
New Financial Year 2026–27: Starting April 1, 2026, a new financial year begins in India, bringing a host of important changes that will directly affect your savings, investments, and spending habits. Key reforms introduced by the Government of India and the Reserve Bank of India aim to simplify taxation, strengthen digital security, and promote transparency.
From the new Income Tax framework to stricter digital payment rules, here are 16 major changes you must know about:
New Income Tax Act 2025 Comes into Effect
The old Income Tax Act of 1961 will be replaced by the Income Tax Act, 2025, designed to simplify and modernize the tax system. While tax slabs remain largely unchanged, processes and terminology have been streamlined.
One major change: the dual concept of Assessment Year (AY) and Financial Year (FY) is removed. Income earned from April 1 will now be reported under a single “Tax Year 2026–27.”
2. PAN–Aadhaar Linking Mandatory
PAN cards not linked with Aadhaar will become inoperative from April 1. Without an active PAN:
- You cannot open a bank account
- Transactions above ₹50,000 will be restricted
- Reactivation may involve penalties
3. New Income Tax Forms Introduced
Tax filing forms have been renamed:
- Form 16 → Form 130
- Form 16A → Form 131
This aligns with the new simplified tax structure.
4. Stronger Digital Payment Security
The Reserve Bank of India has made multi-factor authentication mandatory. For large transactions:
- OTP alone will not be sufficient
- Biometric authentication (fingerprint/face ID) or PIN will be required
This enhances security but may slightly increase transaction time.
5. Cashless Toll Payments on Highways
National highway tolls are moving toward a fully digital system:
- Cash lanes may be discontinued
- UPI payments may attract up to 25% extra charge
- Vehicles without FASTag may face double penalties
6. New Tax Regime: ₹12 Lakh Tax-Free Limit
Under the new tax regime:
- Income up to ₹12 lakh is tax-free
- With ₹75,000 standard deduction, effective exemption becomes ₹12.75 lakh
7. LPG Prices and ATM Charges
- LPG cylinder prices will be revised monthly
- Banks may reduce free ATM withdrawal limits
- Charges may exceed ₹23 per extra transaction
8. More Cities Added for HRA Benefits
Cities like Bengaluru, Pune, Hyderabad, and Ahmedabad are now classified as metro cities for HRA:
- Eligible for 50% HRA exemption (earlier limited to 4 metros)
9. Higher Children’s Education Allowance
Under the old tax regime:
- Education allowance increased from ₹100 → ₹3,000/month
- Hostel allowance increased from ₹300 → ₹9,000/month
10. Meal Voucher Tax Exemption Increased
Corporate employees benefit as:
- Tax-free meal allowance increased from ₹50 → ₹200 per meal
11. Gift Voucher Tax Relief
Annual tax-free gift vouchers increased from:
- ₹5,000 → ₹15,000
12. New PAN Card Rules
- Aadhaar-only PAN issuance discontinued
- New category-based forms required
- PAN mandatory for deposits above ₹10 lakh
13. FASTag Annual Pass Cost Increased
The National Highways Authority of India has increased FASTag annual pass:
- From ₹3,000 → ₹3,075
- Valid for 1 year or 200 trips
14. Automatic PF Transfer
Under the Employees’ Provident Fund Organisation:
- PF accounts will auto-transfer when you change jobs
- No manual form submission required
15. Easier PF Withdrawals
PF withdrawal rules are simplified:
- Up to ₹5 lakh withdrawal
- Auto-settlement within 3 days
- Allowed for illness, education, or marriage
16. Tax on Sovereign Gold Bonds (SGB)
If SGBs are bought from the secondary market:
- Maturity gains will attract 12.5% capital gains tax
- Tax exemption now limited to bonds purchased directly from RBI
Conclusion: What This Means for You
The new financial year brings a mix of tax relief, stricter compliance, and enhanced digital security. While some changes may require adjustment—like stricter payment authentication or PAN compliance—others, such as higher tax-free income limits and allowances, offer clear financial benefits.
Action Tip: Review your PAN-Aadhaar status, update your tax planning, and prepare for increased digital compliance to avoid penalties

