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Old vs New Tax Regime FY26: The Decision Tree for Indian Salaried Earners

New regime is default but old regime may save more tax. The break-even depends on your deductions stack — 80C + 80D + HRA + home loan + NPS. This guide walks through the decision tree with worked examples at different income levels.

9 min readPublished 24 May 2026

Indian salaried earners face a binary choice every April: old tax regime (higher slabs but rich deductions) or new tax regime (lower slabs, almost no deductions). New is default. Wrong choice = ₹50k-2L extra tax annually.

The slabs (FY 2025-26)

New regime (default)

Plus 4% cess. Standard deduction ₹75,000. Rebate 87A: no tax if total income ≤ ₹12 lakh.

Old regime (optional)

Plus 4% cess. Standard deduction ₹50,000. Rebate 87A: no tax if income ≤ ₹7 lakh. Allows 80C, 80D, HRA, 80CCD(1B), Section 24(b) home loan interest, etc.

The breakeven by income level

IncomeOld regime needs deductions of...
₹10 lakh~₹2.5 lakh
₹15 lakh~₹3.75 lakh
₹20 lakh~₹4.0 lakh
₹25 lakh~₹4.5 lakh
₹50 lakh+~₹6 lakh+

If your total deductions cross the threshold = old regime is cheaper. Below = new regime is cheaper.

The deduction inventory (old regime only)

Worked examples

Example 1: ₹15L income, salaried, rents in Bengaluru

Deductions: ₹1.5L 80C (EPF + ELSS) + ₹50k NPS + ₹25k 80D + ₹1.8L HRA exemption + ₹50k standard = ₹4.55L

Old regime: tax on ₹10.45L = ₹1.39L. New regime: tax on ₹14.25L (only ₹75k std) = ₹1.43L.

Old wins by ~₹4,000. Marginal here — depends on HRA fact-pattern.

Example 2: ₹15L income, salaried, owns home with home loan

Deductions: ₹1.5L 80C (EPF + principal) + ₹50k NPS + ₹50k 80D + ₹2L home loan interest 24(b) + ₹50k standard = ₹5L

Old regime: tax on ₹10L = ₹1.17L. New regime: tax on ₹14.25L = ₹1.43L.

Old wins by ₹26,000.

Example 3: ₹15L income, no home loan, basic 80C only

Deductions: ₹1.5L 80C + ₹25k 80D + ₹50k standard = ₹2.25L

Old regime: tax on ₹12.75L = ₹1.96L. New regime: tax on ₹14.25L = ₹1.43L.

New wins by ₹53,000.

Example 4: ₹8L income, salaried

Most ₹8L earners fall under the ₹12L rebate in new regime → ZERO tax. Old regime would tax them ₹40-70k depending on deductions.

New wins comprehensively at ₹8-12L income due to the rebate.

The decision algorithm

  1. Income < ₹12L? → NEW regime (rebate gives zero tax)
  2. Income ₹12-15L without home loan/heavy HRA? → NEW regime
  3. Income ₹15L+ with home loan + max 80C + HRA + 80D + NPS? → OLD regime
  4. Income ₹15L+ without home loan, modest deductions? → NEW regime
  5. Income ₹50L+ at any deduction level? → Often OLD if you have home loan + family insurance + NPS, else NEW

Switching mechanics

The future direction

Government clearly nudging toward new regime — lower slabs each Budget, sweeter rebate. Old regime deductions unlikely to expand. Plan long-term assuming new becomes standard, but optimise for current year specifics.

Use the Income Tax calculator to compute both regimes side-by-side with your specific numbers. Make the decision data-driven, not based on what colleagues do.

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