Old vs New Tax Regime FY 2025-26: Which One Saves You More Money?

Old vs New Tax Regime FY 2025-26: Which One Saves You More Money?

For FY 2025-26, the new regime wins for almost everyone earning under ₹25 lakh. The old regime only wins if you have ₹6 lakh+ in deductions — and most people don’t. Let’s run the numbers with a real salary.

What Changed in Budget 2025

Budget 2025 changed the tax math significantly. The new tax regime (default since FY 2023-24) got three big changes:

  • Standard deduction raised to ₹75,000 (was ₹50,000)
  • Section 87A rebate raised to ₹60,000 (was ₹12,500)
  • New slabs start at ₹4 lakh (not ₹2.5 lakh)

Result: A salaried person earning ₹12.75 lakh pays zero tax under the new regime. No 80C, no 80D, no HRA calculations needed. Just salary minus ₹75,000 standard deduction.

The old regime? You still get the deductions, but the slabs are harsh. You pay 5% from ₹2.5 lakh, 20% from ₹5 lakh, 30% from ₹10 lakh. You need massive deductions just to catch up.

Tax Slabs: New vs Old (FY 2025-26 / AY 2026-27)

New Tax Regime

Taxable Income 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: ₹75,000
Section 87A rebate: Up to ₹60,000 if taxable income ≤ ₹12,00,000
Effective zero-tax ceiling (salaried): ₹12,00,000 + ₹75,000 = ₹12,75,000

Source: PIB Press Release PRID 2098406, Union Budget 2025-26; Section 115BAC Income Tax Act

Old Tax Regime (Below 60 years)

Taxable Income 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%

Standard deduction: ₹50,000
Section 87A rebate: Up to ₹12,500 if taxable income ≤ ₹5,00,000

Source: Income Tax Department portal; Section 113 Income Tax Act

Worked Examples

Salary ₹8 lakh, deductions ₹1.2 lakh (typical: EPF + 80D + a small ELSS SIP)

Under the new regime: 8L minus 75K standard deduction = 7.25L taxable. Tax comes to 16,250, but Section 87A wipes that out completely. Net tax: zero. Yes, zero.

Under the old regime: 8L minus 1.2L deductions minus 50K standard deduction = 6.3L taxable. Tax: 38,500 plus cess. You pay 40,040.

The new regime saves you 40,040. That’s roughly a month of rent in most tier-1 cities.

Salary ₹15 lakh, deductions ₹5.29 lakh (including HRA, home loan, 80C, NPS)

New regime: ₹15,00,000 – ₹75,000 = ₹14,25,000 taxable. Tax = ₹93,750. After 4% cess = ₹97,500

Old regime: ₹15,00,000 – ₹5,29,000 – ₹50,000 = ₹9,21,000 taxable. Tax = ₹96,700. After 4% cess = ₹1,00,568

Winner: New regime by ₹3,068 — even with ₹5.29 lakh deductions!

Salary ₹25 lakh, deductions ₹5.25 lakh

New regime: ~₹3,19,800
Old regime: ~₹4,21,200
Winner: New regime by ~₹1,01,400

When Does the Old Regime Actually Win?

Gross Salary Deductions Needed for Old to Win Realistic?
Up to ₹12.75L Impossible ❌ New always wins
₹13L – ₹15L ₹6L+ Only with HRA + home loan + 80C + NPS + senior parents’ health
₹16L – ₹20L ₹7L+ Very difficult
₹21L – ₹25L ₹9L+ Unlikely for most
Above ₹25L ₹10L+ Possible for high earners with large home loans

Source: TheSalaryInvestor break-even analysis

In plain terms: unless you have a home loan EMI plus HRA plus maxed-out 80C plus senior parents’ health insurance plus NPS contributions, the new regime wins.

What You Lose vs What Survives in New Regime

Deduction Old Regime New Regime
80C (EPF, PPF, ELSS, insurance, tuition) ₹1.5L
80D (Health insurance) ₹25K + ₹50K (senior parents)
80CCD(1B) (NPS self) ₹50K
HRA Exemption Actual calculation
Section 24(b) (Home loan interest) ₹2L
80E (Education loan) No limit
LTA Actual cost
80TTA (Savings interest) ₹10K

What survives under the new regime: standard deduction of 75K, employer NPS at 14% of basic (80CCD(2)), gratuity, VRS, leave encashment, family pension, and gifts up to 50K.

Risk Flags You Should Know

  1. HRA metro expansion — Pune, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Ahmedabad become “metro” (50% HRA rate) from April 2026 (FY 2026-27), not this year.
  2. Business income? You must file Form 10-IEA to opt for old regime. Switching back to new regime is a one-time lifetime option.
  3. Capital gains: Section 87A rebate does NOT apply to LTCG (112A) or STCG (111A).
  4. 80TTA gone in new regime: All savings interest fully taxable at slab rate.
  5. NPS employer contribution: New regime gives 14% of basic vs old regime’s 10% — new regime actually wins here.
  6. Income Tax Act, 2025 starts 1 April 2026. It renumbers sections but does not change rates for FY 2025-26.
  7. Budget 2026 confirmed: No changes to slabs for FY 2025-26 and FY 2026-27.
  8. Super seniors (80+): Only old regime gives ₹5 lakh basic exemption.

Common Myths Busted

Myth Reality
“Old regime always better with deductions” False. Need ₹6L+ deductions at ₹15L salary.
“80TTA saves ₹10K in new regime” False. 80TTA NOT available in new regime.
“Can switch yearly with business income” False. One-time lifetime option only.
“Income Tax Act 2025 changes tax rates” False. Only reorganises sections.
“Standard deduction is ₹50K in both” False. New: ₹75K. Old: ₹50K.

Your Action Step Today

If you’re salaried and earn under ₹25 lakh: Choose the new regime when filing ITR. You don’t need to do anything special — it’s the default. Just file before 31 July 2026.

If you earn above ₹25 lakh OR have a large home loan + HRA + senior parents’ insurance: Sit with your CA this week. Calculate both regimes with actual numbers. The old regime might win — but only with documented proof of deductions.

If you have business income: You must actively opt for old regime via Form 10-IEA before filing. Talk to your CA this week — the one-time switch rule is a trap.

Key Takeaway

For FY 2025-26, the new tax regime is the default winner for 90%+ of salaried Indians. The math changed in Budget 2025. Stop assuming old regime saves money. Run the numbers once, pick the winner, and file by 31 July.

Sources: PIB Budget 2025-26 (PRID 2098406), Income Tax Dept portal, Section 115BAC, ClearTax 87A guide, Budget 2026 confirmation (BusinessToday), TheSalaryInvestor break-even analysis.


This is educational content, not tax advice. Consult a CA for your specific situation.

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