New Income Tax Regime vs Old Regime: The Definitive Comparison for FY 2025-26
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.
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)
My clients always ask me this. Sharing this link from now on.
Switched to new regime last year. Saved about 40k. No regrets.
Saving this for ITR season 🙏
The 3.75L break-even number is so useful. Never seen anyone quantify it this clearly.
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.
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.
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.