What are the key income tax changes from April 1, 2026?
From April 1, 2026, the new tax regime under Section 115BAC becomes the default. A unified “Tax Year” replaces the old FY/AY system, the standard deduction is ₹75,000 under the new regime, and new labour codes mandate that basic pay must be at least 50% of your CTC.
I spent the better part of last week helping a friend — salaried, mid-30s, two kids — figure out why his projected take-home for April looked lower than March.
Same CTC. Same employer. No demotion. Just a payroll slip that suddenly didn’t add up.
The culprit? India’s new income tax framework kicking in from April 1, 2026. And the thing is, he’d read the news headlines.
He just hadn’t connected the dots to his own salary.
That’s what this guide fixes. By the end, you’ll know exactly what changed, how it hits your wallet (whether you’re salaried or a senior citizen), and the specific moves to make before you file your next return.
Quick Summary: What’s Changing at a Glance
From April 1, 2026, India’s Income Tax Act 2025 and Rules 2026 replace the old framework.
The new tax regime under Section 115BAC becomes your default.
No action needed to “opt in” — you’re already in it unless you actively opt out.
Here’s the snapshot:
- ✅ New tax regime is now default — no more automatic old regime
- ✅ Standard deduction stays at ₹75,000 for salaried taxpayers
- ✅ “Tax Year” replaces the old Previous Year / Assessment Year terminology
- ✅ CTC restructuring is mandatory — basic pay must be ≥50% of CTC
- ✅ Compliance gets stricter — new ITR form numbering, tighter crypto reporting, labour code enforcement
- ✅ No major slab rate changes — the rates themselves aren’t the story here
The real story? It’s what happens behind the payslip.
What is Changing from April 1, 2026?
The entire scaffolding of how your income gets taxed, reported, and processed is being overhauled — even if the slab rates look familiar.
Think of it as the same building with completely rewired plumbing.
Key changes, broken down:
- Tax Year unification: “FY” and “AY” are gone. Everything is now “Tax Year 2026-27.”
- Your payroll software, ITR forms, and employer filings all need to reflect this.
- About 30% of payroll software was reportedly unpatched for this as of early notifications.
- Section 115BAC default: The new regime applies automatically.
- If you want the old regime (with HRA, 80C, etc.), you must explicitly opt out before the filing deadline.
- 50% basic pay mandate: Under proposed labour code changes (yet to be fully implemented across all sectors), basic pay may need to be structured at a higher proportion of CTC, which can impact PF and take-home salary..
- This isn’t optional. And it has a cascading effect on PF, gratuity, and take-home.
- EPF statutory limit hikes: With basic pay surging, your EPF contribution (12% of basic) jumps proportionally.
- For someone on a ₹50,000 CTC with a previously low ₹10,000 basic, PF could spike by ₹3,000/month.
- EV perquisite clarity: Employer-provided electric vehicles are now valued at a flat ₹5,000/month for perquisite calculations.
- SGB capital gains taxation: Sovereign Gold Bonds purchased via exchanges (not directly from RBI) now attract 12.5% LTCG tax.
- Labour code final dues: Employers must credit final settlement within two working days of an employee’s last day.
- No exceptions.
That’s a lot. But not all of it affects everyone equally.
Impact on Salaried Employees
If you’re salaried, the biggest shift isn’t the tax rate — it’s your take-home pay structure.
The 50% basic pay mandate rewires your entire salary breakup.
Here’s what matters:
Standard Deduction Stays — But Context Changes
The ₹75,000 standard deduction remains available under the new regime.
Combined with the rebate structure, income up to ₹12.75 lakh stays effectively tax-free for most salaried individuals. That part’s good.
Fewer Exemptions in the New Regime
Under the default new regime, you lose deductions for HRA, Section 80C (PPF, ELSS, LIC), home loan interest under 80EE, and most other popular tax-saving instruments.
NPS employer contribution up to 14% of basic remains deductible — one of the few survivors.
