Complete Income Tax Calculation Guide FY 2025-26 (Old vs New Regime, Deductions, Rebate, Surcharge & Relief)
By CA Devesh Thakur — Simplified for Students, Taxpayers & Accountants
This is your ultimate Income Tax blueprint for FY 2025-26 (Assessment Year 2026-27). Instead of memorising slabs and formulas, this blog explains the logic, flow and computation — step by step — so you understand how tax is really calculated, not just what the numbers are.
Introduction – Why This Guide Matters
Every year, taxpayers ask the same questions:
- When do I pay income tax?
- How is taxable income calculated?
- Should I choose the old or new regime?
- What deductions can I claim?
- How do rebate, surcharge and relief work?
This guide covers every step — from head-wise income to final tax payable or refund.
It’s structured so that even beginners can follow, and advanced learners can use it as a reference.
When Do You Pay Income Tax?
Income tax is computed based on income earned during the financial year (April 1 – March 31).
But tax doesn’t wait till filing time — government ensures you pay as you earn during the year itself.
Taxes get collected in multiple ways:
- Advance Tax – If your estimated tax liability in a year is ₹10,000 or more, you must pay tax in instalments during the year. The idea is to prevent year-end bulk payment and ensure steady revenue. (eTaxSave)
- TDS (Tax Deducted at Source) – Employer, banks and other payers deduct tax at source on your behalf.
- TCS (Tax Collected at Source) – Seller collects tax on certain transactions.
- Self-Assessment Tax – If after accounting for advance tax and TDS there is remaining tax due, you pay it before filing your return.
- Equalisation Levy – A special levy on certain digital transactions with non-resident entities.
Step 1 — Five Heads of Income
Under Section 14 of the Income Tax Act, all income must be classified under one of five heads:
| Head of Income | Meaning |
| Salary | Income from employment (basic, allowances, perquisites) |
| House Property | Rent from owned property |
| Business or Profession | Profit from business or freelancing work |
| Capital Gains | Profit from sale of assets like shares or property |
| Other Sources | Interest, lottery winnings, gifts, dividends, etc. |
If income doesn’t fit the first four heads, it falls under “Other Sources”.
🧮 Step 2 — What is Gross Total Income (GTI)?
Gross Total Income (GTI) is the sum of income under all five heads after adjusting losses.
Loss adjustments can include:
• Inter-source losses
• Inter-head losses
• Brought forward losses
• Unabsorbed depreciation
After these adjustments, the remaining amount is your GTI — the foundation for computing tax.
📊 Step 3 — GTI vs Total Income
Many students confuse GTI with Total Income.
- GTI = Income from all heads after losses.
- Total Income = GTI − Deductions under Chapter VI-A (80C to 80U).
Formula:
Total Income (Taxable Income) = GTI − Deductions (80C to 80U)
Total Income is the amount on which your final tax liability is computed.
ITR FY 2025-26: Complete Comparison of Old vs New Tax Regime (Below 60, 60–80 & 80+ Individuals)
By CA Devesh Thakur
If you are filing ITR for FY 2025-26 (AY 2026-27), the biggest question is:
You can download them below:
• 📘 Individual (Below 60 Years) – Old vs New Regime Comparison
Download here: income tax slab applicable for …
• 📘 Individual (Age 60–80 Years) – Tax Comparison (AY 2026-27)
Download here: Individual_60_to_80_Tax_Compari…
• 📘 Super Senior Citizen (80+ Years) – Detailed Comparison
Download here: Super_Senior_80Plus_Tax_Compari…
• 📘 Complete Income Tax Slab Guide – FY 2025-26 (With Amendments)
Download here: income tax slab applicable for …
Old Tax Regime or New Tax Regime — which is better?
With the updated slabs, ₹12 lakh rebate in new regime, and surcharge caps, the answer is no longer emotional. It is mathematical.
This detailed guide covers:
- Slab rates
- Rebate u/s 87A
- Surcharge structure
- Deductions impact
- Age-wise comparison
- Strategic decision guide
1️⃣ Basic Exemption Limit – Age Wise Comparison
| Age Category | Old Regime | New Regime (115BAC(1A)) |
| Below 60 years | ₹2,50,000 | ₹4,00,000 |
| 60–80 years | ₹3,00,000 | ₹4,00,000 |
| 80 years & above | ₹5,00,000 | ₹4,00,000 |
🔎 Important:
The new regime does NOT give any age-based higher exemption.
2️⃣ Tax Slab Structure – Detailed Comparison
A. Old Tax Regime
Old Tax Regime
Applicable if you choose the old regime and claim deductions/exemptions.
