Income Tax Bill, 2025 – Key Changes that every Taxpayers Need to Know
08/12/2025
Introduced on : 11th August, 2025 Effective from : 1st April, 2026 (Tax Year 2026–27 onwards)
The Government of India has tabled the New Income Tax Bill, 2025, marking one of the most significant overhauls of tax law since the Income Tax Act, 1961. While the tax rates and slabs remain unchanged, the bill focuses on simplification, clarity, and ease of compliance for individuals, businesses, and professionals.
In this blog, we break down the key provisions of the bill in simple terms — so you can quickly understand what’s changing and how it might impact you or your Income.
1. Simplified Law Structure:
The law has been restructured to make it easier to read and apply as compared to Old Income Tax Act, 1961:
Reduced from 819 to 536 sections and 48 to 23 chapters.
Outdated and redundant provisions removed for e.g., Fringe Benefit Tax references.
Commuted Pension: Fully deductible for both salaried and non-salaried individuals (specified funds).
Section 80M Restored: Inter-corporate dividend deduction to avoid double taxation.
LLPs: Alternate Minimum Tax (AMT) scrapped — a big relief for LLPs and investment funds.
Charitable Trusts: Benefits for capital gains roll-over and unspent income carry-forward restored.
8. Compliance & Administration Reforms:
Refunds allowed even if returns are filed late, in genuine cases.
No ₹200 per day late fee for minor TDS filing delays.
Easier NIL-TDS certificates for residents and non-residents.
More CBDT powers for digital-first tax administration — expect faster, more automated processing.
9. Key Changes from the February 2025 Draft:
Income Tax Refund bar for late returns removed in this Bill.
“In normal course” phrase removed from property rent rules to avoid disputes.
Commuted pension deduction extended even to non-employees.
Clarification: Vacant business premises not taxed as house property.
Conclusion
The Income Tax Bill, 2025 is not a rate-changing reform but a structure-changing reform. By simplifying the law, updating definitions, and reducing unnecessary compliance hurdles, the government aims to make tax administration more transparent and taxpayer-friendly.
While the actual tax liability for most individuals and businesses won’t change immediately, the shift to a Tax Year system, clearer property income rules, and restored deductions could make a noticeable difference in ease of filing and reduced disputes.
We wish to consistently build value for our clients by delivering a motivated and committed team of professionals working hand in hand to maintain the highest standards of integrity and confidentiality in fulfilling client-specific needs.