The Real Friction: CTC Restructuring
This is where it gets messy. When your employer bumps basic pay to 50% of CTC, your allowances (HRA, special allowance, transport) shrink.
PF deduction balloons. The net effect? A 5-10% drop in monthly take-home for employees with previously low-basic structures.
My friend’s situation? His basic jumped from ₹18,000 to ₹30,000 on a ₹60,000 CTC.
His PF went from ₹2,160 to ₹3,600. That’s ₹1,440 less per month in-hand — roughly ₹17,000 per year vanishing into his PF account.
Good for retirement. Painful for rent.
The Decision: Old vs. New Regime
You still have a choice. But now you must actively choose the old regime.
If you have significant HRA claims, home loan interest, or heavy 80C investments, the old regime might still save you more.
If your deductions are thin, the new regime’s lower rates and simplicity win.
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Impact on Senior Citizens
Senior citizens (60+) and super senior citizens (80+) retain key benefits, but the default regime shift demands a fresh calculation.
Don’t assume your old setup still works.
Here’s the breakdown:
- Rebate expansion: For super senior citizens, income up to ₹7 lakh remains tax-free under the new regime via a rebate of up to ₹20,000.
- But utilization sits at roughly 15%, largely because pension income often goes unreported or miscalculated.
- Standard deduction applies: The ₹75,000 deduction is available to pension-receiving seniors under the new regime.
- Old regime benefits persist — if you opt in: Section 80D (health insurance), 80TTB (interest income for seniors), and higher basic exemption limits (₹3 lakh for 60+, ₹5 lakh for 80+) only apply if you choose the old regime.
- Regime choice matters more here: Seniors with high medical expenses, fixed deposit interest, and health insurance premiums often save more under the old regime.
- But you must actively opt out of the new default.
The mistake I see most often? Seniors not recalculating after the basic pay / pension restructuring.
Their CA files under the new regime by default, and they lose deductions worth ₹50,000-₹1,00,000.
Old vs New Tax Regime: The Decision Table
Choosing the right regime depends on your total deductions, not just your income level. Here’s how to think about it:
- HRA Exemption
Old Regime: Available (metro/non-metro rules)
New Regime (Default): Not available - Section 80C (₹1.5L)
Old Regime: Available
New Regime (Default): Not available - Standard Deduction
Old Regime: ₹50,000
New Regime (Default): ₹75,000 - NPS Employer (14%)
Old Regime: Available
New Regime (Default): Available - Home Loan Interest (80EE) & Health Insurance (80D)
Old Regime: Available
New Regime (Default): Not available - Tax Rates
Old Regime: Higher slab rates
New Regime (Default): Lower slab rates - Opt-in Required?
Old Regime: Yes (must actively choose)
New Regime (Default): No (automatic default)
When to Choose Old Regime
- Your total deductions (80C + HRA + 80D + home loan) exceed ₹3.5-4 lakh
- You’re a senior citizen with heavy medical expenses
- You live in a metro and pay high rent with legitimate HRA claims
When to Stick With New Regime
- Your deductions are under ₹2.5 lakh
- You don’t have HRA or home loan benefits
- You prefer simplicity and lower rates
Example: A salaried person earning ₹15 lakh with ₹1.5L in 80C, ₹60K in 80D, and ₹2.4L HRA saves approximately ₹45,000 more under the old regime.
Without those deductions? The new regime wins by ₹30,000+.
Run the numbers. Don’t guess.
What You Should Do Before Filing (Step-by-Step)
The single most important action is running a side-by-side tax simulation for both regimes before your employer locks in TDS.
Everything else flows from that.
Step 1: Compare Both Regimes
Use the CBDT e-filing portal’s regime comparison tool. Input your actual income, rent, investments, and insurance premiums.
Look at the final tax payable under each — not just the slab rates.
Visual checkpoint: The portal should show two columns with “Tax Payable” at the bottom.
If the difference is under ₹5,000, the new regime’s simplicity probably wins.
Step 2: Verify Your Payslip Structure
Check your April 2026 payslip. Basic pay should show ≥50% of CTC.