(a) Below 60 Years
| Income Slab | Tax Rate |
| Up to ₹2.5L | Nil |
| ₹2.5L–₹5L | 5% |
| ₹5L–₹10L | 20% |
| Above ₹10L | 30% |
(b) 60–80 Years (Senior Citizens)
| Income Slab | Tax Rate |
| Up to ₹3L | Nil |
| ₹3L–₹5L | 5% |
| ₹5L–₹10L | 20% |
| Above ₹10L | 30% |
(c) 80+ Years (Super Senior Citizens)
| Income Slab | Tax Rate |
| Up to ₹5L | Nil |
| ₹5L–₹10L | 20% |
| Above ₹10L | 30% |
B. New Tax Regime (Same for All Ages)
New Tax Regime — Section 115BAC(1A)
Default regime for FY 2025-26. It has lower slab rates but limited deductions.
| Income Slab | Tax Rate |
| Up to ₹4L | Nil |
| ₹4L–₹8L | 5% |
| ₹8L–₹12L | 10% |
| ₹12L–₹16L | 15% |
| ₹16L–₹20L | 20% |
| ₹20L–₹24L | 25% |
| Above ₹24L | 30% |
Rule of thumb:
- If you have significant deductions (80C, 80D, HRA, home loan interest), old regime can be better.
If you don’t claim many deductions, new regime usually gives lower tax
3️⃣ Rebate Under Section 87A (Major Change)
| Particular | Old Regime | New Regime |
| Income eligible for rebate | Up to ₹5,00,000 | Up to ₹12,00,000 |
| Maximum rebate | ₹12,500 | ₹60,000 |
| Special rate income eligible? | No | No |
| Marginal relief available | Yes | Yes |
Effective Zero Tax Limit
- Old regime → ₹5 lakh
- New regime → ₹12 lakh (normal slab income)
This is the biggest structural shift.
4️⃣ Surcharge Comparison
| Total Income | Old Regime | New Regime |
| ₹50L–₹1Cr | 10% | 10% |
| ₹1Cr–₹2Cr | 15% | 15% |
| ₹2Cr–₹5Cr | 25% | 25% |
| Above ₹5Cr | 37% | Capped at 25% |
Special Cap (Both Regimes)
| Income Type | Maximum Surcharge |
| Dividend income | 15% |
| 111A / 112 / 112A income | 15% |
🔎 High income earners above ₹5 crore benefit significantly under new regime due to surcharge cap.
5️⃣ Deductions & Exemptions Comparison
| Particular | Old Regime | New Regime |
| 80C | Allowed | Not allowed |
| 80D (medical – higher for seniors) | Allowed | Not allowed |
| HRA | Allowed | Not allowed |
| LTA | Allowed | Not allowed |
| Chapter VI-A deductions | Allowed | Restricted |
| Standard Deduction | Allowed | Limited |
If you have significant deductions, old regime may still be beneficial.
| Section | Nature of Deduction | Eligible Assessee | Conditions | Limit |
| 80C | Savings & investments (PF, Life Insurance etc.) | Individual, HUF | Old regime only | ₹1,50,000 |
| 80CCC | Pension Fund contribution | Individual | Old regime | ₹1,50,000 |
| 80CCD(1) | NPS contribution | Individual | Old regime | Included in 80C cap |
| 80CCD(1B) | Additional NPS | Individual | Any regime | ₹50,000 |
| 80D | Health insurance premium | Individual, HUF | Non-cash payment | ₹25,000/₹50,000 |
| 80DD | Dependant disability | Individual, HUF | Certificate required | ₹75,000/₹1,25,000 |
| 80E | Interest on education loan | Individual | Any | No limit (8 yrs) |
| 80EE/80EEA/80EEB | Interest on housing/electric vehicle loan | Individual | Sanction conditions apply | ₹50,000/₹1,50,000 |
| 80G | Donations to eligible funds | All assessee | Money only | Depends on fund |
| 80GG | Rent paid (no HRA) | Individual | Conditions apply | ₹60,000 |
| 80TTA/80TTB | Interest on savings/deposits | Individuals/HUF | Saving/term deposits | ₹10,000/₹50,000 |
| 80U | Disability | Individual | Medical certificate | ₹75,000/₹1,25,000 |
If you have minimal deductions, new regime usually wins.
6️⃣ Health & Education Cess
Applicable in both regimes:
4% on tax + surcharge
7️⃣ Practical Decision Guide (Strategic View)
| Scenario | Better Option |
| Income up to ₹5L | Either |
| Income ₹5L–₹12L (no deductions) | New regime |
| High 80C, housing loan, HRA | Old regime |
| Super senior with high medical deduction | Old regime |
| Income above ₹5Cr | New regime (surcharge cap) |
8️⃣ Common Mistakes Taxpayers Make
- Choosing old regime emotionally because “age exemption is higher.”
- Ignoring surcharge impact at higher income levels.
- Assuming ₹12L means zero tax without checking special rate income.
