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Income Tax

New Income Tax Regime vs Old Regime: The Definitive Comparison for FY 2025-26

@ca_vikram · 29 Mar 2026 · 2 min read
After advising hundreds of clients this tax season, I want to settle the new vs old regime debate with actual numbers — not vague generalisations.

THE CORE DIFFERENCE
Old regime: More deductions available (80C, 80D, HRA, LTA, home loan interest etc.) but higher slab rates.
New regime: Lower slab rates but almost all deductions removed (except standard deduction of Rs 75,000 for salaried from FY 2024-25).

NEW REGIME SLABS (FY 2025-26)
0-3 lakh: NIL
3-7 lakh: 5%
7-10 lakh: 10%
10-12 lakh: 15%
12-15 lakh: 20%
Above 15 lakh: 30%

Plus: Section 87A rebate makes income up to Rs 7 lakh effectively zero tax in new regime.

WHO BENEFITS FROM NEW REGIME?
1. Salaried employees with income 7-10 lakh and few investments — new regime almost always wins
2. Anyone without home loan, HRA benefit, or significant 80C investments
3. Senior citizens with pension income (no HRA anyway)
4. Young professionals just starting — haven't built up investments yet

WHO SHOULD STAY IN OLD REGIME?
1. Anyone with home loan interest deduction above Rs 2 lakh
2. Salaried with HRA component in city like Mumbai/Delhi (HRA exemption is significant)
3. Those with 80C at full Rs 1.5 lakh + 80D at Rs 25,000 + NPS Rs 50,000 — total Rs 2.25 lakh saved
4. Income above Rs 15 lakh with maximum deductions — the 30% slab kicks in both regimes

BREAK-EVEN CALCULATOR (simplified)
For income of Rs 12 lakh:
Old regime with Rs 3.5 lakh deductions = taxable Rs 8.5 lakh → tax ~Rs 65,000
New regime = tax ~Rs 80,000
Old regime wins here.

For income of Rs 12 lakh with only Rs 1.5 lakh (just 80C):
Old regime = taxable Rs 10.5 lakh → tax ~Rs 1.05 lakh
New regime = tax ~Rs 80,000
New regime wins.

MY RECOMMENDATION FOR 2025-26
If your total deductions exceed Rs 3.75 lakh — stick with old regime.
If your total deductions are below Rs 3.75 lakh — move to new regime.
If you're salaried below Rs 7 lakh — new regime is a no-brainer.

The government clearly wants everyone in the new regime eventually. It's simpler to administer and reduces disputes. Go with it unless your numbers clearly show otherwise.
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Disclaimer: This content is the author's personal opinion and analysis. It does not constitute professional tax or legal advice. Consult a qualified professional for specific advice on your situation.

Comments (7)

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Vikash Tiwari 2 weeks from now

My clients always ask me this. Sharing this link from now on.

CA Pooja Verma 2 weeks from now

Switched to new regime last year. Saved about 40k. No regrets.

Rohan Desai 4 days from now

Saving this for ITR season 🙏

Suresh Menon 2 days from now

The 3.75L break-even number is so useful. Never seen anyone quantify it this clearly.

Ravi Krishnan 7 hours ago

This is the clearest explanation I have seen. I have been going back and forth on this every year. The break-even figure of Rs 3.75 lakh is the key insight I was missing. Thank you for this.

CA Sneha Joshi 7 hours ago

Vikram sir, excellent breakdown. One question — for a salaried person drawing Rs 14 lakh CTC with HRA of Rs 3.5 lakh in Mumbai, standard deduction Rs 75,000 and 80C at Rs 1.5 lakh — which regime works out better? I have been using new regime for 2 years but not sure if I am losing out.

CA Vikram Mehta 7 hours ago

Sneha, for that profile: Old regime deductions = HRA (approximate Rs 2.1 lakh based on Mumbai rent), 80C Rs 1.5 lakh, standard deduction Rs 75,000. Total = Rs 4.35 lakh. That clearly crosses the Rs 3.75 lakh break-even I mentioned. Old regime should give you lower tax. Run the exact numbers with your actual rent paid — HRA exemption calculation has three components and the minimum applies.