EPF deduction should be 12% of the new basic. If your basic is still below 50%, flag it with HR — your employer’s restructuring may have failed.
Step 3: Review and Maximize Deductions
If opting for the old regime, ensure all deductions are documented: rent receipts for HRA (update Form 12BB), 80C proof, 80D premiums, NPS statements.
Missing paperwork means lost savings.
Step 4: Plan Income Timing
If you have income straddling March 31, 2026 — bonuses, freelance payments, capital gains — understand that pre-April income falls under the old Act and post-April under the new.
You may need to file dual returns via the e-filing portal’s split function.
Verification: Run the Tax Year filter in your payroll tool. Pre-2026 income should flag separately as “Old Act.”
For a full walkthrough on organizing your finances before the deadline, check out our year-end financial checklist — it covers everything from document prep to last-minute deduction claims.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Don’t let autopilot cost you money. These are the errors I see repeatedly:
- Blindly accepting the new regime default. The default isn’t always optimal.
- If you have deductions exceeding ₹3.5 lakh, you’re leaving money on the table.
- Ignoring the PF impact on take-home. The 50% basic mandate means your PF contribution likely doubled.
- Budget for the cash flow dip now, not in May.
- Not recalculating after CTC restructuring. Your old tax projection is obsolete.
- The basic pay hike changes HRA exemption math, PF contributions, and gratuity calculations simultaneously.
- Filing HRA claims without updated rent agreements. Post-restructuring, your HRA exemption calculation changes because the basic pay component changed.
- Backdate rent agreements if needed and submit via Form 12BB addendum.
- Assuming SGB maturity is tax-free. Only bonds bought directly from RBI retain that benefit.
- Exchange-purchased SGBs now attract 12.5% LTCG.
- Missing the two-day final dues window. If you’re switching jobs, your employer must settle within two working days under the new labour codes.
- Know your rights.
For more strategies on keeping more of your income, read our tax saving tips for salaried professionals.
Final Action Checklist
Before April filing season hits, tick these off:
- Run old vs. new regime comparison on CBDT portal
- Verify April payslip shows basic ≥50% CTC
- Confirm EPF deduction matches 12% of new basic
- Gather all 80C, 80D, HRA documentation (if opting old regime)
- Update rent agreements post-basic pay restructuring
- Check payroll software shows “Tax Year 2026-27” (not AY/PY)
- Simulate final dues timeline if planning a job change
- Consult CA for income straddling March 31, 2026
FAQs
What income tax changes take effect from April 1, 2026?
India’s Income Tax Act 2025 replaces the old framework. The new tax regime under Section 115BAC becomes default, “Tax Year” replaces Previous Year/Assessment Year, basic pay must be 50% of CTC under labour codes, and compliance requirements including ITR form numbering and crypto reporting are updated.
Is the new tax regime compulsory from April 2026?
No. The new regime is the default, not compulsory.
You can opt out and choose the old regime before filing your return.
But you must actively make that choice — inaction means you’re taxed under the new regime automatically.
Which tax regime is better for salaried employees?
It depends on your deductions. If your combined deductions (HRA, 80C, 80D, home loan interest) exceed ₹3.5 lakh, the old regime typically saves more.
Below ₹2.5 lakh in deductions, the new regime’s lower rates and ₹75,000 standard deduction usually win.
How does the 50% basic pay rule affect my salary?
Your employer must set basic pay at minimum 50% of CTC.
This increases EPF and gratuity contributions, reducing monthly take-home by 5-10% for employees with previously low basic structures.
The money goes into retirement savings, not taxes — but the cash flow impact is immediate.
Do senior citizens benefit from the new tax regime?
Senior citizens retain the ₹75,000 standard deduction and rebate benefits (up to ₹20,000 for super seniors on income ≤₹7 lakh) under the new regime.
But those with high medical expenses and health insurance premiums often save more under the old regime, which preserves Section 80D and 80TTB deductions.
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