Income Tax Bill 2025 - Basics That Matter The Union Budget 2025 brought several updates to India’s direct taxation system, but what really matters for individuals and small businesses? Amid lengthy proposals, technical jargon, and shifting slabs, the Income Tax Bill 2025 introduces a few critical changes that could directly affect your income, deductions, and compliance obligations. This article breaks down the real basics that matter what to pay attention to, what’s changing, and how it could impact your financial decisions for the financial year 2025–26 (AY 2026–27). 1. New Tax Slabs - But Only If You Opt In The government continues to promote the new tax regime as the default option, but it’s still optional. The 2025 Bill proposes:
1. ₹7 lakh income still tax-free under the new regime (due to rebate u/s 87A).
2. Standard deduction of ₹50,000 is now applicable under both regimes.
3. No major slab change , but the new regime still has lower tax rates with no exemptions
Why it matters: If you claim a lot of deductions (HRA, 80C, etc.), the old regime may still save you more . But if your income is largely a straightforward salary, the new regime’s simplicity may benefit you.
2. TDS Changes for Freelancers & Influencers A big update: the Income Tax Bill 2025 proposes stricter TDS compliance for digital earners.
1. Platforms like YouTube, Instagram, freelancing websites, and affiliate networks will now be mandated to deduct TDS at 5% on payouts exceeding ₹30,000 per annum.
2. This applies to individual creators, gig workers, and freelancers , including foreign income routed via Indian banks.
Why it matters: If you earn through digital services , TDS will be deducted even before you receive your payment. Keeping PAN linked, tracking Form 26AS , and timely filing ITR becomes essential to avoid double taxation or refund delays.
3. Cap on Deduction Under Section 80C Remains Unchanged Many taxpayers hoped that the ₹1.5 lakh limit under Section 80C (for PPF, ELSS, LIC, etc.) would be revised. However, the Income Tax Bill 2025 retains the cap , despite inflation and rising investment costs.
Why it matters: This puts pressure on taxpayers to diversify into non-tax-saving investments or shift to the new regime where 80C is irrelevant. You may need to rethink your financial planning .
4. Startups & MSMEs - Compliance Simplified For small businesses and startups:
1. The presumptive taxation threshold u/s 44ADA and 44AD is proposed to be raised to ₹100 lakh (for professionals) and ₹300 lakh (for small businesses) .
2. Audit requirements relaxed for firms with digital transactions of over 95% of their turnover.
Why it matters: This means less audit hassle for genuine small businesses. If you’re a consultant, shop owner, or online trader, this change could cut costs and red tape .
5. Capital Gains Exemption Limit - Plugged Loopholes The 2025 Bill includes a tightening of capital gains exemption limits under Sections 54 and 54F.
You can now only claim exemption on house property capital gains if reinvested in a residential property worth not more than ₹10 crore .
Why it matters: High-net-worth individuals using loopholes to avoid tax on luxury property purchases may now lose exemption benefits. For regular investors, this won’t matter, but the line between genuine reinvestment and tax avoidance is now stricter.
6. Better Refund System & Faster Processing The Income Tax Bill also proposes to:
1. Mandate faster ITR processing timelines (revised to 7–10 days on average).
2. Enable auto-calculation of deductions based on PAN-linked investments (via Form 26AS + AIS).
3. Use AI for return mismatch alerts.
Why it matters: You’ll likely see faster refunds and fewer notices , but errors will be flagged faster, too. Be accurate and proactive in filing.
7. New Penalty on Non-Filing - ₹5,000 Flat Fee If you fail to file ITR by the extended due date (which is expected to be October 31, 2025 , for salaried individuals), a flat ₹5,000 penalty will be levied.
Why it matters: Even if you’re not liable to pay tax (e.g., due to deductions), missing the ITR filing deadline can still cost you.
Conclusion The Income Tax Bill 2025 isn't splashy, but it cleanly tightens a few key screws. It talks clearer rules, a bigger online reach for taxpayers, and simpler forms, yet leaves slab rates and deductions almost as they were. What counts is matching your income-salaried, gig, MSME, or investment-then picking the tax plan that suits you best.
FAQs Q1. What is the Income Tax Bill 2025 about? The Income Tax Bill 2025 updates tax brackets, streamlines TDS rules for freelancers, widens perks for start-ups, and rewrites capital-gains rules so filing is easier for everyone.
Q2. Are income tax slabs changing in 2025? The Income Tax Bill 2025 updates tax brackets, streamlines TDS rules for freelancers, widens perks for start-ups, and rewrites capital-gains rules so filing is easier for everyone.
Q3. Is TDS applicable to freelancers and influencers now? Yes, online platforms now cut 5% TDS once a creator's yearly earnings touch ₹30,000. That rule hits bloggers, freelancers, and gig workers alike.
Q4. Has the 80C deduction limit increased? No, for the 2025-26 financial year, the ₹1.5-lakh cap under Section 80C stays the same.
Q5. What changes are proposed for startups and MSMEs? Sections 44ADA and 44AD now let professionals earn up to ₹100 lakh and businesses up to ₹300 lakh before an audit kicks in, so fewer taxpayers will face that extra paperwork.