Filing your Income Tax Return (ITR) or ITR Filing in 2026 is a historic experience. As of February 2026, we are in the transition period where the Income Tax Act, 2025 are replacing the decades-old law. While the rules are getting simpler, the names of forms and the deadlines have changed.
Whether you are a salaried professional, a freelancer, or a business owner, this 1200+ word guide is your definitive roadmap for the Financial Year (FY) 2025-26 (Assessment Year 2026-27).
1. The 2026 “New Law” Update: From 1961 to 2025
For over 60 years, India followed the Income Tax Act of 1961. However, the government has now enacted the Income Tax Act, 2025.
What this means for you right now:
- FY 2025-26 Filing: For the income you earned between April 2025 and March 2026, the calculations still follow the 1961 Act, but the filing process will use the new, simplified interface and renumbered forms.
- Simplified Jargon: The Act has been reduced from over 700 sections to roughly 530, making the law easier for a common person to read.
- New Names: Many forms you knew by heart have been renamed to follow a logical sequence.
Key last dates
Salaried / individuals (ITR-1, ITR-2)
31 July 2026
Business without audit (ITR-3, ITR-4)
31 August 2026
Business with audit
31 October 2026
Transfer pricing cases
30 November 2026
If you miss the deadline
Belated return
File till 31 December 2026
Late fee
₹5,000 if income above ₹5 lakh
₹1,000 if income up to ₹5 lakh
Revised return
Allowed till 31 March 2027
Updated return
Allowed till 31 March 2031
Who should file ITR
You must file if
Total income above basic exemption limit
Want refund of TDS
Have capital gains
Foreign assets or foreign income
Business income
Even with low income, filing helps in
Loan approval
Visa process
Proof of income
Which ITR form for you
ITR-1 (Sahaj)
Salary
One house property
Interest income
Income up to ₹50 lakh
ITR-2
Capital gains
More than one house property
ITR-3
Business or profession
ITR-4
Presumptive business income
Documents you need
PAN
Aadhaar
Form 16
Form 26AS
AIS
Bank statements
Capital gains statement
Home loan interest certificate
Step-by-step filing
Login to income tax portal
Check prefilled data
Select correct ITR form
Add income details
Claim deductions
Verify tax paid
Submit
E-verify within 30 days
Common mistakes to avoid
Wrong ITR form
Not reporting interest income
Skipping AIS mismatch
Not e-verifying
New changes from 2026
Staggered due dates based on ITR form
More prefilled data in forms
Revised return deadline extended to March
Smart filing strategy
File before June end if you
Expect refund
Have multiple Form 16 / TDS entries
Trade in stocks
You get
Faster refund
Less portal rush
2. Important Deadlines: The “Staggered” 2026 Calendar
One of the most helpful changes in Budget 2026 is the “Staggered Deadline.” To prevent the website from crashing on July 31st, the government has spread out the dates based on your income type.
| Category of Taxpayer | ITR Form | Official Deadline |
| Salaried Individuals & Pensioners | ITR-1 & ITR-2 | 31 July 2026 |
| Freelancers & Small Businesses (Non-Audit) | ITR-3 & ITR-4 | 31 August 2026 |
| Audit Cases (Large Businesses) | ITR-3 / ITR-5 | 31 October 2026 |
| Belated Return (With Penalty) | Any | 31 December 2026 |
| Revised Return (To Fix Mistakes) | Any | 31 March 2027 |
Notice that freelancers and small business owners (ITR-3/4) now have an extra month (August 31) compared to salaried employees. This is a significant relief for those managing their own accounts.
3. The “Form Renaming” Era: Know Your New Numbers
Under the new rules, the Tax Department is renumbering several common forms to make them more organized. While the names are changing, the purpose remains the same.
- Form 16 is now Form 130: This is still your Salary TDS certificate. If your HR sends you “Form 130,” don’t panic—it’s just the new version of Form 16.
- Form 16A is now Form 131: This is for TDS on non-salary income, like bank interest or professional fees.
- Form 26AS is now Form 168: Your Annual Tax Credit statement has a new home under Form 168, though most people will now simply use the AIS (Annual Information Statement).
4. The Tax Slabs: Is Income up to ₹12.75 Lakh Really Tax-Free?
The biggest headline of 2026 is the “Zero Tax” limit. Under the New Tax Regime (which is now the default), the tax-free threshold has been significantly raised.
New Tax Regime Slabs (FY 2025-26):
- Up to ₹4,00,000: Nil
- ₹4,00,001 – ₹8,00,000: 5%
- ₹8,00,001 – ₹12,00,000: 10%
- ₹12,00,001 – ₹16,00,000: 15%
- Above ₹24,00,000: 30%
How the “Zero Tax” Works
Under the New Tax Regime (for FY 2025-26), the government uses a two-step process:
- Step 1 (The Slabs): They calculate tax based on your income.
