India’s income tax system is set for a major reset from April 1, 2026. The Income Tax Department has released the draft Income-tax Rules, 2026 along with draft tax return forms, offering the first clear look at how the new Income-tax Act, 2025 will work in practice.
The drafts have been opened for public comments for 15 days, until February 22, 2026. The tax department has invited taxpayers, professionals and industry bodies to review the proposals and share feedback, saying the aim is to make the rule-making process more participative and practical.
A KEY STEP TOWARDS THE NEW TAX REGIME
The release of draft rules marks an important transition towards the new income tax law. While the Act sets out the broad legal framework, the rules and forms decide how the system functions on the ground.
According to the tax department, the new framework is built around four goals: simpler compliance, less ambiguity, better use of technology and a lower burden on taxpayers. Officials say the redesign is meant to make tax filing easier to understand and more efficient for both individuals and businesses.
SMARTER TAX FORMS AND MORE PRE-FILLED DATA
One of the biggest changes is a complete redesign of income tax return (ITR) forms.
The tax department says the new forms are being turned into “smart forms” with features such as pre-filled information, automated matching of data and centralised processing. Common details have been standardised across different forms so that taxpayers do not have to repeat the same information again and again.
For salaried individuals and small taxpayers, this could mean cleaner pre-filled returns and fewer chances of errors or mismatches. For businesses, it may reduce repeated queries from the tax department and shorten assessment timelines.
The push towards technology is also expected to support data-driven tax administration and improve taxpayer services, while cutting down on manual intervention.
SIMPLER LANGUAGE AND CLEARER INSTRUCTIONS
The department has also focused on making the rules and forms easier to read. The drafts use simpler language, and notes and instructions have been rewritten to remove operational and legal confusion.
Officials believe this will improve understanding of tax provisions and support both ease of living for individuals and ease of doing business for companies.
To help taxpayers adjust, the Income Tax Department has released two navigators. One links the old rules with the new draft rules, and the other maps existing forms to the proposed new ones. Feedback is being collected rule-wise and form-wise so that suggestions can be reviewed in a structured way.
CLEANING UP OUTDATED PROVISIONS
Tax experts say the draft rules signal a long-awaited clean-up of older provisions that no longer fit today’s economic and digital environment.
Across the proposed ITR forms, a few themes stand out. Electronic filing is becoming the standard. Simplified return options are being more tightly defined. At the same time, disclosure requirements are expanding and the tax system is moving towards more structured and detailed data reporting.
WHAT TAXPAYERS SHOULD DO NEXT
The government has stressed that these drafts are not final. Taxpayers and professionals have time until February 22, 2026 to study the proposed rules and forms and point out practical concerns.
When the new law comes into force on April 1, 2026, the ITR form numbers may still look familiar. But the way people qualify, report income and file returns is likely to change in noticeable ways. The feedback received over the next few weeks will play a key role in shaping the final version of India’s new income tax framework.
































