Key Points

The Indian government has introduced four significant amendments to the Income Tax Act for Financial Year 2026. These changes provide tax exemptions for infrastructure investments by sovereign wealth and pension funds. The amendments also clarify standard deduction rules and streamline assessment procedures for businesses. The modifications aim to enhance transparency and provide more financial flexibility for taxpayers.

Key Points: Sitharaman's 4 Key Income Tax Act Amendments for FY26

  • Tax exemptions granted to sovereign wealth and pension funds
  • Clarification on standard deduction under new tax regime
  • Block assessment cases simplified
  • Unified Pension Scheme aligned with National Pension System
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Explained: Four amendments to Income Tax Act to be applicable in FY26

Finance Minister unveils crucial tax reforms impacting sovereign funds, pension schemes, and salaried individuals in landmark Income Tax Act amendments

Explained: Four amendments to Income Tax Act to be applicable in FY26
"These amendments will significantly improve the ease of doing business - Nirmala Sitharaman, Union Finance Minister"

New Delhi, Aug 14

The government has introduced four amendments to the Income Tax Act, 1961, relevant for FY 2025-26, but included in the Income Tax Bill, 2025, applicable for FY 2026-27, Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman has said.

The major amendment grants tax exemption on dividends, interest, and long-term capital gains to sovereign wealth funds and pension funds investing in infrastructure from April 1, 2020, to December 31, 2030, subject to notification.

The Public Investment Fund (PIF) and its wholly-owned subsidiaries will be named directly in the section for exemption.

The second major clarification involved the abatement of all assessments for block periods in search cases until there is a block assessment order. It will be a major reform for ease of doing business.

Further, the minister said that the amendment provided clarity about the standard deduction of Rs 75,000 that applies to salaried individuals under the new tax regime.

The Finance Act, 2023, introduced Section 115BAC(1A), offering new income tax slab rates for taxpayers choosing the new tax regime, but a drafting error crept in, as a clause (clause iii) was omitted from Section 115BAC(1A).

The enhanced standard deduction of Rs. 75,000 under the new tax regime then became unavailable for the financial year 2025-26 due to this omission. The latest amendment, passed by Parliament, corrected this drafting error.

The fourth amendment addressed the Unified Pension Scheme (UPS) to clear the confusion on deduction and bring parity with the National Pension System. The recent amendment aligns the UPS with the NPS for tax purposes.

NPS allowed up to 60 per cent of the accumulated corpus under the scheme to be withdrawn tax-free at the time of closure or opting out. Further partial withdrawals, up to 25 per cent of self-contributions, were also exempt from taxable income. The amendment extends these exemptions to UPS, bringing parity between both schemes.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
The pension scheme parity is a welcome move. My husband is in UPS and we were always confused about tax implications compared to NPS. This will help many government employees plan their retirement better.
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Aman W
While the amendments are good, why are sovereign funds getting tax exemptions when common investors pay full capital gains tax? Feels unfair to middle-class taxpayers like us who are already burdened.
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Sarah B
The ease of doing business reforms are much needed! As an expat working in India's startup ecosystem, I've seen how tax uncertainties can delay investments. Clear assessment rules will boost investor confidence.
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Vikram M
Tax laws should be simpler. Every year there are amendments to fix previous year's mistakes. Why can't they draft properly in the first place? Still, better late than never I suppose.
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Kavya N
The infrastructure investment incentives are smart policy. We need foreign capital for our roads and power projects. This will create jobs and boost economic growth in the long run. #MakeInIndia
D
David E
As an NRI investor, I appreciate the stability these amendments bring. The block assessment clarification removes uncertainty - now I can plan my India investments without tax anxiety.

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