Income Tax

Section 87A & Section 156 Rebate: Why Tax May Still Be Payable Below ₹12 Lakh

01 June 2026

Section 87A & Section 156 Rebate: Why Tax May Still Be Payable Below ₹12 Lakh

Author: CA VARUN GUPTA   |   Date: 01 Jun 2026

1. Introduction

There is considerable confusion among taxpayers regarding the rebate available under section 87A of the Income-tax Act, 1961 and section 156 of the Income-tax Act, 2025, particularly after the enhanced rebate applicable from Financial Year 2025-26 / Assessment Year 2026-27 onwards. Many taxpayers understand the rebate limit as a complete exemption limit and assume that no income-tax can be payable if total income is within ₹12,00,000. This understanding is not correct in every situation. In this article, we will discuss the concept of rebate in detail, compare the relevant provisions under the Income-tax Act, 1961 and the Income-tax Act, 2025, and explain the important scenarios where rebate is available, restricted or not available at all.

Under the Income-tax Act, 1961, this rebate is governed by section 87A. Under the Income-tax Act, 2025, the corresponding provision is section 156. Both provisions are similar in nature and provide rebate from income-tax to eligible resident individuals.

Section 87A of the Income-tax Act, 1961 / section 156 of the Income-tax Act, 2025 does not make income exempt. It only grants a rebate from income-tax after the tax is first computed. Therefore, in certain cases, tax may still be payable even when the total income is within the rebate limit.

For Assessment Year 2026-27, under the new tax regime, a resident individual may get rebate up to ₹60,000 where total income does not exceed ₹12,00,000. Under the old tax regime, rebate remains available up to ₹12,500 where total income does not exceed ₹5,00,000.

However, this does not mean that ₹12,00,000 is the basic exemption limit. The basic exemption limit under the new tax regime is ₹4,00,000. The amount of ₹12,00,000 is only the upper income limit for claiming rebate under section 87A of the 1961 Act / section 156 of the 2025 Act, subject to the conditions and restrictions provided in the section.

This distinction is very important because many taxpayers see a tax demand even when their total income is below ₹12,00,000, especially where the income includes capital gains, lottery income, virtual digital asset income, unexplained income, or other income taxable at special rates.

We have tried to cover all relevant aspects in this article. However, if you still have any queries or require further clarification, you may contact us at the details mentioned at the end of this article.

2. Section 87A / Section 156 is a rebate, not an exemption

The first and most important point is that section 87A of the Income-tax Act, 1961 / section 156 of the Income-tax Act, 2025 is not an exemption provision. It is a rebate provision.

ParticularsMeaning
Basic exemption limitIncome up to this level is not charged to normal slab tax
Section 87A / Section 156 rebate limitTax is first calculated and then reduced by rebate, if conditions are satisfied

Under the new tax regime for AY 2026-27, the normal slab structure starts with nil tax up to ₹4,00,000. Thereafter, tax is calculated at 5%, 10%, 15%, 20%, 25% and 30%, depending upon the income slab.

Under the Income-tax Act, 1961, the new tax regime is contained in section 115BAC(1A). Under the Income-tax Act, 2025, the corresponding new tax regime provision is section 202(1).

Therefore, ₹12,00,000 is not the basic exemption limit. It is only the income limit up to which rebate under section 87A / section 156 may be available to an eligible resident individual.

In simple words:

Income up to ₹4,00,000 is not taxable under the new regime because of the basic exemption slab. Income above ₹4,00,000 and up to ₹12,00,000 becomes effectively tax-free only because of rebate under section 87A of the 1961 Act / section 156 of the 2025 Act, subject to statutory conditions.

3. What section 87A / section 156 provides

Section 87A of the Income-tax Act, 1961 / section 156 of the Income-tax Act, 2025 applies only to an individual resident in India.

Broadly, the rebate provision operates as under:

Tax regimeRelevant section under 1961 ActCorresponding section under 2025 ActEligible assesseeIncome limitMaximum rebate
Old tax regime / normal provisionSection 87A main provisionSection 156(1)Resident individualTotal income up to ₹5,00,000₹12,500
New tax regimeSection 87A first proviso read with section 115BAC(1A)Section 156(2) read with section 202(1)Resident individualTotal income up to ₹12,00,000₹60,000

The Finance Act, 2025 amended section 87A with effect from 01.04.2026. Accordingly, for Financial Year 2025-26 / Assessment Year 2026-27, the new-regime rebate limit was increased from ₹7,00,000 to ₹12,00,000 and the maximum rebate was increased from ₹25,000 to ₹60,000.

