Old vs New Tax Regime: Which One Should You Choose?

Old vs New Tax Regime: Which One Should You Choose?

Choosing between the old and new tax regime is one of the most important financial decisions Indian salaried professionals make every year. The new regime offers lower rates but removes most deductions. The old regime retains higher rates but allows you to claim deductions under 80C, 80D, HRA, and more.

New regime: lower tax rates, almost no deductions. Old regime: higher rates, but 80C (₹1.5L), 80D, HRA, home loan interest all available. If your total deductions exceed ₹3.75 lakh, old regime likely saves more. New regime is the default from FY 2023-24.

What Are the Two Tax Regimes?

Old Tax Regime — Higher base rates but 70+ exemptions and deductions available (HRA, 80C, 80D, LTA, home loan interest, etc.).

New Tax Regime — Lower rates, fewer slabs, almost no deductions. Default regime from FY 2023-24 onwards — you must actively opt out to use old (Source: Income Tax India).

Tax Slabs: FY 2024-25

Income Slab Old Regime New Regime
Up to ₹2,50,000 Nil Nil
₹2,50,001–₹3,00,000 5% Nil
₹3,00,001–₹5,00,000 5% 5%
₹5,00,001–₹6,00,000 20% 5%
₹6,00,001–₹9,00,000 20% 10%
₹9,00,001–₹10,00,000 20% 15%
₹10,00,001–₹12,00,000 30% 15%
₹12,00,001–₹15,00,000 30% 20%
Above ₹15,00,000 30% 30%

New regime provides standard deduction of ₹75,000 and tax rebate under Section 87A for taxable income up to ₹7,00,000 — making income up to ~₹7.75 lakh effectively tax-free (Source: Ministry of Finance, Union Budget 2024-25).

Key Deductions: Old Regime Only

These are NOT available in the new regime:

  • Section 80C — Up to ₹1,50,000 (PPF, ELSS via SIP, EPF, life insurance, tuition fees)
  • Section 80D — ₹25,000 self (₹50,000 senior citizens) for health insurance
  • HRA Exemption — Based on rent paid, salary, and city
  • Section 24(b) — Home loan interest up to ₹2,00,000
  • LTA — Leave Travel Allowance
  • Section 80E — Education loan interest (no limit)
  • Section 80TTA — Savings account interest up to ₹10,000

New regime allows only: standard deduction (₹75,000), employer NPS under 80CCD(2), and family pension deduction (Source: Income Tax India — Deductions).

When Is the Old Regime Better?

Old regime saves more when total deductions exceed ~₹3.75–4.5 lakh. You likely benefit if you have:

  • Home loan with ₹2L+ interest (Section 24b)
  • HRA exemption (₹1–2L for metro renters)
  • Full 80C utilisation (₹1.5L)
  • Health insurance (80D: ₹25K–₹75K)
  • NPS contribution (80CCD: ₹50K extra)

When Is the New Regime Better?

  • You don’t have a home loan
  • You live in own house or with parents (no HRA)
  • Your 80C investments are minimal
  • Your salary is under ₹10 lakh
  • You prefer simplicity over tax planning

If you’re just starting out, the 50/30/20 rule can help you allocate income before worrying about which regime to pick.

Calculation: ₹10 Lakh Salary

Old Regime New Regime
Gross Salary ₹10,00,000 ₹10,00,000
Standard Deduction ₹50,000 ₹75,000
80C ₹1,50,000
80D ₹25,000
HRA ₹1,20,000
Taxable Income ₹6,55,000 ₹9,25,000
Tax Payable ₹36,000 ₹41,250
Winner Old Regime ✓

Calculation: ₹15 Lakh Salary (No Home Loan, No HRA)

Old Regime New Regime
Gross Salary ₹15,00,000 ₹15,00,000
Standard Deduction ₹50,000 ₹75,000
80C ₹1,50,000
80D ₹25,000
Taxable Income ₹12,75,000 ₹14,25,000
Tax Payable ₹1,91,250 ₹1,50,000
Winner New Regime ✓

Without HRA and home loan, new regime wins at higher incomes.

How to Switch Between Regimes

  • Salaried employees: Can switch every year at the time of filing ITR
  • Business/professional income: Can switch only once (after opting out of new regime, can’t come back)
  • Default: New regime applies unless you explicitly opt for old
  • Employer: Inform your employer at the start of FY for correct TDS deduction

Common Mistakes

  • Not calculating both regimes. Many people assume new is always better — it’s not if you have significant deductions.
  • Forgetting HRA. If you pay rent and don’t claim HRA, you’re leaving money on the table in old regime.
  • Ignoring employer NPS. 80CCD(2) works in BOTH regimes — up to 14% of basic salary.
  • Not investing to claim 80C. If you choose old regime but don’t actually invest ₹1.5L, you lose the benefit.
  • Switching without planning. If you have a home loan, switching to new regime means losing ₹2L deduction.

FAQs

Can I switch between regimes every year?

Yes, if you’re salaried with no business income. You choose at the time of filing your ITR each year.

Which regime is the default?

New tax regime is the default from FY 2023-24. You must actively opt for old regime if you want it.

Does NPS work in the new regime?

Employer’s NPS contribution under 80CCD(2) works in both regimes. Your own NPS contribution under 80CCD(1B) — the extra ₹50,000 — only works in old regime.

What about home loan in new regime?

Section 24(b) home loan interest deduction (₹2L) is NOT available in new regime. If you have a home loan, old regime is usually better.

Which regime is better for freelancers?

Depends on deductions. Freelancers can claim business expenses regardless of regime. But if you also have 80C, 80D, and other deductions exceeding ₹3.75L, old regime wins. Note: freelancers can only switch once — choose carefully.

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Conclusion

There’s no universal answer. Calculate your actual deductions for the year. If they’re below ₹3.75 lakh, new regime likely wins with its lower rates. If above — especially with home loan + HRA + full 80C — old regime saves more. Use the Income Tax India comparison tool to run your exact numbers before deciding.

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