Income-tax draft rules 2026: The draft document for the updated Income Tax rules 2025, set to come into effect from 1 April this year state changed numbers for Form 16 (TDS on salary) and Form 26AS (AIS), among others, CAs have highlighted in multiple reports.
According to a CNBC-TV18 report, the Income-Tax Act 2026, have been opened for stakeholder consultation, with chartered accountants noting that among other things, the forms have been renumbered. This includes Form 16 to Form 130, and Form 26AS to Form 168.
An official notification to this effect is awaited, it added, noting that no major procedural change is expected. It cited CA Mrinal Mehta, Joint Secretary of the Bombay Chartered Accountants’ Society saying that the reporting formats remain unchanged.
Further, Vikas Sharma, Lead – Personal Tax at AKM Global also told the publication the move is “structural and administrative”, while the content, purpose, and timelines for salaried taxpayers and employers “remain largely unchanged”.
What are the new numbers for I-T forms?
According to a report by The Economic Times, citing CA Suresh Surana, tax forms including Form 13, 16, 16A, 24Q, 26Q, 27Q, and 26AS are to be renamed effective from April 1, 2026, when the new I-T Act is officially implemented.
Further, forms 3CA, 3CB, and 3CD are to be amalgamated into one single Form 26, it added. Here’s a look at the new forms and their purpose:
Surana told the paper that compliances and all communications relating to Tax Year 2026-27 onwards, “may be expected to move to the renumbered forms under the new I-T Act… However, the operational rollout will remain subject to notifications, utilities and system readiness of the income-tax portal.”
Will we see transition period between old and new form numbers?
As per the ET report, the government is likely to allow “parallel” operation or transition period before fully imposing the changed Form numbers, given most taxpayers’ years-long familiarity with the old system. “While some short-term confusion cannot be ruled out, the impact is likely to be transitory, provided adequate communication and handholding measures accompany the transition,” Surana stated.
At present, the Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) has called for stakeholder comments, consultations and feedback on the draft new law. The Parliament is expected to pass the law on or before 1 April.
Surana also told the paper he expects the CBDT to issue detailed FAQs on the revised forms sometime soon in order to “provide more clarity on the applicability of the statutory forms”.