The Income-tax Act, 2025 carries the same broad position in section 156. Section 156(2) provides rebate where the total income of a resident individual is chargeable under section 202(1), i.e., the new tax regime under the 2025 Act.

However, Finance Act, 2025 also inserted an important restriction in section 87A. Similarly, section 156(3) of the Income-tax Act, 2025 provides that the deduction under section 156(2) shall not exceed the income-tax payable as per the rates provided in section 202(1).

This means that the rebate is linked to normal slab-rate tax under the new regime and does not automatically eliminate tax payable on special-rate income.

This is the main reason why tax may still become payable even when total income is below ₹12,00,000.

4. Why tax may still be payable even when income is below ₹12 lakh

The phrase “no tax up to ₹12 lakh” should be understood carefully. It is broadly correct only where the income is taxable under normal slab rates and the assessee satisfies all conditions of section 87A of the 1961 Act / section 156 of the 2025 Act.

It is not a blanket exemption for every type of income.

Tax may still be payable where:

  • 1. the assessee is not a resident individual;
  • 2. the assessee opts for the old regime and income exceeds ₹5,00,000;
  • 3. total income exceeds the prescribed rebate limit;
  • 4. income includes special-rate income such as capital gains, lottery income, online gaming income, virtual digital asset income, unexplained income, etc.;
  • 5. tax payable is in the nature of cess, surcharge, interest, late fee or penalty;
  • 6. total income is increased during processing, assessment or reassessment beyond the eligible limit.

Thus, section 87A / section 156 gives relief only within the boundaries of the rebate provision. It cannot be treated as a general exemption from tax.

Important practical point: In many cases, because of the statutory limitation on rebate, the assessee may still be required to pay tax even when total income is within the rebate limit. However, this does not mean that tax planning or relief is not possible in every case. Depending upon the facts, nature of income, period of holding, type of capital gain, set-off eligibility, deductions, exemptions, regime selection and other applicable provisions, there may still be lawful ways to reduce or avoid tax liability, particularly in cases involving STCG, LTCG or other special-rate income. Since the correct treatment differs from case to case, professional advice should be taken before filing the return or responding to any demand. For case-specific guidance, you may contact us at the details mentioned at the end of this article.

5. Example 1: Normal income of ₹12 lakh under new regime — no tax payable

Assume a resident individual has salary income of ₹12,00,000 and opts for the new tax regime.

ParticularsAmount
Tax on first ₹ 4,00,000Nil
Tax on ₹ 4,00,001 to ₹ 8,00,000 @ 5%₹ 20,000
Tax on ₹ 8,00,001 to ₹ 12,00,000 @ 10%₹ 40,000
Total tax before rebate₹ 60,000
Less: Rebate under section 87A / section 156₹ 60,000
Tax payableNil

In this case, the entire tax of ₹60,000 is normal slab-rate tax under section 115BAC(1A) of the 1961 Act / section 202(1) of the 2025 Act. Therefore, rebate under section 87A / section 156 covers the full tax and the final tax payable becomes nil.

6 Example 2: Income below ₹12 lakh but includes STCG under section 111A / section 196

Assume a resident individual has the following income under the new regime:

ParticularsAmount
Normal taxable income₹ 10,00,000
Short-term capital gain under section 111A of the 1961 Act / section 196 of the 2025 Act₹ 1,00,000
Total income₹ 11,00,000

Now, tax on normal income of ₹10,00,000 under section 115BAC(1A) of the 1961 Act / section 202(1) of the 2025 Act will be:

ParticularsAmount
Tax up to ₹ 4,00,000Nil
Tax on ₹ 4,00,001 to ₹ 8,00,000 @ 5%₹ 20,000
Tax on ₹ 8,00,001 to ₹ 10,00,000 @ 10%₹ 20,000
Total normal slab tax₹ 40,000
Less: Rebate under section 87A / section 156₹ 40,000
Normal tax payableNil

However, short-term capital gain under section 111A of the 1961 Act / section 196 of the 2025 Act is taxed separately at special rate. For transfers on or after 23.07.2024, STCG on STT-paid listed equity shares, equity-oriented mutual funds and units of business trust is taxable at 20%.

