Calculate Your Income Tax (India)
Slab-wise Breakdown
| Slab | Old Regime Tax | New Regime Tax |
|---|
Understanding Income Tax Regimes in India
New Tax Regime (Default from FY 2025-26)
| Income Slab | Tax Rate |
|---|---|
| Up to ₹4,00,000 | Nil |
| ₹4,00,001 – ₹8,00,000 | 5% |
| ₹8,00,001 – ₹12,00,000 | 10% |
| ₹12,00,001 – ₹16,00,000 | 15% |
| ₹16,00,001 – ₹20,00,000 | 20% |
| ₹20,00,001 – ₹24,00,000 | 25% |
| Above ₹24,00,000 | 30% |
Standard deduction of ₹75,000 for salaried employees. Income up to ₹12 lakh is effectively tax-free due to Section 87A rebate. For income slightly above ₹12 lakh, marginal relief ensures your tax does not exceed the amount by which your income exceeds ₹12 lakh — preventing an abrupt tax jump. Deductions like HRA, 80C, 80D are not allowed under new regime.
Old Tax Regime
| Income Slab (Below 60) | Tax Rate |
|---|---|
| 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% |
Allows all deductions: 80C, 80D, HRA, home loan interest, NPS, etc. Section 87A rebate applies for income up to ₹5 lakh.
Tax Saving Tips
- 1. Max out Section 80C (₹1.5L): EPF, PPF, ELSS, tax-saver FD, life insurance, tuition fees, and home loan principal all count. ELSS has the shortest lock-in (3 years).
- 2. Get health insurance (80D): ₹25,000 for self/family, additional ₹25,000 for parents (₹50,000 if parents are seniors). Up to ₹1 lakh total deduction for family + senior parents.
- 3. Invest ₹50K in NPS (80CCD(1B)): This is over and above the 80C limit. NPS also gives employer contribution deduction under 80CCD(2).
- 4. Claim HRA if renting: HRA exemption can save significant tax for those paying high rent in metro cities.
- 5. Home loan benefits: Up to ₹2L interest deduction (Sec 24) + ₹1.5L principal under 80C. First-time buyers get additional ₹1.5L under 80EEA.
- 6. Compare regimes annually: Your optimal regime can change each year based on salary structure and investment patterns. Always calculate both before filing.
Real-World Tax Calculation Examples
Example 1: ₹8 Lakh Salary — New Regime Wins
Rahul earns ₹8,00,000 gross salary with no investments.
- New Regime: After ₹75,000 standard deduction, taxable income = ₹7,25,000. Tax = ₹0 (below ₹12L rebate threshold). Zero tax.
- Old Regime: After ₹75,000 standard deduction, taxable = ₹7,25,000. Tax = ₹5,000 (5% on ₹2.5-5L) + ₹45,000 (20% on ₹5-7.25L) = ₹50,000 + cess = ₹52,000.
Verdict: New regime saves ₹52,000. With no deductions, the new regime is clearly better.
Example 2: ₹15 Lakh Salary — Deductions Decide
Priya earns ₹15,00,000 with ₹1.5L in 80C, ₹25K in 80D, and ₹50K in NPS (80CCD).
- New Regime: Taxable = ₹14,25,000 (after standard deduction). Tax = ₹20,000 + ₹40,000 + ₹40,000 + ₹33,750 = ₹1,33,750 + cess = ₹1,39,100.
- Old Regime: Taxable = ₹15L - ₹75K - ₹1.5L - ₹25K - ₹50K = ₹12,00,000. Tax = ₹12,500 + ₹1,00,000 + ₹60,000 = ₹1,72,500 + cess = ₹1,79,400.
Verdict: New regime saves ₹40,300 even with ₹2.25L in deductions. The new regime's lower slab rates overcome the deduction benefit.
Example 3: ₹25 Lakh Salary — Old Regime Wins
Suresh earns ₹25,00,000 with ₹1.5L (80C), ₹50K (80D), ₹50K (NPS), ₹2L (home loan interest), and ₹2.4L (HRA).
- New Regime: Taxable = ₹24,25,000. Tax = ₹20K + ₹40K + ₹40K + ₹60K + ₹80K + ₹1,00K + ₹6,250 = ₹3,46,250 + cess = ₹3,60,100.
- Old Regime: Taxable = ₹25L - ₹75K - ₹1.5L - ₹50K - ₹50K - ₹2L - ₹2.4L = ₹17,35,000. Tax = ₹12,500 + ₹1,00,000 + ₹2,20,500 = ₹3,33,000 + cess = ₹3,46,320.
Verdict: Old regime saves ₹13,780. With ₹6.9L in total deductions, the old regime edges ahead — the breakeven is around ₹5-6L in deductions.
Old vs New Regime: Break-Even Analysis
The “right” regime depends on your total deductions. Here’s a quick guide for different income levels:
| Gross Salary | Deductions Needed for Old Regime to Win | Recommendation |
|---|---|---|
| Up to ₹7.5L | N/A | New regime (likely zero tax) |
| ₹7.5L – ₹10L | > ₹1.5L | New regime for most |
| ₹10L – ₹15L | > ₹3.75L | New regime unless heavy deductions |
| ₹15L – ₹20L | > ₹4.25L | Depends on HRA + 80C + 80D |
| ₹20L – ₹30L | > ₹5.5L | Old regime if you have home loan + HRA |
| Above ₹30L | > ₹6L+ | Old regime often wins with full deductions |
Rule of thumb: If your total deductions (80C + 80D + NPS + HRA + home loan interest) exceed ₹4-5 lakh, calculate both regimes carefully. Below that threshold, the new regime almost always wins.