- Step 2 (The Rebate): If your total taxable income is ₹12 Lakh or less, they give you a special discount (Rebate under Section 87A) that cancels out the tax completely.
| Income Bracket | Slab Rate | Tax Calculation |
| First ₹4 Lakh | 0% | ₹0 |
| Next ₹4 Lakh (4L to 8L) | 5% | ₹20,000 |
| Next ₹4 Lakh (8L to 12L) | 10% | ₹40,000 |
| Total Tax Before Rebate | ₹60,000 | |
| Minus Section 87A Rebate | – ₹60,000 | |
| Final Tax Payable | ₹0 |
Standard Deduction: All salaried individuals get a flat ₹75,000 deduction automatically.
Section 87A Rebate: If your taxable income (after the deduction) is ₹12,00,000 or less, the government gives you a rebate that makes your tax liability ZERO.
The Result: A salary of ₹12,75,000 minus the ₹75,000 deduction equals ₹12,00,000. Under Section 87A, the tax on this is wiped out.
5. Step-by-Step Instructions: How to File Like a Pro
Filing yourself is easier than ever because of “Pre-filled Returns.”
Step 1: The AIS Check (The “Financial Mirror”)
Before you type a single number, download your AIS (Annual Information Statement). This document shows every rupee you earned that the government already knows about—including bank interest, stock dividends, and even large credit card spends. If your ITR doesn’t match your AIS, you will get an automated notice.
Step 2: Choosing Your Form
- ITR-1 (Sahaj): For income up to ₹50 Lakh from salary and one house.
- ITR-2: For those with Capital Gains (stocks, property, crypto).
- ITR-3: For business owners/professionals claiming expenses.
- ITR-4 (Sugam): For freelancers using Presumptive Taxation (paying tax on 50% of total receipts).
Step 3: Online Filing & E-Verification
- Log in to incometax.gov.in.
- Select AY 2026-27.
- Verify the pre-filled data against your Form 130 (old Form 16).
- Submit and e-Verify via Aadhaar OTP.
- Crucial: You must verify within 30 days. If you miss this, your return is considered “Not Filed.”
6. Special Insights for Freelancers & Creators
If you run a blog or a design firm, the Presumptive Taxation Scheme (Section 44ADA) is your best friend.
- How it works: If you earn ₹20 Lakh in a year, you can simply declare ₹10 Lakh (50%) as your profit. You pay tax only on that ₹10 Lakh.
- The Benefit: No need to maintain a “Balance Sheet” or “Profit & Loss Account.”
- Pro Tip: In 2026, the limit for this scheme has been increased for digital transactions. If 95% of your income is digital (UPI, Bank Transfer), you can use this scheme for income up to ₹1.5 Crore.
7. Why Filing Matters (Beyond Taxes)
Even if your income is below the taxable limit (Nil Return), you should still file.
- Visa Processing: Embassies for the US, UK, and Europe require the last 3 years of ITR.
- Lending & Loans: Whether it’s a home loan or a business loan for your startup, your ITR is your “Financial Identity Certificate.”
- Claiming Refunds: If your bank deducted 10% TDS on your FD interest but your total income is below the tax limit, you can only get that money back by filing an ITR.
8. Jargon Buster: 2026 Edition
To make this easy for everyone, here is a quick translation of common tax terms:
| Old Term / Hard Word | Simple 2026 Meaning |
| Assessment Year (AY) | The “Filing Year” (Currently 2026-27). |
| Financial Year (FY) | The “Earning Year” (April 2025 – March 2026). |
| Standard Deduction | A “Free Discount” of ₹75,000 for salaried people. |
| Tax Rebate (87A) | A “Full Refund” on tax for income up to ₹12 Lakh. |
| Belated Return | A “Late Entry” filing done after the deadline. |
Don’t Wait for the Deadline
The shift to the Income Tax Act, 2025 and the renaming of forms like Form 130 and Form 168 might seem confusing at first, but the goal is a cleaner, faster system. By understanding the new staggered deadlines—July 31 for salary and August 31 for freelancers—you can plan your finances without stress.
Key Takeaway: Always check your AIS first. It is the single most important document in the 2026 tax ecosystem.
Quick Checklist for AY 2026-27:
- [ ] Link PAN with Aadhaar (if not done).
- [ ] Download AIS/Form 168 from the portal.
- [ ] Collect Form 130 (Salary) or Form 131 (Non-Salary) from deductors.
- [ ] File before July 31 (Salaried) or August 31 (Business).
- [ ] e-Verify within 30 days using Aadhaar OTP.




