This post is for educational purposes only and does not constitute tax or financial advice. For personalised guidance, consult a chartered accountant.
Every year between April and July, millions of salaried Indians face the same question: which tax regime should I choose? The answer sounds like it should be simple. It usually isn’t — because the right choice depends on your specific salary, your investments, and your living situation. This guide cuts through the confusion and gives you a clear framework to decide.
The basic difference
India’s income tax system currently offers two options for salaried professionals filing their returns.
Zero tax up to ₹12.75 lakh
80C, HRA, 80D, home loan available
The decision is this: do your deductions save you more than the new regime’s lower rates? If yes, the old regime wins. If no, the new regime wins.
What the slabs look like (FY 2025-26)
The new regime has gentler rates across all income levels, especially in the ₹8–15 lakh range. The old regime starts taxing at 20% above ₹5 lakh, which is where the gap widens.
| Annual income | New regime rate | Old regime rate |
|---|---|---|
| Up to ₹2.5 lakh | Nil | Nil |
| ₹2.5 – ₹4 lakh | Nil | 5% |
| ₹4 – ₹8 lakh | 5% | 5% / 20% |
| ₹8 – ₹12 lakh | 10% | 20% |
| ₹12 – ₹15 lakh | 15% | 30% |
| Above ₹15 lakh | 20–30% | 30% |
There is one major additional benefit in the new regime: if your taxable income is ₹12 lakh or below, the rebate under Section 87A brings your total tax to zero. For salaried individuals, the ₹75,000 standard deduction extends this limit to ₹12.75 lakh — meaning a large share of salaried professionals in India pay no tax at all under the new regime.
What deductions are available in each regime?
This is where the practical decision happens. The more deductions you legitimately claim, the more attractive the old regime becomes despite its higher rates.
The new regime does allow a few deductions: the ₹75,000 standard deduction, employer NPS contributions under Section 80CCD(2), and home loan interest on let-out (not self-occupied) property.
Two real examples
Let us work through two realistic scenarios to make this concrete.
How to decide for your situation
You don’t need to run complex calculations to get a first answer. Use this as a starting filter.
How to actually make the switch
Add up your 80C investments, health insurance premiums, rent paid (for HRA), and home loan interest. This single number drives the decision.
Platforms like ClearTax and Groww offer free calculators that compute your liability under both regimes side by side. It takes under two minutes with your Form 16 or salary slip handy.
Your employer needs your regime choice early in the financial year (usually April) to deduct the correct TDS from your salary. If you miss this, you can still correct it when filing your ITR.
A new home loan, a change in rent, higher insurance premiums — these shift the calculation. Don’t assume last year’s choice is automatically correct this year.
Can you switch between regimes every year?
Yes — if your income is from salary only (no business income), you can choose between the old and new regime each year when filing your ITR. The new regime is the default, so if you want the old regime, you need to actively opt for it while filing. If you have business income, the rules are more restrictive — consult a CA before making any changes.
The bottom line
For most younger salaried professionals with limited deductions — especially those earning below ₹12.75 lakh — the new regime offers zero tax liability and simplicity. For those with established financial commitments like a home loan, regular 80C investments, and family health insurance, the old regime often wins despite the higher slab rates.
Neither regime is universally better. Run the numbers for your specific situation once a year, and choose accordingly. That is the only right answer. Once you know your tax outgo, the next step is building a monthly budget around your take-home salary so your savings and investments stay on track.