Section 80C Investment Options Compared
Section 80C allows deductions up to ₹1,50,000. Here are the most popular options:
| Investment | Returns | Lock-in | Risk | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EPF | 8.15% | Till retirement | Zero | Salaried (auto-deducted) |
| PPF | 7.1% | 15 years | Zero | Govt-backed, tax-free |
| ELSS Mutual Fund | 10-15%* | 3 years | High | Highest return potential |
| Tax-Saver FD | 6.5-7.5% | 5 years | Zero | Conservative, familiar |
| NSC | 7.7% | 5 years | Zero | Post office investors |
| SCSS | 8.2% | 5 years | Zero | Senior citizens (60+) |
| Life Insurance | 4-6% | Long-term | Low | Only for pure protection |
| NPS (80CCD) | 8-12%* | Till 60 | Medium | Extra ₹50K above 80C |
*Market-linked returns are historical averages and not guaranteed.
Optimal strategy: If your EPF contribution doesn’t fill the ₹1.5L limit, supplement with ELSS (for growth) or PPF (for safety). Always invest ₹50K in NPS for the additional 80CCD(1B) benefit.
Salary Structure Optimization for Tax Saving
Your CTC (Cost to Company) structure can significantly impact your tax liability. Here’s how to optimize:
Key Salary Components to Maximize
- HRA (House Rent Allowance): Exempt under old regime if you pay rent. Higher HRA allocation means more tax savings. Exemption is the minimum of: actual HRA, 50% of basic (metro) or 40% (non-metro), or rent paid minus 10% of basic.
- NPS Employer Contribution: Your employer’s NPS contribution (up to 10% of basic + DA) is deductible under 80CCD(2) — this is above the ₹1.5L 80C limit and works in both regimes.
- Leave Travel Allowance (LTA): Tax-free for domestic travel costs, claimable twice in a 4-year block. Ask for LTA in your salary structure.
- Food Coupons/Meal Allowance: Up to ₹50 per meal (about ₹26,400/year) is tax-exempt.
- Reimbursements: Phone, internet, fuel, books — many employers allow tax-free reimbursements against bills. These directly reduce taxable income.
Avoid These Structures
- Low basic, high special allowance: Special allowance is fully taxable. A low basic also reduces PF, gratuity, and HRA benefits.
- Performance bonuses without restructuring: Bonuses are fully taxable. If possible, discuss distributing over months or structuring as allowances.
Tax Calendar & Important Deadlines (FY 2025-26)
| Date | Event | Who |
|---|---|---|
| 15 Jun 2025 | Advance Tax — 1st installment (15% of estimated tax) | Self-employed / income >₹10K tax |
| 15 Sep 2025 | Advance Tax — 2nd installment (45% cumulative) | Self-employed / income >₹10K tax |
| 15 Dec 2025 | Advance Tax — 3rd installment (75% cumulative) | Self-employed / income >₹10K tax |
| 15 Mar 2026 | Advance Tax — 4th installment (100%) | Self-employed / income >₹10K tax |
| 31 Mar 2026 | FY 2025-26 ends. Last date for tax-saving investments (80C, 80D, etc.) | All taxpayers |
| 15 Jun 2026 | TDS certificates (Form 16) from employer | Salaried employees |
| 31 Jul 2026 | ITR filing deadline (non-audit cases) | Salaried, small business |
| 31 Oct 2026 | ITR filing deadline (audit cases) | Businesses requiring audit |
| 31 Dec 2026 | Belated/revised return deadline | Missed original deadline |
Pro tip: Don’t rush tax-saving investments in March. Plan them early in the financial year (April-June) to maximize the time-value benefit and avoid last-minute poor choices.
Common Tax Filing Mistakes to Avoid
- 1. Not reporting all income sources: Bank interest, FD interest, capital gains, freelance income — all must be reported even if TDS was deducted. The IT department cross-references with AIS (Annual Information Statement).
- 2. Choosing the wrong ITR form: Salaried with no business income? Use ITR-1 (Sahaj). Have capital gains? Use ITR-2. Wrong form = defective return notice.
- 3. Not verifying AIS/TIS: Check your Annual Information Statement on the income tax portal. It shows all your financial transactions. Mismatches trigger notices.
- 4. Claiming deductions under the new regime: If you opt for the new regime, deductions like 80C, 80D, and HRA are not allowed (except standard deduction and NPS employer contribution under 80CCD(2)). Incorrectly claiming them causes rejection.
- 5. Missing the ITR deadline: Filing after July 31 means a penalty of ₹5,000 (₹1,000 if income < ₹5L), loss of carry-forward of losses, and interest under 234A.
- 6. Not e-verifying the return: After filing, you must e-verify within 30 days using Aadhaar OTP, net banking, or bank account. Without verification, your ITR is treated as not filed.
- 7. Ignoring Form 26AS: This shows all TDS credited against your PAN. If TDS shown here doesn’t match your return, you’ll face issues claiming refunds or credits.
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