For many professionals, presumptive taxation has always been the easiest way to file taxes.
It saves time, avoids complex bookkeeping, and keeps things simple.
But a small change in the Income Tax Act, 2025 could now make this option less beneficial—and even increase your tax bill.
Let’s understand what’s changed in a simple way.
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A Simple Example to Understand the Change
Imagine a professional earning:
Gross receipts: Rs 24 lakh
Actual profit: Rs 15 lakh
Under the Old Law (Income Tax Act, 1961)
Earlier, professionals could simply declare 50% of their receipts as income.
Taxable income = Rs 12 lakh
In many cases, this could mean zero tax under the new tax regime (after rebate).
This made presumptive taxation a popular and convenient choice.
What Has Changed in the New Tax Law
Under the Income Tax Act, 2025, things are different.
Now, if your actual profit is higher than 50%, you may have to declare the higher amount as taxable income.
So in the same example:
Earlier taxable income: Rs 12 lakh
Now taxable income: Rs 15 lakh
A difference of just Rs 3 lakh — but the tax impact is much bigger.
Old vs New: What You Pay Now
Here’s how the change affects you:
Old law taxable income: Rs 12 lakh
New law taxable income: Rs 15 lakh
Tax earlier: Rs 0
Tax now: Rs 1,09,200
That’s an extra tax burden of over Rs 1 lakh, even though your income hasn’t changed.
Why This Change Matters
Experts say this shift removes a key advantage of presumptive taxation.
Earlier, the 50% rule acted like a fixed benchmark, giving professionals flexibility.
Now:
You may need to declare actual profit if it’s higher
This reduces the benefit of “assumed income”
Tax liability can increase significantly
This is especially worrying for professionals who rely on this scheme to avoid detailed accounting.
What Exactly Changed in the Law
The difference lies in how the rule is written.
Old law: 50% of receipts was treated as a base income
New law: You must declare higher of 50% or actual profit
This makes the rule stricter and removes earlier ambiguity.
What Is Presumptive Taxation?
Presumptive taxation is a system where:
You don’t need to maintain detailed books
Income is assumed at a fixed percentage (usually 50%)
Tax is paid on that assumed income
It was designed to make tax filing simple for small professionals.
What Should Professionals Do Now?
With this change, professionals should rethink their tax strategy:
Check if presumptive taxation still benefits you
Compare actual profit vs assumed income
Consider maintaining proper records if needed
Even a small difference in calculation can lead to a much higher tax bill.
Final Takeaway
Same income. Same earnings. But under the new law, you could end up paying more tax.
This change shows that even small updates in tax rules can have a big financial impact.
