New vs Old Tax Regime 2026 — Which One Actually Saves More?

Every April, your employer sends a message: declare your tax regime. Most people pick one based on a vague feeling — “the new one is simpler” or “my CA suggested the old one.” The new vs old tax regime 2026 decision is worth five minutes of actual calculation, because the difference for many salaried individuals is between paying ₹0 and paying ₹75,000 or more. Here is how to know which side you are on.

The new vs old tax regime 2026 — what actually changed

The core architecture has been stable since FY 2023-24, but FY 2025-26 brought one significant update: the Section 87A rebate under the new regime now covers tax liability up to ₹60,000, making income up to ₹12 lakh completely tax-free. Combined with the ₹75,000 standard deduction for salaried individuals, a salary of up to ₹12.75 lakh produces zero tax under the new regime. That single change drew over 70% of individual taxpayers to the new regime in FY 2024-25 — and it is the right choice for many of them.

But not for everyone. The new regime’s lower rates come at a cost: almost every deduction disappears. Section 80C, HRA exemption, home loan interest under Section 24b, health insurance under 80D, LTA — none of these apply. The old regime keeps all of them, at the cost of higher slab rates.

The decision reduces to one question: are your total deductions large enough that they bring your old-regime tax below your new-regime tax? If yes, stay old. If no, switch new.

The slabs side by side — FY 2025-26

Income slab New regime rate Old regime rate (below 60)
Up to ₹2.5 lakh Nil Nil
₹2.5–₹4 lakh Nil 5%
₹4–₹8 lakh 5% 5% / 20%*
₹8–₹10 lakh 10% 20%
₹10–₹12 lakh 10% 30%
₹12–₹16 lakh 15% 30%
₹16–₹20 lakh 20% 30%
₹20–₹24 lakh 25% 30%
Above ₹24 lakh 30% 30%

Income Tax Department’s official guidance

*Old regime: 5% up to ₹5 lakh, 20% from ₹5–10 lakh. 4% health and education cess applies on computed tax under both regimes.

The new regime’s rates are clearly lower across the ₹8–₹24 lakh range. The old regime only wins when deductions reduce taxable income enough to offset those rate advantages.

Three people, three different answers — new vs old tax regime 2026

Rahul, ₹10 lakh salary, no deductions beyond standard. Under the new regime, after the ₹75,000 standard deduction his taxable income is ₹9.25 lakh. With the 87A rebate covering liability up to ₹60,000, he pays zero tax. Under the old regime at the same income with no 80C, no HRA, no 80D, his liability is approximately ₹75,000 after cess. Rahul should be in the new regime, clearly.

Priya, ₹14 lakh salary, significant deductions. She claims ₹1.5 lakh under 80C, ₹50,000 under 80D, and ₹1.8 lakh HRA exemption — a total of ₹3.8 lakh in deductions plus the ₹75,000 standard deduction. Under the old regime her taxable income drops to ₹8.45 lakh, producing a tax liability of approximately ₹88,000 after cess. Under the new regime at ₹14 lakh minus ₹75,000 standard deduction, her taxable income is ₹13.25 lakh and her liability is approximately ₹1,14,000. Priya saves about ₹26,000 by staying in the old regime.

Suresh, ₹20 lakh salary, home loan borrower. He claims ₹1.5 lakh in 80C, ₹2 lakh home loan interest under Section 24b, ₹25,000 in 80D, and ₹75,000 standard deduction — total ₹4.5 lakh in deductions. Old regime taxable income: ₹15.5 lakh, liability approximately ₹2,80,000. New regime taxable income: ₹19.25 lakh, liability approximately ₹2,96,000. Suresh saves ₹16,000 in the old regime — not massive, but real. If his home loan interest were ₹3 lakh instead of ₹2 lakh, the saving would be approximately ₹46,000.

The pattern: at lower incomes with minimal deductions, the new regime wins by a wide margin. At higher incomes with a home loan and maxed-out 80C and 80D, the old regime wins — and the margin grows with the size of the deductions.

tax calculator that shows both regimes simultaneously

The deductions that actually move the needle

Not all old-regime deductions have equal impact. Here is what actually makes a difference at different income levels:

HRA exemption is often the largest single deduction for salaried employees in metro cities. In Mumbai, Delhi, or Bengaluru, HRA exemption of ₹1.5–2.5 lakh per year is common for employees earning ₹10–20 lakh. This single deduction, at the 30% slab, saves ₹45,000–₹75,000 in tax.

Home loan interest under Section 24b allows up to ₹2 lakh deduction on self-occupied property. At the 30% slab, that is ₹60,000 in annual tax saving — more than the 87A rebate benefit of the new regime for many higher-income borrowers.

Section 80C at ₹1.5 lakh saves ₹45,000 at 30% slab. Most salaried employees already exhaust this through PF contributions and life insurance premiums alone — without needing to make any additional investment decision.

Section 80D health insurance

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