How to Use This Section Navigator

This tool is designed for two audiences — tax professionals and CA students who need to quickly cross-reference provisions between the old and new Acts, and taxpayers who want to understand where a specific provision sits in the new legal framework. Here is how to use every feature:

  1. Reference Table Mode — Click the “Reference Table” tab to access the complete chapter-wise mapping. All 23 chapters are listed with their IT Act 2025 section ranges and corresponding IT Act 1961 equivalents. Click the Sections ▼ button on any chapter row to expand it and see the section-by-section comparison within that chapter.
  2. Search Functionality — Use the search box to find a specific section number, chapter name or keyword. Typing “salary” will surface all chapters and sections related to salary income. Typing “80” will surface all sections beginning with 80 in the 1961 Act and their 2025 equivalents.
  3. Expand All / Collapse All — Use the Expand All button to open every chapter simultaneously for a full-page view of all 530+ sections. Use Collapse All to return to the compact chapter summary view. This is useful when printing or sharing the complete reference table.
  4. Matching Quiz Mode — Click the “Matching Quiz” tab to test your knowledge. The quiz presents chapter names on the left and section ranges on the right — match them correctly. Green indicates a correct match, red indicates an incorrect attempt. Click “New Round” to get a fresh randomised set of questions. This is particularly useful for CA Intermediate and Final students preparing for exams under the new curriculum.
  5. Score Tracking — The quiz tracks your Score, Correct answers and Wrong answers in real time across the current session. Use this to benchmark your familiarity with the new Act’s structure before exams or client work.

💡 Pro Tip for Tax Professionals: The most efficient way to use this tool is to search by the 1961 section number you already know — for example, search “139” to find the equivalent filing provision in the IT Act 2025. This reverse lookup is far faster than reading through the entire new Act when you need to cross-reference a specific provision during client work, litigation or assessment proceedings.


Income Tax Act 2025 — What Changed and Why It Matters

The Income Tax Act 2025 is the most significant overhaul of Indian income tax law since the original Income Tax Act of 1961 was enacted. The new Act does not change the fundamental taxation principles — the same income heads, deductions and rates continue — but it completely restructures how the law is written, organised and numbered.

The Old Act

📜 Income Tax Act 1961 — The Old Framework

The IT Act 1961 was enacted over 60 years ago and has been amended hundreds of times through successive Finance Acts. Over decades of amendments, it became fragmented, cross-referenced and difficult to navigate — with provisions spread across sections, sub-sections, clauses, provisos, explanations and schedules that were added piecemeal over six decades.

  • 298 sections with numerous sub-sections
  • 14 Schedules
  • Over 1 million words of statutory text
  • Heavily cross-referenced — a single section often refers to 10+ other sections
  • Multiple Finance Act amendments layered over original text
The New Act

📗 Income Tax Act 2025 — The New Framework

The IT Act 2025 is a complete rewrite — every provision has been re-examined, rewritten in plain language, logically reorganised and given a new section number. The objective was to make the law accessible to taxpayers without legal training while eliminating redundancy and internal inconsistency.

  • 530+ sections across 23 Chapters
  • Logical chapter organisation by subject matter
  • Plain language drafting — shorter sentences, clearer structure
  • Tables and formulae integrated into the text
  • Reduced cross-referencing — each section is more self-contained
  • Effective from Assessment Year 2026-27 (FY 2025-26)

⚠️ Critical Point — The New Act Does NOT Change Tax Rates or Liability: The Income Tax Act 2025 is a consolidation and restructuring exercise — it does not introduce new taxes, change existing tax rates, remove deductions or alter any substantive tax liability. Every provision that existed in the 1961 Act has been carried over into the 2025 Act, just reorganised and renumbered. Your tax liability for AY 2026-27 onwards is computed under the 2025 Act — but the amount you pay is determined by the same economic logic as before. What changes is the section number you cite, not the outcome.


The 23 Chapters of the Income Tax Act 2025 — Overview

The IT Act 2025 organises all income tax provisions into 23 logically sequenced chapters — moving from definitions and scope through income computation, deductions, special taxpayers, procedural requirements and penalties. Here is a chapter-by-chapter overview:

