Tax & Compliance

Old Tax Regime vs New Tax Regime 2026: Which Saves You More?

Comparison illustration of the Old Tax Regime vs New Tax Regime 2026 in India highlighting tax savings, deductions, and income tax benefits.
A visual comparison of India’s Old and New Tax Regimes for 2026 to help taxpayers determine which option offers greater savings.

Old tax regime vs new tax regime — every March, this question sends millions of Indians into a spiral of spreadsheets, conflicting advice, and last-minute panic. Your HR emails you a declaration form. Your colleague swears by the new regime. Your CA recommends the old one. And you have no idea which is right for your specific situation.

Here is the truth: neither regime is universally better. The right answer depends entirely on your income level, your deductions, and how much paperwork you want to handle. This guide gives you the exact numbers, real examples, and a simple framework to make the right call for FY 2025-26 (AY 2026-27).

Old Tax Regime vs New Tax Regime — Key Differences at a Glance

Before comparing the slabs, understand the fundamental difference between the two regimes. The old regime taxes you more but lets you reduce that income through deductions. The new regime taxes you less but removes almost all deductions.

Feature Old Tax Regime New Tax Regime
Tax slab rates Higher rates (5% to 30%) Lower rates (5% to 30% but wider slabs)
Default regime from FY 2025-26 Not the default — must opt in Default — applies automatically
Section 80C deduction (₹1.5 lakh) Allowed Not allowed
HRA exemption Allowed Not allowed
Home loan interest (Section 24b) Up to ₹2 lakh (self-occupied) Only for let-out property
Standard deduction ₹50,000 ₹75,000 (higher in new regime)
Section 87A rebate (tax-free income) Up to ₹5 lakh (rebate ₹12,500) Up to ₹12 lakh (rebate ₹60,000)
Section 80D (health insurance) Allowed Not allowed
NPS deduction (80CCD(1B)) ₹50,000 extra deduction Employer's NPS contribution only
Documentation required High — proofs for every deduction Minimal — just salary and investment basics

Sources: Income Tax Act 2025, ClearTax, incometax.gov.in — FY 2025-26 (AY 2026-27)

Important — New Regime Is Now the Default

From FY 2024-25 onwards, the new tax regime became the default for all salaried employees and HUFs. This means your employer automatically deducts TDS under the new regime unless you specifically submit Form 12BB declaring the old regime. If you miss declaring, your entire year's TDS calculation runs under the new regime — and you must sort it out at the time of ITR filing. Act early — submit your regime declaration to HR by April 15.

New Tax Regime — Slabs and Rates for FY 2025-26

The new tax regime offers significantly lower slab rates and a much higher tax-free income threshold. Under Section 87A, the government grants a full rebate of up to ₹60,000 — making income up to ₹12 lakh effectively tax-free. Add the ₹75,000 standard deduction, and a salaried individual earning up to ₹12.75 lakh pays zero tax. (Source: Budget 2025, ClearTax)

Income Slab Tax Rate — New Regime
Up to ₹4 lakh Nil
₹4 lakh to ₹8 lakh 5%
₹8 lakh to ₹12 lakh 10%
₹12 lakh to ₹16 lakh 15%
₹16 lakh to ₹20 lakh 20%
₹20 lakh to ₹24 lakh 25%
Above ₹24 lakh 30%

Source: Budget 2025-26, confirmed unchanged in Budget 2026-27. incometax.gov.in

The ₹12 Lakh Zero-Tax Threshold — How It Works

If your income is ₹12 lakh, your tax before the rebate works out to approximately ₹60,000. Section 87A then gives you a full rebate of ₹60,000 — reducing your tax to zero. This zero-tax benefit disappears completely once your income crosses ₹12 lakh. So a person earning ₹12 lakh pays ₹0 in tax, while someone earning ₹12.1 lakh pays full slab tax on the entire ₹12.1 lakh. Plan accordingly if your income sits near this threshold.

Old Tax Regime — Slabs and Rates for FY 2025-26

The old tax regime charges higher rates but allows you to reduce your taxable income significantly through deductions. As a result, high earners with large investments and home loans often pay less tax under the old regime despite its higher slab rates.

Income Slab Tax Rate — Old Regime Senior Citizens (60–80 yrs) Super Senior (80+ yrs)
Up to ₹2.5 lakh Nil Nil Nil
₹2.5 lakh to ₹3 lakh 5% Nil Nil
₹3 lakh to ₹5 lakh 5% 5% Nil
₹5 lakh to ₹10 lakh 20% 20% 20%
Above ₹10 lakh 30% 30% 30%

Source: Income Tax Act 2025, ClearTax — FY 2025-26

Old Regime — Higher Basic Exemption for Seniors

The old regime offers a higher basic exemption limit for senior citizens — ₹3 lakh for those between 60 and 80 years, and ₹5 lakh for those above 80 years. However, the new regime does not extend this benefit — it uses a flat ₹4 lakh exemption for everyone. As a result, senior citizens should calculate carefully before assuming the old regime is always better.

