Categories: Direct Tax

Changes in Perquisites & Allowances in I Tax Act 2025

Key Changes in Perquisites & Allowances in Income Tax Act, 2025

The Income Tax Act, 2025, introduced by the Income Tax Department and effective from 1 April 2026, brings structural clarity and rationalisation in the taxation of perquisites and allowances under the head “Salaries.” . The changes in perquisites and allowances under the Income Tax Act, 2025, are evolutionary rather than revolutionary. They focus on clarity over complexity, structure over fragmentation, and compliance ease over interpretational challenges. While the fundamental taxability principles remain largely unchanged, the presentation, classification, and compliance approach have been significantly improved.

Motor Car Perquisite: Major Increase in Valuation Limits

Car Owned / Hired by Employer

Usage Type Income Tax Act, 1961 Income Tax Act, 2025
Wholly for official duties Nil No change
Exclusively for personal use Actual expenses + driver + wear & tear – employee recovery No change
Partly official + partly personal
• Engine ≤ 1.6L (expenses borne by employer) INR 1,800 p.m. INR 5,000 p.m.
• Engine > 1.6L (expenses borne by employer) INR 2,400 p.m. INR 7,000 p.m.
• Engine ≤ 1.6L (expenses borne by employee) INR 600 p.m. INR 2,000 p.m.
• Engine > 1.6L (expenses borne by employee) INR 900 p.m. INR 3,000 p.m.
• Chauffeur perquisite (additional) INR 900 p.m. INR 3,000 p.m.

Car Owned by Employee (Employer Reimburses Expenses)

Usage Income Tax Act, 1961 Income Tax Act, 2025
Wholly official use Nil Nil
Partly official + partly personal
• Engine ≤ 1.6L Reimbursement – INR 1,800 p.m. Reimbursement – INR 5,000 p.m.
• Engine > 1.6L Reimbursement – INR 2,400 p.m. Reimbursement – INR 7,000 p.m.

Major Changes in Other Perquisites

Particular Income Tax Act, 1961 Income Tax Act, 2025 Change
Interest‑free / concessional loan Taxable if loan > INR 20,000 Taxable if loan > INR 2,00,000 10x threshold increase
Gift / Token / Voucher perquisite Exemption up to INR 5,000 Exemption up to INR 15,000 3x increase
Overseas medical treatment perquisite Exemption up to INR 2,00,000 Exemption up to INR 8,00,000 4x increase

New Mandatory Conditions House Rent Allowance (HRA) :

Where annual rent exceeds INR 1,00,000, the following are now mandatory:

  • Furnishing PAN of the landlord
  • Declaration whether the landlord is a relative
  • Mandatory rent agreement as supporting documentation
  • Failure to meet any of the above conditions results in denial of HRA exemption

Structural Changes in the Income Tax Act 2025

The Income‑Tax Act, 2025, which becomes effective from 1 April 2026, reorganises and simplifies the structure of the Indian tax law. While the layout and section numbering have undergone significant restructuring, the fundamental tax framework remains broadly the same. The primary purpose is to make the statute easier to read, navigate, and implement. The Income Tax Act, 2025, is more of a structural and procedural reform rather than a substantive overhaul. It aims to enhance usability without altering the underlying tax philosophy. For taxpayers and professionals, the focus will now shift from relearning the law to adapting to the new structure and section references.

Comparison: Income Tax Act 1961 vs. Income Tax Act 2025:

Below is a crisp comparison outlining the structural transformation:

Particulars Income‑tax Act 1961 Income‑tax Act 2025
Number of Sections More than 700 536
Number of Chapters 23 23
Schedules 14 16
Total Pages (Content) 823 pages 622 pages
Effective Date In force till 31 March 2026 Effective from 1 April 2026

Even though the 2025 Act has been re structured with fewer sections and refined chapter content, the core tax system, concepts, and principles remain largely consistent.

Chapters of the New Income‑tax Act, 2025

The Act continues to have 23 chapters, some with sub‑divisions. Below is a clean breakdown of each chapter and its purpose. Chapter‑wise Overview New Income‑tax Act, 2025

Chapter Overview
Chapter 1 Preliminary
Chapter 2 Basis of Charge
Chapter 3 Incomes which do not form part of Total Income
Chapter 4 Computation of Total Income
Chapter 5 Income of Other Persons Included in the Total Income of the Assessee
Chapter 6 Aggregation of Income
Chapter 7 Set‑off or Carry Forward and Set‑off of Losses
Chapter 8 Deductions in Computing Total Income
Chapter 9 Rebate and Reliefs
Chapter 10 Special Provisions Relating to Avoidance of Tax
Chapter 11 General Anti‑Avoidance Rule (GAAR)
Chapter 12 Mode of Payment in Certain Cases
Chapter 13 Determination of Tax in Special Cases
Chapter 14 Tax Administration
Chapter 15 Return of Income
Chapter 16 Procedure for Assessment
Chapter 17 Special Tax Provisions for Certain Persons
Chapter 18 Appeals, Revision and Alternate Dispute Resolution
Chapter 19 Collection and Recovery of Tax
Chapter 20 Refunds
Chapter 21 Penalties
Chapter 22 Offences and Prosecution
Chapter 23 Miscellaneous

