Key Points

The new Income Tax Bill 2025 has been passed by the Lok Sabha with no changes to return filing requirements for small taxpayers. Despite recommendations from the parliamentary committee, taxpayers including senior citizens must still file returns to claim tax refunds. The bill keeps existing provisions intact, requiring all taxpayers to file returns even if their income is below the exemption threshold. Experts like Preeti Sharma suggest the revised bill aims to make tax laws more comprehensible for the common citizen.

Key Points: I-T Bill 2025 Keeps Small Taxpayer Return Filing Mandatory

  • New I-T Bill maintains mandatory return filing for all taxpayers
  • Late and revised returns still eligible for tax refunds
  • Small taxpayers must file returns to claim TDS refunds
  • Parliamentary panel led by Baijayant Panda reviewed bill recommendations
2 min read

New I-T Bill: No ITR filing exemptions for small taxpayers, late filers can claim refunds

New Income Tax Bill requires all taxpayers to file returns for refunds, no exemptions for small income groups or senior citizens

"The biggest advantage of the new law is that the common man may easily understand it - Preeti Sharma, BDO India"

New Delhi, Aug 12

The new Income Tax Bill, 2025, passed by the Lok Sabha, clarifies that late-return filers are eligible for refunds on excess taxes deducted in a financial year.

Analysts said on Tuesday that the bill was missing the proposal to eliminate the requirement for small taxpayers to file returns just to claim tax refunds.

The new I-T Bill kept section 433 intact, which required that 'every claim for refund under this part shall be made by furnishing a return as per section 263'. So, effectively, the law still requires a return of income to claim a refund, with no alternative methods allowed.

Taxpayers who file late or revised returns after the due date will still be eligible for refunds, the new bill suggested.

Small taxpayers, including senior citizens, must file returns solely to claim a refund for excess taxes deducted at source (TDS), even if their income is below the basic exemption threshold.

The committee had recommended that taxpayers should not be required to file a return just to avoid penalties. "The current mandatory requirement solely to claim a refund could inadvertently lead to prosecution, particularly for small taxpayers whose income falls below the taxable threshold but from whom tax has been deducted at source. In such scenarios, the law should not compel a return merely to avoid penal provisions for non-filing," the parliamentary panel had earlier suggested.

Preeti Sharma, Partner, Global Employer Services, Tax and Regulatory Services, BDO India, said, "The biggest advantage of the new law is that the common man may easily understand it with lesser efforts as compared to the old law. The revised bill has incorporated most of the changes recommended by the Select Committee. Taxpayers still have to undergo the process of assessing the right regime to follow while filing a tax return. Similarly, no changes are proposed in tax rates as introduced in Budget 2025."

The new bill was passed, incorporating the recommendations of a 31-member parliamentary panel led by BJP MP Baijayant Panda.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priyanka N
At least they're allowing late filers to claim refunds now. Last year I missed the deadline by 15 days and lost ₹12,000 in TDS refund. This is a positive change 👍
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Sunil U
The parliamentary committee's recommendation made so much sense! Why force people below taxable limit to file returns? More paperwork for citizens and more workload for IT department. Lose-lose situation.
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Anjali F
As a CA, I see many clients struggling with this. The new bill is better but still misses key pain points. Small taxpayers spend ₹2000-3000 on CAs just to claim ₹5000 refund. Where's the logic in this?
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Karan T
Good step forward but half-baked reform. Government talks about Digital India but still wants physical paperwork for small refunds. Can't they implement automatic refunds for amounts below ₹10,000?
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Nisha Z
The bill is progressive in some aspects but fails common citizens where it matters most. My domestic help has to file ITR just to claim ₹3000 TDS from bank FD. This is harassment of poor people!

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