What Each Regime Allows — Full Deduction Comparison

This is the section that decides everything. The regime that suits you depends almost entirely on how much you can claim in deductions under the old regime.

Deduction / Exemption Old Regime New Regime
Standard Deduction ₹50,000 ₹75,000
Section 80C (PPF, ELSS, LIC, EPF, home loan principal) Up to ₹1.5 lakh Not available
HRA Exemption Actual rent minus 10% of salary (formula-based) Not available
Home loan interest (self-occupied) Section 24b Up to ₹2 lakh Not available
Home loan interest (let-out property) Full interest (no cap) Allowed
Section 80D (health insurance premium) Up to ₹25,000 (₹50,000 for seniors) Not available
Section 80CCD(1B) — NPS additional ₹50,000 extra Not available
Employer NPS contribution 80CCD(2) Up to 10% of salary Allowed (up to 14% for govt employees)
Leave Travel Allowance (LTA) Allowed Not available
Section 87A rebate Up to ₹12,500 (income up to ₹5 lakh) Up to ₹60,000 (income up to ₹12 lakh)

Real Examples — Who Saves More Under Each Regime

Forget the theory. Here are four real income scenarios that show exactly which regime saves more — with actual rupee calculations.

Example 1 — Salary ₹8 lakh, Minimal Deductions

Profile: Priya, 28, salaried, rents a room with family. She invests ₹30,000 in EPF only. She claims no HRA formally and has no home loan.

Calculation Old Regime New Regime
Gross income ₹8,00,000 ₹8,00,000
Standard deduction - ₹50,000 - ₹75,000
80C deduction - ₹30,000 ₹0
Taxable income ₹7,20,000 ₹7,25,000
Tax payable (before cess) ₹54,000 ₹27,500
Tax after 4% cess ₹56,160 ₹28,600
Verdict Pays more Saves ₹27,560 more

Example 2 — Salary ₹15 lakh, HRA + 80C + Home Loan

Profile: Rahul, 35, salaried. He pays ₹20,000/month rent in Mumbai, maximises 80C at ₹1.5 lakh, and pays ₹1.8 lakh in home loan interest on a self-occupied property. He also pays ₹25,000 in health insurance premium under 80D.

Calculation Old Regime New Regime
Gross income ₹15,00,000 ₹15,00,000
Standard deduction - ₹50,000 - ₹75,000
HRA exemption - ₹1,44,000 ₹0
80C deduction - ₹1,50,000 ₹0
Home loan interest 24b - ₹1,80,000 ₹0
80D premium - ₹25,000 ₹0
Taxable income ₹9,51,000 ₹14,25,000
Tax payable (before cess) ₹1,15,200 ₹1,73,750
Tax after 4% cess ₹1,19,808 ₹1,80,700
Verdict Saves ₹60,892 more Pays more
The Break-Even Rule

At ₹15 lakh income, the old regime wins only when total deductions exceed approximately ₹3.5 to ₹4 lakh. Below that threshold, the new regime's lower slab rates compensate for the missing deductions. At ₹20 lakh and above, the break-even deduction threshold rises to approximately ₹4.5 to ₹5 lakh. Always calculate both before deciding.

Example 3 — Salary ₹12 lakh, No Major Deductions

Profile: Anjali, 26, first job. Lives with parents, no home loan, EPF only at ₹50,000. Her situation perfectly illustrates the new regime's biggest advantage.

Calculation Old Regime New Regime
Gross income ₹12,00,000 ₹12,00,000
Standard deduction + 80C - ₹1,00,000 - ₹75,000
Taxable income ₹11,00,000 ₹11,25,000
Tax before rebate ₹1,42,500 ₹57,500
Section 87A rebate - ₹12,500 - ₹57,500 (full rebate)
Tax after rebate + cess ₹1,35,200 ₹0
Verdict Pays ₹1.35 lakh in tax Pays zero tax

The ₹12 lakh zero-tax threshold under the new regime is the single most powerful tax benefit for middle-income Indians in 2026. A salaried employee earning ₹12 lakh pays no tax at all — while under the old regime, the same person pays over ₹1.35 lakh even with basic deductions. For incomes at this level, the new regime wins by a large margin.

Who Should Choose Which Regime — The Decision Framework

Use this framework to decide in under 30 seconds. Add up all your annual deductions — 80C + HRA + home loan interest + 80D — and check the table below.