Therefore:

ParticularsAmount
STCG under section 111A / section 196₹ 1,00,000
Tax @ 20%₹ 20,000
Health and Education Cess @ 4%₹ 800
Final tax payable₹ 20,800

Thus, even though total income is only ₹11,00,000, tax is still payable because rebate under section 87A / section 156 under the new regime does not wipe out the special-rate tax.

7. Example 3: Only special-rate income below ₹12 lakh

Assume a resident individual has only STCG under section 111A of the 1961 Act / section 196 of the 2025 Act of ₹5,00,000 and no other normal income.

ParticularsAmount
STCG under section 111A / section 196₹ 5,00,000
Normal incomeNil
Total income₹ 5,00,000

At first glance, the taxpayer may think that since total income is below ₹12,00,000, no tax is payable. However, this income is not normal slab income. It is special-rate capital gain income.

Since there is no normal slab-rate tax under section 115BAC(1A) of the 1961 Act / section 202(1) of the 2025 Act, rebate under section 87A / section 156 may not be available to reduce such special-rate tax under the new regime for AY 2026-27 onwards.

Therefore, tax may still be payable even though total income is below ₹12,00,000.

8. Rebate is specifically not available against LTCG under section 112A / section 198

Section 112A of the 1961 Act / section 198 of the 2025 Act deals with long-term capital gains on listed equity shares, equity-oriented mutual funds and units of business trust, subject to prescribed conditions.

Section 112A(6) of the 1961 Act specifically provides that where total income includes long-term capital gains covered by section 112A, rebate under section 87A is allowed only from the income-tax on total income as reduced by tax payable on such capital gains.

Similarly, under the Income-tax Act, 2025, section 198(7) provides that where total income includes long-term capital gains covered by section 198, rebate under section 156 shall be allowed from the income-tax on the total income as reduced by tax payable on such capital gains.

In simple terms:

Income typeRebate position
Normal slab incomeRebate under section 87A / section 156 may apply, subject to conditions
LTCG under section 112A / section 198Rebate under section 87A / section 156 is not available against tax on such LTCG

Therefore, even if total income is within the rebate limit, tax on LTCG under section 112A of the 1961 Act / section 198 of the 2025 Act may still remain payable.

9. Special-rate incomes where tax may remain payable despite section 87A / section 156

The following are important examples where section 87A / section 156 may not fully remove tax because the income is taxable at special rates:

Nature of incomeIncome-tax Act, 1961Income-tax Act, 2025Rebate impact
STCG on listed equity/equity mutual fund/business trust unitsSection 111ASection 196Tax may remain payable under new regime AY 2026-27 onwards
LTCG generallySection 112Section 197Tax may remain payable due to new restriction
LTCG on listed equity/equity mutual fund/business trust unitsSection 112ASection 198Rebate not available against such LTCG tax
Lottery, crossword puzzle, betting, gambling, horse race etc.Section 115BBSection 194Rebate may not wipe out special-rate tax
Online gaming winningsSection 115BBJSection 194Rebate may not wipe out special-rate tax
Unexplained cash credit, investment, money, expenditure etc.Sections 68 to 69D read with section 115BBESections 102 to 106 read with section 195Rebate may not wipe out special-rate tax
Virtual digital asset / crypto incomeSection 115BBHSection 194Rebate may not wipe out tax
Patent royaltySection 115BBFSection 194Tax may remain payable
Carbon credit incomeSection 115BBGSection 194Tax may remain payable
Certain special-rate income of non-residents / FIIs / NRIsSections 115A, 115AC, 115AD, 115E etc.Relevant reorganised provisions in 2025 ActGenerally not relevant for 87A / 156 if assessee itself is non-resident

The important point is that after the Finance Act, 2025 amendment, the new-regime rebate under section 87A is restricted to tax payable as per the normal slab rates under section 115BAC(1A). Similarly, under section 156(3) of the Income-tax Act, 2025, rebate under section 156(2) cannot exceed tax payable as per rates under section 202(1).

Therefore, tax payable under special-rate provisions may continue to remain payable.

10. Cases where section 87A / section 156 rebate is not available at all

Section 87A of the 1961 Act / section 156 of the 2025 Act is not available in the following cases:

SituationWhether section 87A / section 156 applies?Reason
Resident individualYes, subject to income limit and other conditionsCovered by rebate provision
Non-resident individualNoRebate applies only to resident individual
HUFNoRebate applies only to individual
Firm / LLPNoNot an individual
CompanyNoNot an individual
AOP / BOINoNot an individual
Trust / SocietyNoNot an individual
Co-operative societyNoNot an individual
Local authority / artificial juridical personNoNot an individual

Important point: A resident but not ordinarily resident individual is still a resident for this purpose. Therefore, if other conditions are satisfied, such individual may claim rebate under section 87A / section 156. However, a non-resident individual cannot claim this rebate.

