When Two Tax Worlds Collide: AY 2026–27 Compliances in the Era of the New Income-tax Act, 2025

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AY 2026–27 Compliances

You’re standing in April 2026. The old Income-tax Act, 1961 has officially taken its final bow. A brand-new Income-tax Act, 2025 now runs the show.

But your compliance calendar?
It’s still whispering deadlines from a world that technically no longer exists.

Welcome to the great tax transition paradox.

Let’s decode what really happens to compliances for Assessment Year (AY) 2026–27, especially when the law governing the income and the law governing the compliance are… not quite the same.

The Legal Backbone: Section 536 – Repeal with a Safety Net

The answer lies in Section 536 of the Income-tax Act, 2025, which acts like a time-travel stabilizer.

👉 As per the provision (see ):

  • The Income-tax Act, 1961 is repealed
  • BUT… its provisions continue to apply for:
    • Tax years beginning before 1st April 2026
    • All related proceedings (assessment, reassessment, appeals, penalties, etc.)

Think of it as shutting down a software system but keeping its backend alive for all pending transactions.

Step 1: Understanding the Timeline Confusion : AY 2026–27 Compliances

ConceptGoverned by
Income earned in FY 2025–26Income-tax Act, 1961
Assessment Year 2026–27Old Act logic continues
Compliance actions in FY 2026–27Hybrid (Old + New Act interplay)

So even though the new Act is in force, the income belongs to the old regime.

Step 2: Filing of Return – Old Soul, New Body

Here’s the key rule:

👉 Returns for AY 2026–27 will still be governed by the Income-tax Act, 1961

Why?

Because Section 536 clearly states that:

  • Proceedings for tax years before 1 April 2026
  • Must be carried out as per the repealed Act

What this means in practice:

  • ITR forms will still be based on old provisions
  • Deductions (80C, 80D etc.) continue as per old law
  • Income heads, computation rules remain unchanged

📌 In short:
You file like it’s 2025, even though it’s 2026.

Step 3: Payment of Tax – Where the Twist Begins

Now comes the interesting crossover.

Section 536(2)(g) introduces a subtle but powerful shift:

👉 If after 1 April 2026:

  • Refund arises → Interest governed by new Act
  • Tax default occurs → Interest governed by new Act

Translation:

SituationApplicable Law
Tax computationOld Act
Return filingOld Act
Interest on delay (post April 2026)New Act
Interest on refundsNew Act

⚡ This creates a split personality compliance system:

  • The tax liability is born in the old Act
  • But interest consequences live in the new Act

Step 4: Advance Tax & Self-Assessment Tax

Let’s tackle the practical question every CA will ask:

“Which law governs tax payments made in FY 2026–27 for AY 2026–27?”

Answer:

  • Nature of tax → Old Act (since it relates to FY 2025–26 income)
  • Consequences of delay/payment timing (after 01.04.2026) → New Act

So:

  • Advance tax installments (if any spillover)
  • Self-assessment tax paid in FY 2026–27

👉 Computed under old law
👉 But interest exposure governed by new law

It’s like writing an exam under the old syllabus… but penalties are graded under a new rulebook.

Step 5: Assessments, Reassessments & Notices

This is where Section 536 is crystal clear:

👉 Even if proceedings are initiated after 01.04.2026,
they will still follow the old Act if they relate to earlier tax years.

This includes:

  • Notices u/s 148
  • Scrutiny assessments
  • Rectifications
  • Appeals

📌 Entire procedural framework continues under the 1961 Act

Step 6: Carry Forward of Losses & Credits

The law ensures continuity like a careful accountant closing books:

  • Business losses, capital losses → Carried forward under old rules
  • MAT/AMT credits → Continue seamlessly
  • Unabsorbed depreciation → Migrates into new Act structure

👉 But the manner of set-off remains rooted in the old Act

Step 7: The Hidden Risk Zone ⚠️

This transition is not just academic. It creates real risks:

1. Interest Miscalculation

Professionals may apply old interest provisions out of habit,
but new Act applies post April 2026

2. Compliance Confusion

Taxpayers may assume:

“New Act started → Old compliance ended”

Which is incorrect

3. Litigation Opportunities

Interpretational disputes may arise on:

  • Applicability of interest provisions
  • Procedural overlaps
  • Transitional mismatches

Step 8: The Big Picture

Think of AY 2026–27 as a bridge year:

  • One foot in the 1961 Act
  • One foot in the 2025 Act

Not a clean break. More like a relay race where the baton is still mid-air.

Final Takeaway

Here’s the distilled essence:

✔ Income → Old Act
✔ Return → Old Act
✔ Assessment → Old Act
✔ Interest (post 01.04.2026) → New Act
✔ Recovery → New Act enabled
✔ Losses & credits → Seamless transition

Closing Thoughts

Tax law rarely creates poetry. But this transition?

It’s a carefully choreographed duet between two legislations.
One exiting the stage, the other entering, while the music never stops.

And AY 2026–27 sits right in the spotlight.

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