Short Description :
Income-Tax Act 2025 is the definitive annotated text of India's new direct tax code, updated to incorporate all amendments introduced by the Finance Act 2026. The 2025 Act is the most consequential restructuring of Indian direct tax law in over six decades, consolidating the old law into 535+ sections across 22 chapters while replacing the previous year/assessment year framework with a unified 'tax year.' Every provision carries a four-dimension annotation covering applicable Rules and Forms, CBDT Circulars and Notifications, judicially noticed words and phrases, and allied law cross-references—with the full text of every cited statute reproduced in the Appendix, making this a truly self-contained desk reference. Three granular cross-reference tables mapping the complete 1961–2025 transition—down to the sub-section and clause level—alongside an inline 'Corresponding Provision' reference under every section, make this the indispensable transition tool for a profession trained under the old Act. Spanning over 1,500 pages and incorporating five legislative instruments, this is the authoritative single-volume reference for every constituent of India's direct tax profession.
| Subject : | INCOME TAX ACT 2025 |
| Author : | Taxmann |
| Feature : | Income-Tax Act 2025 is the definitive, fully annotated text
of India's landmark Income-tax Act 2025—the successor legislation to the
Income-tax Act 1961—as further amended by the Finance Act 2026. This is
Taxmann's flagship publication, now in its 73rd Edition, and represents over
six decades of unbroken editorial continuity. The Income-tax Act 2025 is the most consequential
restructuring of Indian direct tax law in over six decades. It repeals and
replaces the Income-tax Act, 1961—consolidating, rationalising, and renumbering
an entire body of law that had accumulated across nearly 300 amendments and
countless provisos, explanations, and sub-clauses over 60 years. The 2025 Act
restructures 298 sections of the old law into 535+ sections across 22 chapters,
introducing logical sub-sectioning, tabular presentation of rates and
conditions, cleaner definitional architecture, and a new concept of ‘tax year’
to replace the old ‘previous year/assessment year’ framework. With over 1,500 pages, including five legislative
instruments, three cross-reference tables, associated law provisions, and a
comprehensive subject index—all centred around a fully annotated statutory
text—this volume stands as the definitive single-volume reference on the
Income-tax Act, 2025 for the Indian legal and tax community. This publication serves the full spectrum of India's direct
tax constituency: Practising Professionals — Chartered accountants, tax
advocates, and consultants who need an annotation-rich, always-updated primary
text for daily advisory, compliance, and litigation work. The volume's
annotation structure is calibrated precisely for the working professional who
needs to know not just the provision but also the applicable rule, the relevant
CBDT circular, and the judicial meaning of key terms—all from a single source Corporate Tax Functions — In-house counsel, CFOs, and tax
departments of companies navigating the transition from the old to the new Act,
particularly in areas involving MAT computation, transfer pricing, capital
gains, and the new tax regime applicable to domestic companies and co-operative
societies Income Tax Department and Tribunal Members — Officers
conducting assessment, reassessment, search, and survey proceedings; appellate
authorities hearing appeals before the Commissioner (Appeals), Joint
Commissioner (Appeals), and ITAT; and members dealing with revised faceless
assessment and dispute resolution procedures introduced under the new Act International Tax Practitioners — Specialists advising on
DTAA positions, non-resident taxation, transfer pricing, GAAR, CbCR, APAs, and
IFSC unit taxation, all of which are significantly restructured and
re-sectioned under the 2025 Act Law and Commerce Students, CA/CS/CMA Aspirants — The primary
statutory text, with its institutional cross-references and contextual
annotations, serves equally as an examination resource and a foundation for
professional-level understanding of the new code The Present Publication, in its 73rd Edition | 2026, upholds
its tradition of unmatched accuracy and reliability. It is updated to
incorporate the latest amendments introduced by the Finance Act 2026. The book
is authored and edited by Taxmann's Editorial Board, continuing its legacy as a
cornerstone in Direct Tax, with the following noteworthy features: [Fully Annotated Statutory Text—Four-Dimension Architecture]
The statutory text of every section is accompanied by four layers of structured
annotation: Rules and Forms — Each provision is cross-referenced to the
corresponding rule(s) under the Income-tax Rules 2026 and the prescribed
form(s). For example, references to Rule 3 or Rule 4 alongside the relevant
provision, and form references where compliance requires filing—eliminating the
need to separately consult the Rules Circulars and Notifications — Relevant CBDT circulars and
notifications are cited directly beneath the provision they qualify or clarify.
Historical circulars going back to the 1970s and 1980s are retained where they
remain operative, giving practitioners the complete administrative guidance
landscape alongside the statutory text Words and Phrases Judicially Noticed — Terms that have
acquired specific judicial meaning—such as 'accumulated profits,'
'distribution,' 'beneficially held,' 'in the ordinary course of business,'
'manufacture,' 'charitable purpose,' 'person,' and others—are flagged at the
precise provision where they arise. Allied Laws — Where a provision cross-references another statute—the
Companies Act 2013, the Indian Partnership Act 1932, the Reserve Bank of India
Act 1934, the FEMA 1999, the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita 2023, the IT Act 2000, and
several others—the relevant allied law provision is identified in the
annotation and its full text is reproduced in the Appendix to Division One.
