Old regime
Recommended- Taxable income
- ₹10,25,000
- Tax + surcharge
- ₹1,20,000
- Cess (4%)
- ₹4,800
- Total tax
- ₹1,24,800
Compute your liability under the old vs new regime. Includes 87A rebate, surcharge tiers with marginal relief, 4% Health & Education Cess, and the full Chapter VI-A deduction menu (80C, 80CCD, 80D, 80E, 80TTA/TTB, Sec 24).
| Gross income | ₹15,00,000 |
| Standard deduction | ₹75,000 |
| Chapter VI-A deductions | ₹0 |
| Other deductions (24b, HRA, etc.) | ₹0 |
| Taxable income | ₹14,25,000 |
| Tax on slabs | ₹1,25,000 |
| Less: 87A rebate | ₹-0 |
| Tax after rebate | ₹1,25,000 |
| Plus: surcharge | ₹0 |
| Tax + surcharge | ₹1,25,000 |
| Plus: 4% Health & Education Cess | ₹5,000 |
| Total tax payable | ₹1,30,000 |
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Recommendation: Old regime saves ₹5,200 per year.
India runs two parallel personal-income-tax regimes for individuals: the older slab structure with a wide deduction menu (commonly called the “old regime”), and a simplified concessional slab structure with a narrower deduction menu (the “new regime,” also called the default regime since FY 2023-24). This calculator computes your liability in either regime using the slab rates, rebate limits, surcharge tiers and Health & Education Cess as they stand for the assessment year 2027-28 (financial year 2026-27).
Senior citizens (60 to 79 years) get a higher exemption of ₹3,00,000 and super-senior citizens (80+) of ₹5,00,000, with the same upper-slab rates. There is also a Section 87A rebate of up to ₹12,500 that takes the tax to zero for any taxpayer whose total taxable income is at or below ₹5,00,000.
Section 87A in the new regime grants a higher rebate of up to ₹25,000, with the threshold raised to ₹7,00,000 of taxable income. Marginal relief applies to income just above ₹7,00,000 — the additional tax cannot exceed the additional income above the threshold, which is why our calculator may show ₹100 of tax on an income of ₹7,00,100 instead of the slab rate.
Salaried taxpayers and pensioners receive a standard deduction without any documentation: ₹50,000 in the old regime and ₹75,000 in the new regime (the latter raised in Budget 2024 from ₹50,000 to ₹75,000 specifically to make the new regime more attractive). Employer contributions to NPS under Section 80CCD(2) are also allowed in the new regime — up to 10 percent of basic for private-sector employees and 14 percent for central or state government employees. We treat 80CCD(2) outside this calculator because it is computed at the salary-component level rather than the gross-income level; our salary take-home calculator handles it.
The new regime trades simplicity for higher taxes (or sometimes lower, depending on your deduction profile). The old regime stays competitive when the following deductions stack up:
On top of slab tax, India levies a percentage surcharge that scales with total taxable income:
The Budget 2023 cap on the new regime at 25% surcharge means that very-high- income earners (above ₹5 crore taxable) pay measurably less tax under the new regime than the old, even before considering the new regime’s narrower deduction menu. At each surcharge threshold, marginal relief ensures that the additional surcharge cannot exceed the additional income above the threshold. This is why a taxpayer at ₹50,00,001 of income owes only about ₹1 of surcharge (not the full 10%): the entire incremental rupee is absorbed by relief.
A flat 4% Health & Education Cess is applied on the sum of slab tax and surcharge in both regimes. For most middle-income earners, this cess is the difference between, say, ₹62,500 and ₹65,000 of total liability — small in rupee terms but it stacks on every rupee of tax you owe.
Use the regime comparison view above to see your actual numbers side by side. As a rule of thumb (subject to your own deduction profile):
The choice is reversible every year for salaried taxpayers (you can switch between regimes annually), but business or professional income is locked once opted out of the new regime — switching back is a one-time option only.
We focus on slab tax, rebate, surcharge, cess and the core Chapter VI-A deductions for salaried and pensioner individuals. The following are out of scope and handled in dedicated calculators (or omitted by design):
Take a salaried employee in Mumbai earning ₹15,00,000 gross, contributing ₹1,50,000 to PPF (80C), ₹50,000 to NPS Tier-1 (80CCD(1B)), ₹25,000 to a family health-insurance plan (80D), and paying ₹2,00,000 of interest on a home loan for a self-occupied property (Section 24(b)). HRA exemption is zero (owned home).
Old regime saves ₹5,200 here. Without the home loan interest, however, the comparison flips — strip out ₹2,00,000 of Section 24(b) and old-regime taxable income jumps to ₹12,25,000, slab tax to ₹1,80,000, total ₹1,87,200. Now new regime saves ₹57,200. The home loan is the swing factor.
incometaxindia.gov.in)Disclaimer. MoneyKit results are for informational purposes only and should not be construed as financial or tax advice. Actual tax depends on your full income profile, deductions claimed, residency status, and any special incomes (capital gains, crypto, lottery, foreign sources). Consult a qualified Chartered Accountant before filing your return.
Forward + reverse GST at every CBIC slab. CGST/SGST/IGST split, discount handling, cess.
STCG/LTCG by asset, CII indexation, 12.5%/20% choice for property, 54EC bonds.
30% Section 115BBH on VDA gains, 1% TDS u/s 194S, gift / airdrop / mining FMV.
CTC → monthly in-hand. Basic/HRA/special split, PF, gratuity, HRA exemption, TDS.
Accurate to the rupee. Slabs and rebates current as of (FY 2026-27).