The Income‑Tax Act, 2025 is not a change in the tax regime; it is a restructuring and modernization of the law. The objective is to make the legislation Easier to understand, More logically organized, aligned with modern drafting standards, and user‑friendly for taxpayers and professionals alike. The tax system continues fundamentally unchanged, but navigating the law becomes significantly simpler and more intuitive.

New Tax Regime Slab Rates (Section 202)

The new tax regime continues as the default regime under Section 202. Slab Rates (Applicable to All Taxpayers)

Income Tax Slab Tax Rate
Up to INR 4,00,000 NIL
INR 4,00,001 – INR 8,00,000 5%
INR 8,00,001 – INR 12,00,000 10%
INR 12,00,001 – INR 16,00,000 15%
INR 16,00,001 – INR 20,00,000 20%
INR 20,00,001 – INR 24,00,000 25%
Above INR 24,00,000 30%

Old Tax Regime Slab Rates (Optional)

Income Tax Slabs Age < 60 Years & NRIs Age 60–80 (Resident) Age > 80 (Resident)
Up to INR 2,50,000 NIL NIL NIL
INR 2,50,001 – INR 3,00,000 5% NIL NIL
INR 3,00,001 – INR 5,00,000 5% 5% NIL
INR 5,00,001 – INR 10,00,000 20% 20% 20%
Above INR 10,00,000 30% 30% 30%

Deductions Under the Income Tax Act, 2025

While the structure and section numbering have changed, the substance of most deductions remains similar. Key Deductions Mapping (Old Act vs New Act)

Deduction / Concept IT Act 1961 IT Act 2025
Salary income definition Sec 15 Sec 15
Standard deduction Sec 16(ia) Sec 19
Professional tax Sec 16(iii) Sec 19
Perquisites Sec 17 Sec 17
Income from house property Sec 22 Sec 20
Annual value Sec 23 Sec 21
Home loan interest Sec 24(b) Sec 22
80C investments Sec 80C Sec 123
Pension / annuity Sec 80CCC Sec 123
NPS deduction Sec 80CCD Sec 124
Health insurance Sec 80D Sec 126
Education loan interest Sec 80E Sec 129
Donations Sec 80G Sec 133
Savings account interest Sec 80TTA Sec 153
Rebate Sec 87A Sec 156
HRA exemption Sec 10(13A) Schedule for exempt income
LTA exemption Sec 10(5) Schedule for exempt allowances
Gratuity exemption Sec 10(10) Schedule for retirement benefits
Leave encashment Sec 10(10AA) Same schedule

TDS Under the New Income Tax Act, 2025 :

TDS Major Changes at a Glance

Provision Applicable before 1 April 2026 Applicable after 1 April 2026
TDS Sections Multiple sections like 194C, 194J, etc. Consolidated into fewer sections (e.g., 392, 393, 394)
TDS Forms Form 16, Form 16A, etc. Auto-filled forms with a single comprehensive format (e.g., Form 130, 131)
TCS on Overseas Education (LRS) 5% (above ₹10 lakh) Reduced to 2% (above threshold)
TCS on Overseas Tour Packages 5% up to ₹10 lakh, 20% above Flat 2%
TCS on Goods (scrap, liquor, minerals) 1% (or 5% for some items) Flat 2%
TDS on Manpower Supply Not clearly defined earlier Explicitly covered under TDS provisions
TDS on MACT Compensation Interest Applicable above ₹50,000 Fully exempt (No TDS)
Lower / Nil TDS Certificate Manual approval process Automated system introduced
TDS on NRI Property Transactions Based on TAN of deductor Based on PAN of buyer
  • Simplification: Reduction of 25+ sections into a streamlined structure
  • Automation: Increased reliance on system-driven compliance
  • Lower Rates: Significant reduction in TCS rates for foreign remittances
  • Clarity: Removal of ambiguity in areas like manpower supply
  • Ease of Compliance: Faster processing for certificates and filings

A major structural reform All TDS provisions are consolidated under a single section: Section 393 – Tax to be Deducted at Source. This replaces scattered TDS sections (192 to 194T) under the 1961 Act and aims to streamline compliance for deductors.