11. Rebate is not available where total income exceeds the prescribed limit

The income limit is checked with reference to total income, not gross receipts.

Tax regime1961 Act provision2025 Act provisionRebate limitMaximum rebateWhen rebate is not available
Old tax regime / normal provisionSection 87A main provisionSection 156(1)Total income up to ₹5,00,000₹12,500If total income exceeds ₹5,00,000
New tax regimeSection 87A first proviso read with section 115BAC(1A)Section 156(2) read with section 202(1)Total income up to ₹12,00,000₹60,000If total income exceeds ₹12,00,000, subject to limited marginal relief

Therefore, where total income exceeds the prescribed limit, rebate under section 87A / section 156 is not available in the normal manner.

For example:

SituationResult
Old regime total income ₹4,90,000Rebate available up to ₹12,500
Old regime total income ₹5,10,000Rebate not available
New regime total income ₹12,00,000Rebate available up to ₹60,000, subject to special-rate income restriction
New regime total income ₹12,50,000Normal rebate not available; only marginal relief may apply if conditions are satisfied

12. ₹60,000 rebate is not available under old regime

Another common mistake is that taxpayers apply the new regime rebate limit even while choosing the old regime.

This is incorrect.

The ₹60,000 rebate limit is applicable only where total income is chargeable to tax under section 115BAC(1A) of the 1961 Act / section 202(1) of the 2025 Act, i.e., the new tax regime. If the assessee chooses the old tax regime, the rebate is restricted to ₹12,500 and is available only where total income does not exceed ₹5,00,000.

Therefore:

ExampleResult
Old regime income ₹4,80,000Rebate up to ₹12,500 available
Old regime income ₹7,00,000₹60,000 rebate not available
Old regime income ₹10,00,000₹60,000 rebate not available
New regime income ₹12,00,000Rebate up to ₹60,000 may be available, subject to conditions

13. Rebate is limited to income-tax and does not apply to interest, late fee or penalty

Section 87A of the 1961 Act / section 156 of the 2025 Act provides rebate from income-tax. It does not provide rebate from every amount payable under the Income-tax Act.

Therefore, section 87A / section 156 does not directly reduce the following:

ItemIncome-tax Act, 1961Income-tax Act, 2025Whether rebate applies?
Health and Education CessApplicable after tax computationApplicable after tax computationNo direct rebate; cess is calculated after rebate on remaining tax
SurchargeApplicable as per relevant rate provisionsApplicable as per relevant rate provisionsNo direct rebate
Interest for delay in filing returnSection 234ASection 423No
Interest for default in payment of advance taxSection 234BSection 424No
Interest for deferment of advance taxSection 234CSection 425No
Late filing feeSection 234FSection 428No
Interest on demandSection 220(2)Section 411(3)No, except separate waiver if covered by specific CBDT circular/order
PenaltyRelevant penalty provisionsRelevant penalty provisionsNo

For example, if a taxpayer is eligible for full rebate under section 87A / section 156 and income-tax becomes nil, but the return is filed late, late filing fee may still be payable if applicable. The rebate provision does not waive such fee.

Similarly, if tax on special-rate income remains payable and payment is delayed, interest consequences may arise separately.

14. Effect of agricultural income

Agricultural income is generally exempt, but in certain cases it is aggregated for rate purposes. Due to this rate impact, tax may increase.

If the tax computed after agricultural income aggregation exceeds the maximum rebate available under section 87A of the 1961 Act / section 156 of the 2025 Act, the excess tax may remain payable.

This does not mean that section 87A / section 156 is denied. It only means that the rebate is limited to the maximum statutory amount of ₹12,500 under the old regime or ₹60,000 under the new regime, as applicable.

15. Rebate may be withdrawn if income is increased during processing or assessment

Many times, the assessee claims rebate under section 87A / section 156 in the return of income because the returned total income is within the prescribed limit. However, if during processing, assessment, reassessment or appellate proceedings, total income is increased beyond the eligible limit, the rebate may be withdrawn.

Under the 1961 Act, processing of return is generally done under section 143(1). Under the 2025 Act, the corresponding processing provision is contained in section 270(1).

