80G — Donations✓ Allowed✗ Not allowed
80GG — Rent paid (no HRA)✓ ₹60,000✗ Not allowed
80TTA / 80TTB — Savings interest✓ ₹10K / ₹50K✗ Not allowed
80U — Own disability✓ ₹75K / ₹1.25L✗ Not allowed
SectionNatureLimit (old regime)
80CPF, LIC, ELSS, PPF, home loan principal₹1,50,000
80CCCPension fund contributionWithin 80C cap
80CCD(1)NPS employee contributionWithin 80C cap
80CCD(1B)Additional NPS contribution₹50,000
80DHealth insurance premium₹25,000 / ₹50,000 (senior)
80DDDependent disability₹75,000 / ₹1,25,000
80EEducation loan interestNo limit (up to 8 years)
80EEAHome loan interest — affordable housing₹1,50,000
80GDonations to eligible fundsDepends on fund type
80GGRent paid — no HRA in salary₹60,000 p.a.
80TTA / 80TTBInterest on savings / deposits₹10,000 / ₹50,000
80UOwn disability₹75,000 / ₹1,25,000

Above ₹50 Lakh

Surcharge, Cess & Corporate Rates

Surcharge applies on tax. Cess applies on tax + surcharge. New regime caps surcharge at 25% — a key advantage for HNIs.

25%
Max surcharge — New regime
37%
Max surcharge — Old regime (income >₹5Cr)
Total income rangeOld regimeNew regime
Up to ₹50 lakhNilNil
₹50L – ₹1 crore10%10%
₹1Cr – ₹2 crore15%15%
₹2Cr – ₹5 crore25%25%
Above ₹5 crore37%Capped at 25%
High earners above ₹5Cr save 12% surcharge by choosing new regime — significant at that income level.
Income typeMax surcharge (both regimes)
Dividend income15%
Sec 111A — STCG on equity15%
Sec 112A — LTCG on equity15%
Sec 112 — Other LTCG15%
Health & Education Cess: 4% on (Income Tax + Surcharge) — applies to all taxpayers in both regimes without exception.
EntityConditionRate
Domestic companyTurnover ≤ ₹400Cr (FY 2023-24)25%
Domestic companyOther cases (general)30%
Domestic companySec 115BAA (special rate)22%
Domestic companySec 115BAB (new manufacturing)15%
Foreign companyReduced from 40% — Finance Bill 202535%
Firm / LLPFlat rate30%
Co-operative (Sec 115BAD)Special regime22%

Strategic Planning

Which Regime is Better for You?

The answer is always mathematical. Compute both with your real numbers, then decide.

Your scenarioBetter option
Income up to ₹5L (any deduction level)Either — zero tax in both
Income ₹5L–₹12L, minimal deductions✓ New regime
Income ₹5L–₹12L, high 80C + HRA + home loan✓ Old regime
Salaried, no HRA, no home loan✓ New regime
Home loan interest + HRA + 80C > ₹3.75L✓ Old regime
Senior citizen with high medical expenses✓ Old regime
Super senior (80+) with income under ₹5L✓ Old regime (₹5L exemption)
Income ₹12L–₹15L, fewer deductions✓ New regime usually
Income above ₹5 crore✓ New regime (surcharge cap)
Freelancer / professional, no deductions✓ New regime
Golden rule: Never choose a regime emotionally. Always compute actual tax under both regimes before filing ITR.
1.Choosing old regime only because “I’ve always claimed 80C” — new regime’s lower slabs often offset it, especially above ₹10L.
2.Assuming ₹12L = zero tax without checking if any income is at special capital gains rates — rebate u/s 87A doesn’t apply there.
3.Ignoring surcharge impact at income above ₹50L — a 10–25% surcharge can significantly shift which regime wins.
4.Super seniors assuming old regime is always better — above ₹15L, new regime slabs are often lower even without the ₹5L exemption.
5.Not recalculating every year — slab structures and rebate limits change. Recalculate before submitting Form 12BB to your employer.

Break-even logic for ₹12L–₹15L income range

New regime wins if your total deductions under old regime are less than approximately ₹3.75 lakh. Above that threshold, old regime may give lower tax. The break-even point shifts with income — use the Live Calculator above to find your exact number.


Standard Format

Tax Computation Proforma

Follow this exact sequence when computing income tax liability — used in CA exams and professional practice.

Income from SalaryXXXXX
Less: Standard deduction (₹75K new / ₹50K old)(XXXXX)
Income from House PropertyXXXXX
Less: 30% standard deduction / interest u/s 24(b)(XXXXX)
Profits & Gains of Business / ProfessionXXXXX
Capital GainsXXXXX
Income from Other SourcesXXXXX
Set-off of losses (inter-source / inter-head / b/f)(XXXXX)
Gross Total Income (GTI)XXXXX
Less: Deductions u/s 80C to 80U (old regime)(XXXXX)
Total Income (Taxable Income)XXXXX
Tax on normal slab incomeXXXXX
Tax on special rate income (111A / 112A / 112)XXXXX
Less: Rebate u/s 87A(XXXXX)
Tax after rebateXXXXX
Add: Surcharge (if applicable)XXXXX
Tax after surchargeXXXXX
Add: Health & Education Cess @ 4%XXXXX
Tax before reliefXXXXX
Less: Relief u/s 86 / 89 / 90 / 90A / 91(XXXXX)
Tax liability before prepaid taxesXXXXX
Less: TDS / TCS / Advance Tax paid(XXXXX)
Tax Payable / RefundableXXXXX
Sec 86 — AOP / BOI memberPrevents double taxation of share of income from AOP/BOI already taxed at entity level.
Sec 89 — Salary arrearsSpreads tax impact of arrears/advance salary across relevant years to avoid bunching.
Sec 90 / 90A — DTAA reliefChoose the more beneficial provision between domestic law and treaty. NRIs need TRC.
Sec 91 — Unilateral reliefWhere no treaty exists — relief at the lower of Indian or foreign tax rate on doubly-taxed income.
Head of income — Sec 14What it covers
SalaryBasic pay, allowances, perquisites, gratuity, retirement benefits
House PropertyRental income / deemed rent from owned properties
Business / ProfessionProfit from business, freelancing, professional practice
Capital GainsProfit from sale of shares, mutual funds, property, bonds
Other SourcesInterest, dividends, lottery winnings, gifts, any residual income
📚 Read Complete Tax Guide + Download PDFs on etaxsave.com →

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