Old vs New Act – Key Section Mapping :

Concept Income Tax Act 1961 Income Tax Act 2025
New Tax Regime Sec 115BAC Sec 202
House property deduction Sec 24 Sec 22
Rebate Sec 87A Sec 156
Medical insurance Sec 80D Sec 126
Return filing Sec 139 Sec 263
Exempt incomes Sec 10 Sec 11

The Income Tax Department has provided a section mapping tool to help taxpayers transition smoothly.

Impact of the Income Tax Act 2025 on Different Taxpayers

Salaried Individuals

  • New Tax Year concept replaces “Assessment Year” and “Previous Year”.
  • Higher exemption limits under the Income Tax Rules, 2026 for allowances.
  • New regime remains default, but option to choose old regime continues.

NRI Taxpayers

  • Stricter compliance on foreign asset disclosure.
  • Heavy penalties for non‑reporting of:
  • foreign bank accounts
  • foreign securities
  • overseas property
  • NRE interest remains tax‑free, as before.

Senior Citizens

  • Old‑regime slabs continue to offer higher basic exemption.
  • New TDS threshold on interest income increased to INR 1 lakh.
  • Form 15G/15H merged into a new Form 121 for ease of declaration.

Download – Income Tax Act, 2025 : The Act can be downloaded from the official Income Tax Department website and is effective from 1 April 2026.

Income Tax Act 2025 vs 1961 — Major Differences

Aspect IT Act, 1961 New IT Act, 2025
Effective date From 1 April 1962 From 1 April 2026
Structure Long and complex Simplified & reorganised
Year concept AY + PY One unified Tax Year
Default tax regime Section 115BAC Section 202
TDS Scattered across many sections All in Section 393
Compliance High complexity Clearer drafting
Virtual Digital Assets Limited scope Expanded to include broader fintech assets

Summary of Changes in perquisites & allowances in Income Tax Act, 2025

Compiled from the analysis shared by Rajput Jain and Associates, the Income Tax Act, 2025 introduces a cleaner, more modern framework while retaining the core essence of India’s income‑tax system. The reorganised sections, consolidated TDS regime, simplified slab structure, and clearer drafting aim to make compliance easier, more transparent, and aligned with digital governance. Summary of Changes in perquisites & allowances in Income Tax Act, 2025

  • Motor Car Perquisite: Sharp rise in monthly perquisite valuation—increases of 2.5x to 3x across categories.
  • Other Perquisites: Higher tax‑free thresholds for Loans, gifts, and Overseas medical treatment
  • HRA Compliance Tightened: New documentation and relationship disclosure requirements for rent > INR 100,000.
Rajput Jain & Associates

Rajput Jain & Associates is a Chartered Accountants firm, with it's headquarter situated at New Delhi (the capital of India). The firm has been set up by a group of young, enthusiastic, highly skilled and motivated professionals who have taken experience from top consulting firms and are extensively experienced in their chosen fields has providing a wide array of Accounting, Auditing, Taxation, Assurance and Business advisory services to various clients and their stakeholders. Rajput jain & Associates, a professional firm, offers its clients a full range of services, To serve better and to bring bucket of services under one roof, the firm has merged with it various Chartered Accountancy firms pioneer in diversified fields. We have associates all over India in big cities. All our offices are well equipped with latest technological support with updated reference materials. We have a large team of professionals other than our Core Team members to meet the requirements of our prospective clients including the existing ones. However, considering our commitment towards high quality services to our clients, our team keeps on growing with more and more associates having strong professional background with good exposure in the related areas of responsibility.

Recent Posts

China’s Tax System vs. India’s Tax System

Overview of China's Tax System vs. India's Tax System Overall Structure Framework India: Federal dual-tax model, Center + state powers,… Read More

6 hours ago

Emerging TDS Sec 194T Compliance Risks for Partnership Firm

Key Tax Deducted at Source Compliance Issues under Section 194T Section 194T significantly increases compliance rigor by imposing gross-based, real-time… Read More

6 days ago

Income‑tax Return Filing Calendar for FY 2025‑26

Income Tax Return Due Dates for FY 2025‑26 (AY 2026‑27) Timely filing of an income tax return ensures avoidance of… Read More

7 days ago

CCFS‑2026: Key Benefit, Eligibility & Compliance Implication

MCA Introduces Companies Compliance Facilitation Scheme, 2026 (CCFS‑2026) The MCA has introduced the Companies Compliance Facilitation Scheme, 2026 (CCFS‑2026) to… Read More

7 days ago

TDS on Purchase of Immovable Property – Filing of Form 141

TDS on Purchase of Immovable Property – Filing Impact of Form 141 The CBDT introduced a new form, 141, under… Read More

2 weeks ago

MCA Filling Compliance Due Dates for FY 2025‑26

MCA Filing Calendar – Key Compliance Due Dates (FY 2025‑26) MSME‑1 (Half‑Yearly Return) : Half‑Yearly Return filling Purpose: Disclosure of… Read More

2 weeks ago
Call Us Enquire Now