New Income Tax Bill 2025 will simplify ‘tax year’ definition. Details here | Mint
Source: Live Mint
The “crisper and simplified” new Income Tax Bill 2025 has replaced the term ‘previous year’ from the 60-year-old Income Tax Act, 1961, with ‘tax year’ and done away with the concept of ‘assessment year’, a PTI report noted.
The new I-T Bill, with 536 sections, and 23 chapters running into 622 pages, is likely to be introduced in the Lok Sabha tomorrow (February 15).
New Income Tax Bill 2025 will simplify ‘tax year’ definition
The proposed law replaces the term ‘previous year’ as mentioned in the Income Tax Act, 1961 with ‘tax year’. Also, the concept of assessment year has been done away with.
Currently, for income earned in the previous year (say 2023-24), tax is paid in assessment year (say 2024-25). This previous year and assessment year concept has been removed and only tax year under the simplified bill has been brought in.
New Income Tax Bill 2025 — 536 Sections, 16 Schedules, 622 Pages
The Income Tax Bill, 2025 comprises 536 sections, higher than 298 sections of the current Income-Tax Act, 1961. The existing law has 14 schedules which will increase to 16 in the new legislation.
However, the number of chapters have been retained at 23. The number of pages has been reduced substantially to 622, almost half of the current voluminous Act which includes amendments made over the last six decades.
When the Income Tax Act, 1961, was brought in, it had 880 pages.
“This increase in sections reflects a more structured approach to tax administration, incorporating modern compliance mechanisms, digital governance, and streamlined provisions for businesses and individuals. The new law introduces 16 schedules and 23 chapters,” AMRG & Associates Senior Partner Rajat Mohan said.
As per the proposed law, clearer tax treatment on stock options (ESOPs) have been included for reduced tax disputes and includes judicial pronouncements of the last 60 years for more clarity.
CBDT Empowered to Introduce Schemes
“A key departure from the Income-Tax Act, 1961, is that previously, the Income Tax Department had to approach Parliament for various procedural matters, tax schemes, and compliance frameworks. Now, CBDT has been empowered to introduce such schemes independently, significantly reducing bureaucratic delays and making tax governance more dynamic,” he said.
As per new law, the CBDT can now frame tax administration rules, introduce compliance measures, and enforce digital tax monitoring systems without requiring frequent legislative amendments as per the Clause 533.
Scrutiny, Public Inputs Planned
After introduction, the bill is likely to be sent to a parliamentary standing committee for scrutiny.
Public inputs and suggestions were invited in four categories: simplification of language, litigation reduction, compliance reduction, and redundant/obsolete provisions.
The income tax department has received 6,500 suggestions from stakeholders on review of the Income Tax Act.