Decoding the Income Tax Bill, 2025: A Simpler Tax Code for New Era
The Daily Guardian
|July 26, 2025
The government is attempting to declutter six decades of amendments and jargon to create a tax code that ordinary citizens can grasp. It's the same game with the same rules, but a new rulebook that's easier to read.
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A new Income Tax Bill, 2025 has been introduced in Parliament to replace India's aging Income-tax Act of 1961. This landmark bill promises a cleaner, easier-tounderstand tax law without fundamentally altering how much tax anyone pays. It's a comprehensive rewrite aimed at simplifying language and structure while preserving core tax provisions. In effect, the government is attempting to declutter six decades of amendments and jargon to create a tax code that ordinary citizens can grasp. This explainer breaks down what the new Bill entails, how it compares to the 1961 law, and what it means for different taxpayers from salaried individuals to businesses and non-profits.
WHY A NEW INCOME TAX BILL?
The Income-tax Act of 1961 has been the bedrock of India's tax system for over 60 years, but it has accumulated hundreds of amendments and become notoriously complex. Finance Ministry officials likened updating it to renovating an old house with too many extensions - at some point, you need a fresh blueprint. The Income Tax Bill, 2025, was tabled in the Lok Sabha on February 13, 2025, precisely to create that fresh blueprint. According to the Press Information Bureau, the effort was guided by three core principles: Simplify text and structure: eliminating archaic, intricate language for clarity.
No major policy changes: keeping tax rates and rules stable for continuity.
No rate changes: ensuring tax slabs and rates remain unchanged, giving predictability to taxpayers.
In short, the government sought to rewrite the rulebook without moving the goalposts. Union Minister of State for Finance Pankaj Chaudhary summed it up by saying the new code should be "not just understood by experts but also accessible to the common citizens". This means an average taxpayer reading the law should have a better chance of understanding it without needing a tax lawyer at every turn.
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