Chapter I
Preliminary
Sections 1–2
Chapter II
Basis of Charge
Sections 3–9
Chapter III
Incomes Which Do Not Form Part of Total Income
Sections 10–26
Chapter IV
Computation of Total Income
Sections 27–29
Chapter V
Heads of Income
Sections 30–120
Chapter VI
Aggregation of Income — Set Off and Carry Forward
Sections 121–134
Chapter VII
Deductions to be Made in Computing Total Income
Sections 135–175
Chapter VIII
Rebates and Reliefs
Sections 176–180
Chapter IX
Special Provisions Relating to Avoidance of Tax
Sections 181–201
Chapter X
Special Provisions for Non-Residents
Sections 202–224
Chapter XI
Special Provisions for Certain Persons
Sections 225–260
Chapter XII
Determination of Tax in Certain Special Cases
Sections 261–290
Chapter XIII
Tax Deduction at Source
Sections 291–360
Chapter XIV
Tax Collection at Source
Sections 361–380
Chapter XV
Advance Payment of Tax
Sections 381–396
Chapter XVI
Tax Deduction and Collection Account Number
Sections 397–403
Chapter XVII
Return of Income
Sections 404–430
Chapter XVIII
Procedure for Assessment
Sections 431–480
Chapter XIX
Appeals and Revision
Sections 481–510
Chapter XX
Collection and Recovery of Tax
Sections 511–530
Chapter XXI
Interest Chargeable
Sections 531–545
Chapter XXII
Penalties
Sections 546–570
Chapter XXIII
Offences and Prosecution
Sections 571–590

Key Section Mappings — IT Act 1961 vs IT Act 2025

Here are the most frequently referenced sections by salaried taxpayers, professionals and businesses — mapped between the old and new Acts. These are the sections that appear most commonly in ITRs, Form 16s, TDS certificates and assessment orders:

Provision IT Act 1961 Section IT Act 2025 Section Subject Matter
Salary Income Section 15-17 Chapter V — Sections 30-50 Chargeability, definition of salary, perquisites, profits in lieu
House Property Income Section 22-27 Chapter V — Sections 51-70 Annual value, deductions, self-occupied, let-out
Business and Profession Section 28-44DA Chapter V — Sections 71-110 Profits and gains, deductions, presumptive taxation
Capital Gains Section 45-55A Chapter V — Sections 111-120 Chargeability, computation, exemptions, special rates
Other Sources Section 56-59 Chapter V — Sections 115-120 Dividends, interest, gifts, winnings
HRA Exemption Section 10(13A) Section 10(13A) [IT Act 2025] House Rent Allowance exemption for salaried employees
Set-Off and Carry Forward Section 70-80 Sections 121-134 Inter-head and intra-head set-off, carry forward of losses
Section 80C Deductions Section 80C Chapter VII PPF, ELSS, LIC, EPF, home loan principal, tuition fees
Health Insurance — 80D Section 80D Chapter VII Deduction for health insurance premium payments
Section 87A Rebate Section 87A Sections 176-180 Tax rebate for income within specified threshold
New Tax Regime Section 115BAC Chapter XII Optional/default concessional tax rate regime
Return of Income Section 139 Sections 404-430 Filing of ITR, belated return, revised return, updated return
TDS on Salary Section 192 Chapter XIII — Sections 291-360 Employer’s obligation to deduct TDS on salary payments
Advance Tax Section 207-219 Sections 381-396 Advance tax computation, instalments, liability
Interest for Late Filing Section 234A Sections 531-545 Interest on late filing of return
Interest for Advance Tax Section 234B/234C Sections 531-545 Interest for shortfall/deferment of advance tax
Scrutiny Assessment Section 143 Sections 431-480 Summary assessment, scrutiny, best judgement
Appeals to CIT(A) Section 246A Sections 481-510 First appellate authority — Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals)

💡 Important Note on Section Numbering: The section numbers in the IT Act 2025 are completely different from the 1961 Act. When filing ITR for AY 2026-27 onwards, all references in the return form will use the new 2025 Act section numbers. Form 16, TDS certificates, assessment orders and notices issued for AY 2026-27 and beyond will all cite the new section numbers. This navigator is your reference tool for the transition period — bookmark it and use it whenever you encounter an unfamiliar 2025 Act section number.


Why Was the Income Tax Act Rewritten — The History

The demand for a new, simplified Income Tax Act has been debated for over 30 years. The Direct Taxes Code (DTC) was proposed as early as 2009 but never enacted. The Finance Minister in Budget 2024 announced a comprehensive review of the Income Tax Act with a six-month timeline — and the Income Tax Act 2025 is the result of that review, enacted and notified in 2025.

Problem 1

📚 Complexity and Length

The original 1961 Act was 298 sections. After decades of Finance Act amendments adding provisos, sub-clauses, explanations and new sections like 80JJAA, 115BAC, 194Q etc., the Act became extraordinarily complex. A single section like Section 2 (definitions) ran to over 50 sub-clauses. The 2025 Act restructures this into logical modules.