- Not calculating both regimes before filing ITR.
Tax planning is not about assumptions. It is about computation.
Conclusion: Which Tax Regime is Better for FY 2025-26?
There is no universal answer.
The new regime dominates for:
- Salaried individuals with fewer deductions
- Income up to ₹12 lakh
- Very high income earners due to surcharge cap
The old regime may still benefit:
- Senior citizens with high medical expenses
- Individuals claiming substantial deductions
- Housing loan interest cases
The correct regime must be chosen after calculation.
🔹 Section 86 – Income from AOP / BOI
If you’re a member of an Association of Persons (AOP) or Body of Individuals (BOI), your share of income may or may not be taxed in your hands depending on how the AOP is taxed. Relief prevents double taxation.
🔹 Section 89 – Salary Arrears Relief
If salary is paid in arrears/advance causing higher tax slab in one year, Section 89 redistributes the impact over relevant years to avoid excessive tax.
🔹 Section 90 / 90A – DTAA & Treaty Relief
India enters tax treaties with foreign countries to prevent double taxation. If the treaty benefits you more than domestic law, you can choose the beneficial provision. Non-residents require a Tax Residency Certificate (TRC) to claim treaty benefits.
🔹 Section 91 – Unilateral Relief (No Treaty)
If there’s no tax treaty with a country but tax is paid there on foreign income, you may get relief in India by comparing Indian and foreign tax rates and choosing the lower.
Completed Tax Computation Format
Here is the structured format you should follow:
| Particulars | Amount |
| Income from Salary | XXXXX |
| Income from House Property | XXXXX |
| Profits & Gains of Business/Profession | XXXXX |
| Capital Gains | XXXXX |
| Income from Other Sources | XXXXX |
| Total Head-Wise Income | XXXXX |
| Set-off of Losses | XXXXX |
| Gross Total Income (GTI) | XXXXX |
| Less: Deductions (80C–80U) | (XXXXX) |
| Total Income (Taxable Income) | XXXXX |
| Tax on Total Income | XXXXX |
| Less: Rebate u/s 87A | (XXXXX) |
| Tax after Rebate | XXXXX |
| Add: Surcharge | XXXXX |
| Tax after Surcharge | XXXXX |
| Add: Health & Education Cess @ 4% | XXXXX |
| Tax before Relief | XXXXX |
| Less: Relief 86,89,90,90A,91 | (XXXXX) |
| Tax Liability before Prepaid | XXXXX |
| Less: TDS/TCS/Advance Tax | (XXXXX) |
| Tax Payable / Refundable | XXXXX |
Amendments to the Income-Tax Act: The Finance Bill, 2025 (AY 2026-27)
This briefing document provides a comprehensive synthesis of the tax rate structures, surcharges, rebates, and specific amendments introduced by the Finance Bill, 2025, for the Assessment Year (AY) 2026-27. It outlines the transition toward the New Tax Regime as the default framework and details the fiscal implications for individuals, corporations, and other legal entities.
Executive Summary
The Finance Bill, 2025, signals a significant shift in the Indian tax landscape, primarily by incentivizing the New Tax Regime (Section 115BAC(1A)) through expanded tax slabs and substantially higher rebate limits. Key takeaways include:
- New Tax Regime Dominance: The New Tax Regime is now the default tax framework. It features revised, wider tax slabs with a top rate of 30% applicable only above ₹24,00,000.
- Substantial Rebate Expansion: Under Section 87A, the total income limit for tax rebates under the New Regime has been increased from ₹7,00,000 to ₹12,00,000, with the maximum rebate amount rising to ₹60,000.
- Corporate Tax Rationalization: Foreign company tax rates have been reduced to 35% (down from 40%). For domestic companies, preferential rates of 15% and 22% remain available under specific sections (115BAB and 115BAA).
- Surcharge Caps: Surcharges under the New Tax Regime are capped at 25%, a reduction from the 37% maximum applicable under the Old Regime. Additionally, surcharges on dividends and specific capital gains are capped at 15%.
- Special Rate Exclusions: A critical clarification maintains that Section 87A rebates do not apply to incomes chargeable at special rates, such as capital gains under sections 111A and 112.
1. Individual Taxation: New vs. Old Regime
The Finance Bill, 2025, maintains the coexistence of two tax regimes but clearly positions the New Tax Regime as the primary vehicle for individual taxation.
1.1 New Tax Regime (Section 115BAC(1A))
This is the default regime for Individuals, Hindu Undivided Families (HUF), Association of Persons (AOP), Body of Individuals (BOI), and Artificial Juridical Persons (AJP).
| Total Income Range | Rate of Tax |
| Up to ₹4,00,000 | Nil |
| ₹4,00,001 to ₹8,00,000 | 5% |
| ₹8,00,001 to ₹12,00,000 | 10% |
| ₹12,00,001 to ₹16,00,000 | 15% |
| ₹16,00,001 to ₹20,00,000 | 20% |
| ₹20,00,001 to ₹24,00,000 | 25% |
| Above ₹24,00,000 | 30% |
1.2 Old Tax Regime
No changes have been made to the basic exemption limits or slab rates for those opting out of the New Regime.
