If you earn around ₹20 lakh a year, your choice between the old and new tax regimes can significantly impact your take-home income. The difference can exceed ₹1 lakh annually, but it depends on how effectively you use deductions. The decision today is less about which regime is universally better and more about which aligns with your financial behaviour.
From April 1, 2026, tax slabs and rebate rules remain unchanged, but there is greater clarity around deductions and compliance. While the new regime offers lower tax rates and minimal paperwork, it removes most deductions.
The old regime, however, continues to reward taxpayers who invest, pay rent, or service home loans. For salaried individuals actively using these benefits, it can still be a powerful way to reduce tax liability.
At an annual income of ₹20 lakh, the old regime allows multiple deductions, such as:
If these are fully utilised, total deductions can reach around ₹6.25 lakh, bringing taxable income down to about ₹13.25 lakh.
In such a scenario:
This can result in potential savings of around ₹1.25 lakh. However, this is an illustration; actual savings depend on how many deductions you claim.
The tax-free thresholds remain unchanged for FY 2026–27.
Under the old regime, income up to ₹2.5 lakh is exempt, and up to ₹5 lakh becomes tax-free after rebate. With sufficient deductions, even a higher income can effectively become tax-free.
Under the new regime, income up to ₹12 lakh is tax-free due to a rebate. For salaried individuals, this extends to ₹12.75 lakh after the ₹75,000 standard deduction.
One key point often missed is that not all income qualifies for rebate benefits.
Even if your total income is below ₹12 lakh under the new regime:
This means your overall tax liability may not be zero if you have capital gains, even within the tax-free threshold.
The updated framework introduces structural improvements without altering tax rates:
The choice ultimately depends on your financial habits.
The old regime is beneficial if you:
The new regime works better if you:
At ₹20 lakh income, the old regime can deliver significant tax savings, but only with disciplined financial planning. The new regime offers simplicity and ease.
The smarter choice depends on how you earn, spend, and invest, not just how much you earn.

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