New Tax Forms & Rules Coming This Month as 88% of Taxpayers Shift to New Regime

The Central Board of Direct Taxes will issue new income tax forms and implementing rules this month to prepare for the new Income Tax Act 2025, which takes effect on April 1, 2026. CBDT Chairman Ravi Agrawal stated that explanatory presentations and FAQs will also be released to manage the transition. Data shows overwhelming adoption, with 88% of individual taxpayers and 97% under presumptive schemes already opting for the new tax regime. The reforms, part of the latest Budget, aim to simplify compliance, reduce litigation, and include proposals like cutting the MAT rate to 14%.

Key Points: New Income Tax Forms & Rules to be Issued in February 2025

  • New IT forms & rules for 2025 Act
  • 88% of individual taxpayers in new regime
  • Decriminalisation & simplified compliance
  • MAT rate cut to 14% proposed
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Govt to issue new I-T forms, rules this month as most taxpayers shift to new regime

CBDT to release new IT forms, rules, and FAQs this month for the Income Tax Act 2025, effective April 1, 2026. 88% of individual taxpayers have already opted for the new regime.

"We will be issuing the new income tax forms and rules within February. - Ravi Agrawal"

New Delhi, Feb 5

The Central Board of Direct Taxes Chairman, Ravi Agrawal, has said that new income tax forms, implementing rules and a detailed set of frequently asked questions will be published soon this month to prepare taxpayers transition to the new Income Tax Act, 2025, which takes effect on April 1.

Agrawal said that explanatory presentations will be done along with FAQs to help manage an expected surge in queries during the initial implementation quarter from April through June.

"We will be issuing the new income tax forms and rules within February. They will be opened for stakeholder consultation before the new Income Tax Act of 2025 gets implemented from April 1, 2026," Agrawal said at a post-Budget event.

Direct tax proposals announced in the Union Budget 2026-27 is part of a continuing effort to simplify India's tax framework, he added.

The reform process began in July 2024 when the government announced a comprehensive review of the Income Tax Act, and initially simplified language and improved readability to reduce multiple interpretations and litigation.

The second phase of reforms, introduced through the latest Budget, proposed structural changes to tax provisions to improve clarity and ease compliance before the new Act comes into effect.

Decriminalisation of certain prosecution provisions, immunity from penalties in select cases, simplified compliance procedures and reduced litigation burden formed part of these reforms.

According to the CBDT, these steps are intended to strengthen tax administration while lowering compliance costs and improving taxpayer services.

The CBDT data showed that around 88 per cent of individual taxpayers filing returns through ITR-1, ITR-2, ITR-3 and ITR-4 have opted for the new tax regime, with increased adoption among small businesses and professionals, Agarwal said, adding government does not consider bringing in a sunset clause for filing income tax returns under the old regime.

Nearly 97 per cent of taxpayers under presumptive taxation schemes have migrated to the new regime, and 60 per cent of corporate income shifted disclosure to the revised tax structure, Agrawal said.

To strengthen the attractiveness of the new tax framework, the Budget proposed modification of Minimum Alternate Tax (MAT) provisions for companies. It proposed treatment of MAT as the final tax and with rate cut to 14 per cent from 15 per cent under the old regime.

Agrawal also stated that the Budget raised the Securities Transaction Tax (STT) on derivatives trading to discourage aggressive retail speculation in derivatives markets, although its impact will become clear over time.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Good to see the government is proactive with the FAQs and consultations. The 88% shift to the new regime shows most people find it beneficial, especially with no deductions headache. Hope the MAT rate cut helps companies invest more. 👍
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Aman W
While simplification is welcome, I'm concerned about the STT hike on derivatives. It's presented as curbing speculation, but it also impacts genuine hedgers and could reduce market liquidity. The devil will be in the details of the new rules.
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Sarah B
As an NRI, I'm keenly watching these changes. The decriminalisation of certain provisions and immunity from penalties in select cases is a very positive step. It builds trust. Hope the new forms are easy to navigate for overseas filers too.
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Karthik V
The move to simplify language and reduce litigation is long overdue! My CA spends half the time just interpreting vague provisions. If this saves time and cost, it's a big win for small businesses like mine. Jai Hind!
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Nisha Z
I appreciate the effort, but I hope the "stakeholder consultation" is genuine and not just a formality. Often, feedback from common taxpayers and small professionals is ignored. The proof will be in the final forms released.

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