This is a significant editorial feature: the reader does not need to
cross-refer to a separate volume of statutes to understand the complete legal
position [Finance Act 2026 Amendments—Incorporated] Every change introduced by the Finance Act 2026 is
incorporated directly into the text of the relevant provision, not listed
separately or flagged in a table of amendments. Where a sub-section has been
substituted or a clause omitted, the amended text appears in its correct
position with a footnote identifying the change, effective date (w.e.f.), and
the prior text. This ensures that the reader always works with the current
legal position—not an unamended base text with addenda Representative Finance Act 2026 amendments incorporated
include the substitution of the definition of 'co-operative society' (Section
2(32)) to include Multi-State Co-operative Societies, the omission of
sub-clause (f) from the definition of 'dividend' (Section 2(40)) relating to buybacks,
and the expanded definition of 'group entity' for IFSC Finance Company
purposes—all incorporated inline with the statutory text [Three-Layer 1961–2025 Correspondence System] The most
operationally critical feature of this Edition for practitioners trained under
the old Act is the three-tier cross-reference apparatus between the 1961 and
2025 Acts: Inline Corresponding Provision — Every section carries a
'Corresponding Provision' reference to its 1961 Act equivalent immediately
after the section text. This is consistently applied throughout, even where a
single 2025 provision consolidates multiple 1961 provisions (e.g., Section
2(90) corresponds to Section 2(37A); Section 8 corresponds to Section 9B;
Section 116 maps to Sections 72, 72A, and 72AB of the 1961 Act) Table 1 | 1961 Act → 2025 Act — A dedicated table at the
front maps every section (and key sub-sections/clauses) of the 1961 Act to the
corresponding provision of the 2025 Act, with section headings for both Table 2 | 2025 Act → 1961 Act — The reverse mapping,
allowing practitioners beginning from the 2025 Act provision to identify its
1961 origin Comprehensive Table | Sub-Section and Clause Level — The
most granular layer maps every sub-section and clause of the 2025 Act to the
equivalent sub-section and clause of the 1961 Act. Where a single 2025 clause
corresponds to multiple 1961 provisions—as is common given the consolidation
exercise—all are listed. For complex provisions such as Section 206 (MAT/AMT)
or Section 532 (power to frame schemes), the mapping runs to several pages [Five Legislative Instruments in One Volume] The volume
extends beyond the 2025 Act to include the full text of four companion
legislative instruments—converting it into a complete desk reference for direct
tax practice: Income-tax Act 2025 (as amended by Finance Act 2026) Finance Act 2026 Securities Transaction Tax Commodities Transaction Tax Foreign Assets of Small Taxpayers Disclosure Scheme 2026 [Appendix of Allied Laws and Subject Index] The Appendix
reproduces the complete text of every allied law provision cited anywhere in
the 2025 Act—including relevant sections from the Companies Act 2013, the
Indian Partnership Act 1932, the RBI Act 1934, the LLP Act 2008, SCRA 1956,
FEMA 1999, the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita 2023, the Information Technology Act
2000, the PFRDA Act, and several regulatory frameworks under IRDAI and SEBI.
The Subject Index provides a parallel, concept-based point of entry into the
Act for practitioners who are navigating a legal question rather than a known
section number. The coverage of the book is as follows: Preliminary Comparative Tables Table 1 — All sections of the Income-tax Act 1961 with their
corresponding sections in the Income-tax Act 2025 (section headings for both
Acts included) Table 2 — All sections of the Income-tax Act 2025 with their
corresponding sections in the Income-tax Act 1961 Table 3 — A comprehensive, clause-level table mapping every
section, sub-section, and clause of the 2025 Act to the corresponding provision
of the 1961 Act—an indispensable tool for practitioners migrating institutional
knowledge from the old regime to the new Division One — Income-tax Act 2025 Arrangement of Sections — Full topical listing of all 535+
sections across 22 chapters Complete annotated text of the Income-tax Act 2025 as
amended by the Finance Act 2026 Appendix — List of provisions of Allied Acts, Circulars, and
Regulations referred to in the Act, followed by the full text of each such
provision Subject Index — A detailed keyword and concept index
enabling rapid location of any topic within the Act Division Two — Finance Act 2026 (Dedicated Section) Arrangement of Sections Full text of the Finance Act 2026 Division Three — Securities Transaction Tax Arrangement of Sections Full statutory text of the Securities Transaction Tax Division Four — Commodities Transaction Tax Arrangement of Sections Full statutory text of the Commodities Transaction Tax Division Five — Foreign Assets of Small Taxpayers Disclosure
Scheme 2026 Arrangement of Paragraphs Full text of the Scheme The book follows a five-layer navigational architecture: Layer 1 — Macro Cross-Reference (Front Matter) | Three
tables occupying over 350 pages map the entire 1961–2025 Act transition at
section, sub-section, and clause level. This is the primary orientation tool
for a profession that has worked with the 1961 Act for six decades Layer 2 — Chapter and Section Arrangement | The Arrangement
of Sections within Division One provides a chapter-by-chapter, sub-head-by-sub-head,
section-by-section page reference across all 535+ sections and their
sub-divisions Layer 3 — Annotated Section Text | Within each section, the
layout is: statutory text → 'Corresponding Provision' cross-reference →
footnotes covering rules, forms, circulars, notifications, judicial vocabulary,
and allied law references. Finance Act, 2026 amendments are incorporated into
the body with identifying footnotes Layer 4 — Appendix as Self-Contained Allied Law Reference |
The Appendix in Division One reproduces the complete text of every allied
statute provision cited in the Act—eliminating the need to consult separate
volumes for definitions, procedural provisions, and regulatory frameworks drawn
from dozens of other statutes
Layer 5 — Subject Index as Reverse Entry Point | The
detailed Subject Index enables concept-driven access to the Act, complementing
the section-based and table-based navigation available at the front of the
volume |
| Dispatch : | The Book shall be Dispatched by standard Courier Service within 2 working Days. |
| Author | Taxmann |
| Publisher: | Taxmann |
| Date of Publication : | March 2026 |
| Edition : | 73rd Edition |
| No. of Pages : | 1536 |
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