Introduction
Budget 2026 does not change income tax rates or slabs. Instead, it focuses on compliance rationalisation, litigation reduction, and practical relief for taxpayers. Several long-standing pain points relating to ITR due dates, TDS provisions, employee welfare contributions, and return filing timelines have been addressed.
This article summarises the important direct tax changes introduced in Budget 2026, relevant for individuals, businesses, and professionals.
1. ITR Due Date Extended for Non-Audit Cases
What has changed
The due date for filing Income Tax Returns has been extended by one month for certain categories of taxpayers.
Revised due dates:
| Category of Taxpayer | Earlier ITR Due Date | Revised ITR Due Date (Budget 2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Business or profession not liable to tax audit | 31 July | 31 August |
| Partner of a non-audit firm / spouse (where clubbing applies) | 31 July | 31 August |
| Individuals filing ITR-1 or ITR-2 (salary, house property, capital gains) | 31 July | 31 July (No change) |
| Audit cases (Tax audit / company cases) | 31 October | 31 October (No change) |
| Transfer pricing cases | 30 November | 30 November (No change) |
Why this matters
This change acknowledges ground-level difficulties faced by small businesses and professionals and is expected to reduce belated returns and late filing fees.
2. Revised Return Time Limit Extended
Key change
The time limit for filing a revised return has been extended from:
9 months → 12 months from the end of the relevant tax year
Important condition
Revised returns filed after 9 months may attract a prescribed fee.
Impact
Taxpayers now get a meaningful opportunity to correct genuine errors without being forced into updated return filings.
3. Updated Return – Scope Expanded
Budget 2026 expands the scope of filing updated returns, making them more taxpayer-friendly.
Key relaxations
- Updated return is now allowed even if it reduces previously declared loss
- Updated return can be filed even after receipt of reassessment notice, subject to:
- Existing additional tax
- Additional 10% levy
Benefit
Income disclosed through updated return is protected from penalty, encouraging voluntary compliance.
4. Major Relief on Employees’ PF and ESI Contributions
Earlier position
Employees’ PF/ESI contributions were disallowed if not deposited within the due date under the respective welfare laws, even if paid before ITR filing.
Change introduced
Deduction shall now be allowed if such contributions are paid on or before the due date of filing the income tax return.
Impact
This significantly reduces litigation and harsh disallowances arising from minor delays.
5. TDS Provisions – Important Clarifications (No Rate Change)
Key point
Budget 2026 does not change numerical TDS rates. However, it introduces clarifications and procedural simplifications.
A. Supply of Manpower Covered under Contract TDS
- Supply of manpower is explicitly included under “work”
- Applicable TDS:
- 1% for individual/HUF contractors
- 2% for others
- This ends disputes on whether manpower supply is professional or technical service.
B. No TDS on MACT Interest (Full Relief)
Interest awarded by Motor Accident Claims Tribunal is now fully exempt from TDS, regardless of amount. Earlier exemption was limited to ₹50,000 per year. This prevents cash flow blockage for accident victims.
C. Lower / Nil TDS Certificate – Now Online
Applications for lower or nil TDS deduction can now be filed electronically, reducing physical interaction with Assessing Officers. This benefits professionals, freelancers, and businesses with predictable income.
6. Exemption of Interest on Motor Accident Compensation
Interest received on compensation awarded under the Motor Vehicles Act is now fully exempt from tax in the hands of:
- The victim, or
- Legal heirs
This ensures compensation-related interest is not unfairly taxed.
7. TAN Not Required for Property Purchase from Non-Resident
Change introduced:
A resident individual or HUF purchasing property from a non-resident is not required to obtain TAN for deducting TDS.
Practical impact
This removes unnecessary compliance for one-time property transactions.
8. Income Tax Slab Rates in Budget 2026
Are there any changes in income tax slabs?
As per the Budget 2026 documents, there is no change in income tax slab rates for individuals, HUFs, or other categories of taxpayers.
- The new tax regime under section 115BAC continues as the default regime
- Existing slab structure, rebate provisions, and standard deduction remain unchanged
- Taxpayers may still opt out of the default regime where permitted
This reflects the government’s intent to maintain rate stability while focusing on compliance simplification.
9. What Has Not Changed in Budget 2026
- No change in income tax slab rates
- No change in surcharge or health and education cess
- No change in corporate tax rates
- No general increase or decrease in TDS rates
The emphasis remains on simplification, not rate restructuring.
Conclusion
Budget 2026 marks a shift towards pragmatic tax administration. While tax rates remain untouched, meaningful relief has been provided through extended due dates, reduced litigation triggers, simplified TDS provisions, and fair treatment of genuine taxpayers.
For individuals and businesses alike, the focus should be on timely compliance and leveraging these changes effectively with professional guidance.
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