Tax · FY 2025-26 · Updated

New vs Old Tax Regime 2025-26: Which to Choose?

Complete comparison with slab rates, which deductions you lose, break-even salary, and a salary-wise verdict for Indian salaried employees.

New Regime Slabs (FY 2025-26)

Income Slab Tax Rate
Up to ₹3,00,000Nil
₹3L – ₹7L5%
₹7L – ₹10L10%
₹10L – ₹12L15%
₹12L – ₹15L20%
Above ₹15L30%

Tax rebate u/s 87A: Zero tax up to ₹12L income (after standard deduction of ₹75K, effectively ₹12.75L gross income)

Old Regime Slabs (FY 2025-26)

Income Slab Tax Rate
Up to ₹2,50,000Nil
₹2.5L – ₹5L5%
₹5L – ₹10L20%
Above ₹10L30%

Tax rebate u/s 87A: Zero tax up to ₹5L income. Standard deduction: ₹50,000 for salaried.

The Big Difference: Deductions Available

This is where the two regimes diverge most sharply. The old regime allows you to reduce your taxable income through a long list of deductions. The new regime trades all these for lower slab rates and simplicity.

Deduction Max Amount Old Regime New Regime
Standard Deduction₹50K / ₹75K✓ ₹50K✓ ₹75K
80C (PPF, ELSS, LIC, etc.)₹1,50,000
HRA ExemptionVaries
Home Loan Interest (24b)₹2,00,000
80D (Health Insurance)₹25K – ₹1L
80CCD(1B) NPS extra₹50,000
LTA (Leave Travel Allowance)Varies
80G (Donations)Varies

Break-Even Analysis: When Does Old Regime Win?

The old regime becomes better when your total deductions exceed a certain threshold — the break-even point depends on your income level. Here's a simplified guide:

Break-Even Deduction Needed to Prefer Old Regime

Gross Salary (CTC) Min Deductions Needed Verdict
Up to ₹7 lakhN/A (new regime = 0 tax)New Regime
₹7L – ₹10L~₹2.5L+Case-by-case
₹10L – ₹15L~₹3.75L+Often Old Regime
₹15L – ₹20L~₹4.25L+Old if HRA + HL
Above ₹20L~₹5L+Old Regime typically

Real Example: ₹12 Lakh Salary

Let's compare a salaried employee with gross income of ₹12 lakh and typical deductions:

New Regime

Gross Income₹12,00,000
Standard Deduction− ₹75,000
Taxable Income₹11,25,000
Tax payable₹75,000
+4% cess₹78,000

Old Regime (with deductions)

Gross Income₹12,00,000
Std deduction− ₹50,000
80C (PPF/ELSS)− ₹1,50,000
HRA exemption− ₹1,20,000
80D (health)− ₹25,000
Taxable Income₹8,55,000
Tax + cess₹78,936

At ₹12L with these typical deductions, both regimes result in similar tax. Old regime wins if deductions are higher (e.g., home loan interest or higher HRA). New regime wins if deductions are minimal.

Who Should Choose the New Regime?

  • Salary below ₹7.75 lakh (effectively zero tax under new regime)
  • No home loan, minimal 80C investments, living in own house (no HRA)
  • Want simplicity — no need to collect proofs, submit declarations
  • Fresher employees early in career who haven't built investment habits yet
  • Anyone who finds the new regime math favorable after using our calculator

Who Should Choose the Old Regime?

  • Salary above ₹15 lakh with a home loan, HRA, and 80C investments in place
  • Metro residents paying high rent (HRA exemption can be ₹1–2 lakh+)
  • Those with home loan interest deduction of ₹2 lakh under Section 24b
  • Senior professionals with large health insurance premiums (80D)
  • Anyone whose total deductions exceed the break-even threshold for their income

The Practical Tip: Use Our Calculator First

The math is individual — your answer depends on your exact salary structure, HRA, rent paid, and investment pattern. Don't guess. Use our Income Tax Calculator which computes both regimes side-by-side instantly and tells you exactly which saves more for your specific income.

Try the Income Tax Calculator

Enter your income and deductions. See new vs old regime comparison instantly.

Calculate Now →

Frequently Asked Questions

Which tax regime is better — new or old?
New regime is better if you have limited deductions. Old regime is better with large deductions (80C + HRA + home loan interest). For most salaried people earning below ₹7.75L, the new regime results in zero tax. Above ₹15L with a home loan and HRA, old regime typically wins.
What is the standard deduction in the new tax regime 2025-26?
₹75,000 for salaried employees under the new regime (increased from ₹50,000 in Budget 2024). Old regime standard deduction is ₹50,000.
Can I switch between new and old tax regime every year?
Yes — salaried employees can switch regimes every year when filing their ITR. Business owners can switch from old to new freely, but can only switch back from new to old once in their lifetime.
Is HRA exempt in the new tax regime?
No. HRA exemption is not available under the new tax regime. This is one of the primary reasons metro residents paying high rent often prefer the old regime.