Problem 2

🔗 Cross-Referencing

The 1961 Act was heavily self-referential — understanding one section required reading 10 others. For example, computing tax under Section 115BAC required understanding Sections 10, 16, 24, 80C through 80U, and numerous other sections. The 2025 Act restructures provisions to be more self-contained within each chapter.

Problem 3

📖 Accessibility

The 1961 Act was drafted in archaic legal language inaccessible to most taxpayers. The goal of the 2025 Act is plain language drafting — shorter sentences, active voice, defined terms used consistently, and tables/formulae embedded in the text rather than hidden in provisos. This serves the government’s vision of voluntary compliance.


Frequently Asked Questions — IT Act 2025

From which year does the Income Tax Act 2025 apply?
The Income Tax Act 2025 applies from Assessment Year 2026-27 — meaning it governs income earned during Financial Year 2025-26 (1st April 2025 to 31st March 2026) and all subsequent years. For FY 2024-25 (AY 2025-26) and earlier, the Income Tax Act 1961 continues to apply. This means ITRs filed in 2025 for FY 2024-25 still cite the 1961 Act sections, while ITRs filed in 2026 for FY 2025-26 will cite the 2025 Act sections. The transition year is AY 2026-27.
Does the IT Act 2025 change my tax liability or deductions?
No — the Income Tax Act 2025 is a consolidation and restructuring exercise, not a substantive amendment. All existing deductions, exemptions, tax rates, rebates and procedural requirements have been carried over from the 1961 Act into the 2025 Act. The PPF deduction that was Section 80C in the 1961 Act is still available in Chapter VII of the 2025 Act — just with a different section number. The New Tax Regime that was Section 115BAC is now in Chapter XII. Your actual tax liability on the same income under the same facts is identical under both Acts. What changes is the legal citation — which section number you reference when claiming a deduction or disputing an assessment.
Will Form 16, ITR forms and TDS certificates change for AY 2026-27?
Yes — the ITR forms, Form 16, Form 26AS, TDS certificates and all other tax forms will be updated to reflect the new section numbers of the IT Act 2025 for AY 2026-27 onwards. The CBDT (Central Board of Direct Taxes) is responsible for updating these forms and has been working in parallel with the enactment of the new Act. Taxpayers will notice new section numbers in their Form 16 for FY 2025-26 — this navigator helps you understand which familiar 1961 provision corresponds to each new number you encounter.
Why are there 530+ sections in the 2025 Act when the 1961 Act had only 298 sections?
The higher section count in the 2025 Act reflects a deliberate restructuring strategy — many provisions that were crammed into a single densely drafted 1961 section have been broken out into multiple shorter, clearer sections in the 2025 Act. For example, the definition section (Section 2 of the 1961 Act) which had over 50 sub-clauses spread across one unwieldy section is now split across multiple defined terms sections in Chapter I. Similarly, capital gains computation that was in Sections 45-55A has been expanded into a more granular Chapter V structure. The higher number reflects more sections, not more complexity — each section is shorter and more focused.
How should CA students use this tool for exam preparation?
CA students appearing for examinations from the November 2026 attempt onwards will likely be tested on the IT Act 2025 provisions and section numbers. Use the Reference Table to build familiarity with the chapter structure — understanding that Chapters I-IV cover preliminary and basis of charge, Chapter V covers all five heads of income, Chapter VII covers all deductions, and Chapters XIII-XVI cover TDS/TCS and advance tax. Use the Matching Quiz to test your recall of which sections correspond to which chapters — a common examination format. The ICAI study material for the new curriculum will reference 2025 Act sections, so building this mapping familiarity early gives you a significant advantage.
Are there any substantive changes in the 2025 Act that taxpayers should know about?
The IT Act 2025 itself is primarily a restructuring exercise — the substantive changes to tax rates, deductions and exemptions come through Finance Acts (the annual Budget). Budget 2025, which was presented alongside the new Act, introduced several substantive changes including the revised Section 87A rebate of ₹60,000 for income up to ₹12,00,000 under the New Regime, increased standard deduction of ₹75,000, and revised capital gains framework. These Budget 2025 changes are incorporated into the IT Act 2025 from AY 2026-27. So while the Act itself is a restructuring, the version that applies from AY 2026-27 incorporates all Budget 2025 amendments — making the effective law materially different from FY 2024-25 in terms of both structure and substance.

Navigate the New Act — File Accurately

The transition to IT Act 2025 brings new section references, updated forms and revised rules. Our Chartered Accountants stay current with every change — ensuring your ITR, TDS compliance and assessments cite the correct provisions under the applicable Act. CA-assisted ITR filing starting at ₹599.

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