As of April 1, 2026, India has transitioned to the Income Tax Act, 2025, replacing the historic 1961 Act. While tax rates and slabs remain largely unchanged, the restructuring introduces a new vocabulary and significantly higher exemption limits for several long-stagnant allowances.
Here is a breakdown of the key changes you need to know:
1. The “Tax Year” Concept
The confusing distinction between “Financial Year” (FY) and “Assessment Year” (AY) has been abolished.
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Unified Term: From today, the year in which you earn income is simply called the Tax Year.
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Tax Year 2026-27: Covers income earned from April 1, 2026, to March 31, 2027. Your Form 16 and ITR will now reflect this single term.
2. Major HRA & Allowance Relief
The new rules provide a massive boost to the Old Tax Regime, making it more competitive for those with high expenses:
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Metro City Expansion: Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Pune, and Ahmedabad now join Mumbai, Delhi, Kolkata, and Chennai in the 50% HRA exemption bracket (up from 40%).
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Allowance Hikes:
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Children’s Education: Increased from ₹100/month to ₹3,000/month per child.
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Hostel Allowance: Increased from ₹300/month to ₹9,000/month per child.
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Meal Coupons: Tax-free limit raised from ₹50 to ₹200 per meal.
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Gifts from Employer: Annual tax-free limit raised from ₹5,000 to ₹15,000.
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3. Revised ITR & Filing Deadlines
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Business Relief: The deadline for non-audit business cases (ITR-3 and ITR-4) has been extended by one month to August 31.
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Salaried Filers: The deadline for ITR-1 and ITR-2 remains July 31.
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Revised Returns: You now have 12 months from the end of the tax year (until March 31) to file a revised return, though filings after December 31 will incur a late fee.
4. PAN and Transactional Changes
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Aadhaar-only PAN: You can no longer apply for or update a PAN using only an Aadhaar card. New category-specific forms (e.g., Form 93 for individuals) are mandatory.
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High-Value Tracking: PAN is now mandatory for:
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Cash deposits of ₹10 lakh+ per year.
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Immovable property transactions above ₹20 lakh.
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Vehicle purchases (excluding two-wheelers) over ₹5 lakh.
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5. Investment & Savings Impact
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Sovereign Gold Bonds (SGBs): The tax exemption on maturity now applies only to original subscribers. If you bought SGBs from the secondary market, you will now face a 12.5% LTCG tax upon redemption.
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Share Buybacks: These are now taxed as Capital Gains (based on your holding period) instead of the previous “deemed dividend” treatment at slab rates.
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STT Hike: Securities Transaction Tax on F&O has increased: Futures rise to 0.05% and Options to 0.15%.
Summary Table: Allowance Comparison
| Allowance Item | Limit (Pre-2026) | New Limit (April 2026) |
| Education (per child) | ₹1,200 /year | ₹36,000 /year |
| Hostel (per child) | ₹3,600 /year | ₹1,08,000 /year |
| Meal Benefit | ₹50 /meal | ₹200 /meal |
| Employer Gifts | ₹5,000 /year | ₹15,000 /year |
Note: To benefit from these higher limits, check with your HR department to see if your CTC (Cost to Company) structure needs to be updated to reflect these specific allowances.