- Standard Category:
- Up to ₹2,50,000: Nil
- ₹2,50,001 – ₹5,00,000: 5%
- ₹5,00,001 – ₹10,00,000: 20%
- Above ₹10,00,000: 30%
- Senior Citizens (60 to 80 years): Exemption limit is ₹3,00,000.
- Super Senior Citizens (80+ years): Exemption limit is ₹5,00,000.
2. Enhanced Rebate under Section 87A
The Finance Bill, 2025, introduces pivotal amendments to the rebate available to resident individuals under the New Tax Regime.
- Threshold Increase: For AY 2026-27, the income threshold for the rebate under the New Tax Regime increases from ₹7,00,000 to ₹12,00,000.
- Rebate Amount: The maximum rebate is enhanced from ₹25,000 to ₹60,000.
- Marginal Relief: Marginal relief is provided where the total income exceeds ₹12,00,000, ensuring the tax payable does not exceed the amount by which the income exceeds the threshold.
- Restriction on Special Incomes: The rebate under Section 87A is explicitly not available on tax calculated for incomes chargeable at special rates, including capital gains under sections 111A and 112.
- Old Regime Comparison: Under the old regime, the rebate remains restricted to individuals with total income not exceeding ₹5,00,000.
3. Surcharges, Cess, and Marginal Relief
Surcharges are applied as an additional percentage on the income tax amount, subject to specific caps and relief measures.
3.1 Surcharge Rates for Individuals/HUF/AOP/BOI/AJP
- Income > ₹50 Lakhs to ₹1 Crore: 10%
- Income > ₹1 Crore to ₹2 Crores: 15%
- Income > ₹2 Crores to ₹5 Crores: 25%
- Income > ₹5 Crores: 37% (Note: This 37% rate does not apply under the New Tax Regime; the maximum is capped at 25%).
- Specific Income Caps: Surcharge on dividend income and capital gains (Sections 111A, 112, 112A) is capped at 15%.
3.2 Marginal Relief
Marginal relief is provided across all categories to ensure that the increase in tax (including surcharge) does not exceed the increase in income beyond the specified thresholds (₹50L, ₹1Cr, ₹2Cr, ₹5Cr).
3.3 Health and Education Cess
A uniform ‘Health and Education Cess’ of 4% is levied on the total amount of income tax plus surcharge across all categories of taxpayers.
4. Corporate and Institutional Taxation
Tax rates for companies and other entities vary based on their nature, turnover, and the specific regulatory sections they opt into.
4.1 Domestic Companies
| Category | Tax Rate |
| Turnover/Gross Receipts (FY 2023-24) ≤ ₹400 Crore | 25% |
| All other cases (Old Regime) | 30% |
| Companies opting for Section 115BAA | 22% |
| New Manufacturing Companies (Section 115BAB) | 15% |
- Surcharge for Domestic Companies:
- Income > ₹1 Crore to ₹10 Crores: 7% (reduced to 10% flat for sections 115BAA/115BAB regardless of income).
- Income > ₹10 Crores: 12%.
4.2 Foreign Companies
- Tax Rate: Reduced to 35% (from the previous 40%).
- Surcharge: 2% if income exceeds ₹1 Crore; 5% if income exceeds ₹10 Crores.
4.3 Other Entities
- Co-operative Societies: Taxed at 10%/20%/30% slabs unless opting for Section 115BAD (22%) or Section 115BAE (15% for new manufacturing). Surcharge is 7% (>₹1Cr) or 12% (>₹10Cr); however, if opting for special sections, surcharge is a flat 10%.
- Firms (including LLP): Taxed at a flat 30%. Surcharge of 12% applies if income exceeds ₹1 Crore.
- Local Authorities: Taxed at a flat 30%. Surcharge of 12% applies if income exceeds ₹1 Crore.
5. Summary Table: Surcharge Caps and Specifics
| Entity/Income Type | Surcharge Cap/Rate | Condition |
| New Tax Regime (Individuals) | 25% Max | Regardless of income exceeding ₹5 Crore |
| Capital Gains (111A, 112, 112A) | 15% Max | Applicable to individuals/HUF/AOP/BOI |
| Dividend Income | 15% Max | Applicable to individuals/HUF/AOP/BOI |
| AOP (Only Companies as Members) | 15% Max | On the amount of income tax |
| Foreign Companies | 5% Max | For income exceeding ₹10 Crore |
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