Income Tax Act, 2025, has come into force
on April 1, 2026
Income Tax Act, 2025, has come into force on April 1,
2026, marking the beginning of a new chapter in India’s tax administration and
a significant step towards ‘Viksit Bharat’.
Income Tax Act, 2025
¨ It replaces the
six-decade-old Income-tax Act, 1961, marking a comprehensive effort to simplify
and modernise the country’s income-tax law.
¨ It marks a shift towards
greater clarity and ease of compliance through simple language, a streamlined
structure and a reader-friendly presentation, without altering the underlying
tax policy.
Objectives of the Act
¨
Simplification: Replace
archaic language and redundant provisions with clear, concise, and modern legal
text.
¨
Digital Integration:
Enable faceless assessments and digital compliance to reduce human interface
and corruption.
¨
Taxpayer-Centric
Approach: Improve ease of filing, reduce litigation, and enhance transparency.
¨ Global Alignment: Reflect
contemporary economic realities, including taxation of digital assets and
global income.
Key Highlights of Income Tax Act, 2025
¨ Introduction of ‘Tax
Year’: The Act replaces the confusing terms “Assessment Year” and “Previous
Year” with a single “Tax Year,” defined as the 12-month financial year starting
April 1, to improve clarity and ease compliance.
¨
Power to Frame Schemes:
The Act authorizes the Central Government to design new schemes by
¨
Eliminating the interface
with the assessee or any other person to the extent technologically feasible,
and Optimising utilisation of the resources through economies of scale and
functional specialisation.
¨ Simplified Compliance:
Dispersed provisions have been consolidated, for instance, all TDS rules are
now grouped under Section 393, making them easier to locate and interpret.
¨
Digital-First
Enforcement: Introduces “Virtual Digital Space” (e.g., email, cloud, social
media, trading platforms) and expands “Virtual Digital Assets” to include all
value-bearing, cryptography-based digital assets like cryptocurrencies.
¨
Clearer Structure for MAT
and AMT: Provisions related to Minimum Alternate Tax (MAT) and Alternate
Minimum Tax (AMT) have been placed in separate sub-sections to enhance clarity.
¨
Extended Time for
Updating Returns: Taxpayers can now revise their returns up to four years from
the end of the relevant assessment year, enabling correction of errors without
additional penalties or tax burden.
¨
Reduced Reopening Period:
The time limit for reopening assessments has been shortened to five years,
providing greater certainty and reducing prolonged scrutiny.
Rationale Behind the Shift from Income Tax
Act 1961 to Income Tax Act 2025
¨
Extensive Amendments: The
Act has undergone nearly 65 amendments and over 4,000 changes through Finance
Acts and 19 Taxation Laws Amendment Bills, making it lengthy and complex
despite efforts to keep it updated.
¨
Reduced Tax Base: The
numerous exemptions and incentives granted over time significantly reduced the
tax base, which in turn contributed to increased litigation, higher
administrative costs, and greater compliance burdens.
¨ Complex Language: The Act
was written in traditional legal language, characterized by long sentences,
numerous provisos, making it difficult for the average taxpayer to understand.
¨ Fragmented Structure: The
accumulation of amendments and additions led to a fragmented structure. This
complexity was further compounded by the presence of outdated provisions that
were no longer in use.
Direct Tax Reforms Perspective
· The shift also aligns
with broader direct tax reforms aimed at improving efficiency, transparency,
and ease of compliance.
· It seeks to broaden the
tax base, reduce disputes, leverage digital enforcement, and create a simpler,
taxpayer-friendly system in line with evolving economic and technological
realities.