Example:

ParticularsAmount
Returned total income under old regime₹ 4,90,000
Addition made during processing / assessment₹ 50,000
Revised total income₹ 5,40,000

Since the total income now exceeds ₹5,00,000, rebate under section 87A of the 1961 Act / section 156 of the 2025 Act under the old-regime limit will not be available.

The same principle applies under the new regime if total income exceeds ₹12,00,000, subject to marginal relief provisions.

16. TDS deduction does not decide section 87A / section 156 eligibility

TDS is only tax already deducted at source. It does not decide whether rebate under section 87A / section 156 is available.

Eligibility for rebate depends upon:

  • 1. residential status;
  • 2. status of assessee;
  • 3. total income;
  • 4. tax regime selected;
  • 5. nature of income;
  • 6. special-rate tax restrictions.

Therefore:

SituationResult
TDS deducted and assessee eligible for rebate under section 87A / section 156Refund may arise
TDS deducted but assessee not eligible for rebateRebate cannot be claimed merely because TDS is deducted
Special-rate tax is payableTDS may be adjusted, but rebate may not eliminate tax

17. Belated return is not by itself a ground to deny section 87A / section 156

Section 87A of the 1961 Act / section 156 of the 2025 Act does not provide that rebate will be denied merely because the return is filed after the due date.

Therefore, belated filing of return by itself should not deny rebate, provided the assessee otherwise satisfies the conditions of the rebate provision.

However, late filing fee under section 234F of the 1961 Act / section 428 of the 2025 Act, interest under sections 234A, 234B and 234C of the 1961 Act / sections 423, 424 and 425 of the 2025 Act, and other consequences may separately apply, wherever applicable.

18. Complete checklist: When section 87A / section 156 rebate is not available, not applied or restricted

S. No.SituationEffect
1Assessee is not an individualRebate not available
2Assessee is a non-resident individualRebate not available
3Assessee is HUF, firm, LLP, company, trust, AOP, BOI, society, co-operative society etc.Rebate not available
4Old-regime total income exceeds ₹5,00,000Rebate not available
5New-regime total income exceeds ₹12,00,000Rebate not available in normal manner, subject to marginal relief
6Assessee claims ₹60,000 rebate while opting for old regimeNot permissible
7Tax is payable on LTCG under section 112A of the 1961 Act / section 198 of the 2025 ActRebate not available against such LTCG tax
8Tax is payable on STCG under section 111A of the 1961 Act / section 196 of the 2025 Act under new regime for AY 2026-27 onwardsTax may remain payable due to new restriction
9Income is taxable under section 112 of the 1961 Act / section 197 of the 2025 Act at special rateTax may remain payable
10Income is from lottery, betting, gambling, crossword puzzle, horse race etc. under section 115BB of the 1961 Act / section 194 of the 2025 ActTax may remain payable
11Income is from online gaming under section 115BBJ of the 1961 Act / section 194 of the 2025 ActTax may remain payable
12Income is unexplained income under sections 68 to 69D read with section 115BBE of the 1961 Act / sections 102 to 106 read with section 195 of the 2025 ActTax may remain payable
13Income is from virtual digital assets under section 115BBH of the 1961 Act / section 194 of the 2025 ActTax may remain payable
14Income is from patent royalty or carbon credits under sections 115BBF / 115BBG of the 1961 Act / section 194 of the 2025 ActTax may remain payable
15Tax payable is cess, surcharge, interest, late fee or penaltySection 87A / section 156 does not apply directly
16Total income is increased after processing / assessment beyond the prescribed limitRebate may be withdrawn
17There is no normal slab-rate tax under section 115BAC(1A) of the 1961 Act / section 202(1) of the 2025 Act against which new-regime rebate can be absorbedRebate may become nil or restricted
18Rebate amount exceeds statutory cap of ₹12,500 or ₹60,000Excess tax remains payable

19. Short conclusion

Section 87A / section 156 should be understood as a rebate provision and not as a complete exemption from tax. The benefit is available only to eligible resident individuals and is subject to the prescribed income limit, tax regime and nature of income. Therefore, where income includes special-rate income or any statutory restriction applies, tax may still be payable even when total income is below ₹12,00,000.

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For any query, clarification, or detailed professional consultation in relation to Income Tax or GST matters—particularly notices, assessments, litigation, legal proceedings, or tax demands—you may get in touch with us at the details mentioned below: Mobile: +91-9818640458 | Email: varunmukeshgupta96@gmail.com

Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only. Please consult a qualified Chartered Accountant for advice specific to your situation.

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