Key Points

The new tax regime allows income up to Rs 12.75 lakh to be tax-free with standard deduction. However, capital gains are excluded from this benefit and taxed separately. The Section 87A rebate doesn't apply to special rate incomes like short-term capital gains. Taxpayers earning under Rs 7 lakh may still owe taxes if their income comes primarily from capital gains.

Key Points: Rs 12.75 Lakh Tax-Free Limit Excludes Capital Gains Income

  • Rs 12.75 lakh tax-free limit includes Rs 75,000 standard deduction
  • Capital gains taxed separately under Sections 111A and 112A
  • Section 87A rebate not applicable on special rate incomes
  • Taxpayers under Rs 7 lakh may still owe tax on capital gains
2 min read

Explainer: Tax-free limit of Rs 12 lakh excludes special income

New tax regime offers Rs 12.75 lakh tax-free income but excludes capital gains. Section 87A rebate not applicable on special rate incomes.

"Section 87A rebate on special rate incomes is not being granted for FY 2024-25 – Tax Analysts"

New Delhi, Aug 16

The government announced in the Union Budget 2025-26 that income up to Rs 12.75 lakh, with a standard deduction of Rs 75,000, will be tax-free under the new tax regime.

However, taxpayers should be aware that short-term capital gains and long-term capital gains tax cannot be included in the total income eligible for a full waiver.

The Finance Act, 2025, clarified that the rebate under Section 87A is not available for income taxed at special rates. A taxpayer cannot apply the Section 87A rebate against tax liability from income taxed at special rates, such as short-term capital gains under Section 111A or long-term capital gains under Section 112A.

But analysts have noted that this removal of the Section 87A tax rebate benefit was done through an amendment introduced in Budget 2025, which should only be effective from FY 2025-26 (AY 2026-27) onwards. Currently, Section 87A rebate on special rate incomes is not being granted for FY 2024-25 (AY 2025-26), they noted.

For the unversed, for AY 2025-26, taxpayers with an annual total income of up to Rs 7 lakh qualify for the Section 87A rebate under the new tax regime, while those with an income of up to Rs 5 lakh qualify under the old tax regime. In this context, a taxpayer's total income is calculated by excluding exempt income and applying allowable deductions, including the standard deduction for salary or pension income.

Applying the Section 87A tax rebate to incomes up to the limits mentioned above should result in a net tax liability of zero.

The current Income Tax Return utility, however, does not permit the Section 87A rebate on tax calculated for such special rate income for FY 2024-25. So individuals with a total income under Rs 7 lakh may still incur a tax liability if their earnings primarily come from special-rate capital gains. Analysts waited for the Income Tax Department to provide further clarification on whether the law will take retrospective effect from FY 2024-25.

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

P
Priya S
As a CA, I must say this is creating unnecessary complexity in tax filing. Why introduce changes mid-year without proper IT portal updates? My clients are frustrated with the system not allowing rebates that were available earlier. Government needs better implementation planning.
A
Aditya G
Good step but still not enough for metro cities. ₹12.75 lakh sounds big but after rent, EMIs and school fees in Mumbai/Delhi, we're still struggling. Government should consider city-wise tax brackets like other countries.
S
Sarah B
The standard deduction increase is helpful! As an expat working in India, I appreciate these progressive changes. Makes India more attractive for global professionals. Though the capital gains rules could be simplified for foreign investors.
K
Kavya N
Why so much focus on capital gains? Most middle-class Indians don't even have investments beyond FDs and PPF. Government should first fix basic tax filing issues before making complex changes. My ITR got rejected 3 times this year for silly reasons!
M
Michael C
The retrospective application concern is valid. Changing rules after financial year ends creates uncertainty. India needs more stable tax policies to attract long-term investments. Hope CBDT clarifies soon.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50