Your Situation Choose This Regime Why
Income below ₹12 lakh New Regime Zero tax under Section 87A — nothing beats this
Income ₹12–15 lakh, deductions below ₹3 lakh New Regime Lower slab rates compensate for lost deductions
Income ₹12–15 lakh, deductions above ₹3.5 lakh Calculate both Old regime may win — depends on your exact deduction mix
Income above ₹15 lakh, HRA + 80C + home loan maxed Old Regime Combined deductions of ₹4–5 lakh make old regime competitive
Income above ₹20 lakh, home loan interest ₹2 lakh Old Regime likely High 30% slab makes deductions extremely valuable
First job, no investments, no home loan New Regime Simple, less paperwork, often zero or minimal tax
Senior citizen with minimal income Old Regime often better Higher exemption limit (₹3 lakh to ₹5 lakh) under old regime
Freelancer or self-employed Calculate both Business expenses change the calculation significantly
The Quickest Way to Decide

Open the Income Tax Department's official regime calculator. Enter your income and deductions. It shows your tax under both regimes side by side in under 60 seconds. Use this before submitting your regime declaration to HR. This takes priority over any advice from colleagues or generic articles — your specific numbers are the only ones that matter.

How to Switch Between Regimes

Many people assume they cannot switch once they choose. However, salaried employees can switch regimes every year. Here is how it works.

Salaried employees

  • Submit Form 12BB to your employer at the start of each financial year — typically by April 15 or May 1
  • Declare your chosen regime and the deductions you plan to claim
  • Your employer deducts TDS accordingly for the entire year
  • Even if you declared the new regime to your employer, you can switch to the old regime when you file your ITR — as long as you file before the July 31 deadline

Self-employed or business owners

  • Once you opt out of the new regime, you cannot switch back easily — the rules are stricter for business income
  • Consult a CA before choosing if you have business income alongside salary
Miss the Declaration? You Are on New Regime by Default

If you do not submit Form 12BB to your employer, the new tax regime applies automatically. Your employer deducts TDS at new regime rates. However, you can still switch to the old regime when you file your ITR — provided you file before July 31, 2026, and your income comes only from salary. Do not panic if you missed the April declaration — you still have options at ITR filing time.

Frequently Asked Questions

For a salary of ₹10 lakh with standard deduction only, the new tax regime is better in 2026. Under the new regime, your taxable income after the ₹75,000 standard deduction comes to ₹9.25 lakh. The tax works out to approximately ₹32,500 before cess — and the Section 87A rebate does not fully apply at this income level. However, if you also claim HRA and max out 80C, the old regime reduces taxable income significantly and may result in lower tax. Calculate both using the income tax department's calculator before deciding.

Yes — but only under specific conditions. Under the new tax regime, the Section 87A rebate covers up to ₹60,000 in tax. If your gross income is ₹12 lakh and your only deduction is the ₹75,000 standard deduction, your taxable income becomes ₹11.25 lakh and your tax works out to approximately ₹57,500. The 87A rebate covers this fully — leaving you with zero tax payable. However, this zero-tax benefit applies only to resident individuals. Additionally, special incomes like capital gains from stocks are taxed at flat rates regardless of the 87A rebate. (Source: ClearTax, 2026)

No. HRA exemption is not available under the new tax regime. If you rent accommodation and want to claim HRA tax benefits, you must opt for the old tax regime. HRA is one of the largest deductions available to salaried employees — especially in metro cities like Mumbai, Delhi, and Bengaluru where rent is high. For many salaried employees in metros, HRA alone makes the old regime more attractive despite its higher base slab rates. Calculate your exact HRA exemption amount before deciding which regime to choose.

If you do not submit Form 12BB or declare a regime preference to your employer, the new tax regime applies automatically from FY 2024-25 onwards. Your employer deducts TDS under new regime rates throughout the year. However, you can still switch to the old regime when you file your ITR before July 31, 2026 — as long as you have only salary income and no business income. If switching to the old regime results in lower tax than the TDS already deducted, you receive the difference as a refund after ITR processing.

Yes. The old tax regime continues to exist in 2026. The new Income Tax Act 2025, which replaces the Income Tax Act 1961 from April 1, 2026, retains both regimes. No changes apply to tax slabs or rates for FY 2025-26 (AY 2026-27). The new Act primarily simplifies language and structure — it does not change the fundamental tax rates, deductions, or regime options available to individual taxpayers. Both the old and new regimes remain available for FY 2025-26 ITR filing. (Source: Budget 2026-27, ClearTax, incometax.gov.in)

The Bottom Line

  1. The new tax regime wins for most Indians earning under ₹15 lakh with limited deductions — especially those under ₹12 lakh who pay zero tax under Section 87A. The new regime is also the default from FY 2025-26, so you must actively opt out if you want the old one.
  2. The old tax regime wins when your combined deductions exceed ₹3.5 to ₹4 lakh — typically when you claim HRA in a metro city, max out 80C at ₹1.5 lakh, and pay home loan interest above ₹1.5 lakh. At higher income levels, each deduction saves 30% in tax, making the old regime significantly more valuable.
  3. Calculate both before deciding — use the official income tax calculator at incometax.gov.in. Your colleague's answer is not your answer. Your numbers are the only ones that matter.

Note: This is a general educational guide. Tax calculations depend on your individual income, deductions, and circumstances. Consult a qualified CA for advice specific to your situation. Verify current rules at incometax.gov.in.