Legal Tax Rate by Structure Agriculture: 0% Charitable Trust: 0% Small Biz (§58+§156): 0% GIFT City §147: 0% (20yr) Startup §140: 0% (3yr) New Mfg Co: 15% Cooperative: Low Regular…
Zero Tax is Legal – When Done Right: Some of India’s most legitimate businesses pay zero income tax for years – and this is entirely by design, not accident. Agricultural income has always been exempt. A charitable trust applying all income for approved purposes pays nothing. A DPIIT-recognised startup with IMB certificate (§140, ITA 2025) pays zero corporate tax for 3 years. A GIFT City IFSC entity (§147, ITA 2025) pays zero for 20 years. A small business owner with ₹2 crore turnover using §58 (ITA 2025) presumptive taxation and the ₹12 lakh §156 rebate can also pay zero. This guide covers every major legal structure that creates low or zero tax outcomes in India – as per ITA 2025 provisions.
1. Quick Reference – All Legal Low/Zero Tax Structures
Structure
Effective Tax Rate
ITA 2025
ITA 1961
Key Condition
Agricultural income
0%
§11 Schedule II
§10(1)
Genuine agricultural income; land used for agriculture
Charitable/religious trust
0% (on applied income)
§11/12 ITA 2025
§11/12
Registered under §332-355; 85% income applied for charitable purpose
GIFT City IFSC entity
0% (for 20 years)
§147
§80LA
Valid IFSCA license; IMB/Pr.CCIT certification; 20 of 25 years; commence by 31 Mar 2030
DPIIT startup (IMB certified)
0% (for 3 years)
§140
§80-IAC
DPIIT recognition + IMB certificate; any 3 consecutive years in first 10; ≤₹100Cr turnover
Small business (presumptive + rebate)
0% (if income ≤₹12L)
§58 + §156
§44AD + §87A
Individual; turnover ≤₹3Cr; 6%/8% presumptive income; new regime; total income ≤₹12L
SEZ unit
Varies: 0% for initial years; 50% then 50% of profit
§ 11 Schedule VI / §144
§10AA
Established in notified SEZ; 100% for 5yr, 50% next 5yr, 50% of reinvested profit next 5yr
Cooperative society (primary)
Near 0%
§149
§80P
Primary cooperative; qualifying income (credit, dairy, fishing, cottage); specific deduction
New manufacturing company
15% base rate
§201
§115BAB
Incorporated and commenced manufacturing after 1 Oct 2019; no other deductions claimed
Existing domestic company (small)
22% base rate
§200
§115BAA
Foregoes specific deductions (§10AA, §80-IAC etc.); default 22% rate
HUF with §156 rebate
0% on ₹4L income (old) / effectively low
§202/156
§156(87A) (not for HUF)
HUF gets own basic exemption + slab rates; §156(87A) rebate NOT available to HUF under new regime
Capital gains (LTCG, reinvestment)
0% on reinvested portion
§82/§85/§86
§54/§54EC/§54F
Reinvest LTCG proceeds in new house/bonds/house within prescribed timeline
2. Agricultural Income – Fully Exempt
§11 Schedule II, ITA 2025(= §10(1), ITA 1961) – Agricultural income is completely exempt from income tax in India. This is one of the oldest exemptions in Indian tax law, rooted in the constitutional division of taxation powers between Centre and States.
What Counts as Agricultural Income?
Rent/revenue from land used for agriculture
Income from agricultural operations (cultivation, processing, sale of agricultural produce)
Income from farm buildings on agricultural land used by the cultivator
Income from growing and selling plants, flowers, seeds
Income from tea/coffee/rubber plantations: partially agricultural (40% non-agri for tea, 25% for coffee, 35% for rubber)
What Does NOT Count as Agricultural Income?
Profits from trading in agricultural produce (buying and selling without cultivation)
Income from nurseries selling potted plants (plants grown in pots – no land cultivation)
Income from fisheries, poultry, dairy (not agriculture)
Income from mining of minerals from agricultural land
Partial integration for tax slab purposes: Agricultural income itself is exempt. But for determining the applicable tax slab on non-agricultural income – agricultural income is added to non-agricultural income to determine the slab rate. This “partial integration” prevents wealthy farmers from using agricultural income to bring non-agricultural income into a lower slab. Example: Person earns ₹5 lakh agricultural income + ₹8 lakh business income. The ₹8 lakh is taxed at slab rates applicable to ₹13 lakh (not ₹8 lakh), then tax on ₹5 lakh agricultural portion alone is calculated and subtracted to find net tax on business income.
Agricultural income as a tax evasion tool – under scrutiny: Large unexplained cash deposits claimed as “agricultural income” are a high tax evasion target. Agricultural income exceeding ₹2 lakh requires: (a) land records (7/12 extract, khatoni, land ownership proof), (b) cultivation records, (c) mandi sale receipts/bills, (d) bank receipts. Cash crop income without verifiable land records and sale documentation is routinely disallowed in assessment. Genuine agricultural income is fully exempt – but fabricated claims attract 200% misreporting penalty.
3. Charitable & Religious Trusts – Near-Zero Tax on Applied Income
§11 and §12, ITA 1961 (applicable under ITA 2025 equivalent provisions) – Income of a charitable or religious trust is exempt from income tax if: (a) the trust is registered under §332, (b) at least 85% of income is applied for the charitable/religious purpose during the year, and (c) the remaining 15% may be accumulated (up to 5 years under §11/12 for specific projects).
Registration Requirements
Registration Type
Purpose
Form (ITA 2025)
Old Form
Provisional registration (new trust)
First-time registration – valid 3 years
Form 104
Form 10A
Final registration (after provisional)
Permanent registration after commencement
Form 105
Form 10AB
Statement of donations received
Annual donor statement
Form 113
Form 10BD
Certificate of donation to donor
Issued to donors for §133 (80G-old) deduction
Form 114
Form 10BE
Types of Charitable Purposes
Relief of the poor
Education (schools, colleges, training institutions)
Medical relief (hospitals, dispensaries)
Preservation of environment / monuments
Advancement of any other object of general public utility – BUT if business income exceeds ₹25 lakh or 20% of total income, this category loses exemption
Practical use of trust structure: Schools, hospitals, NGOs, and religious institutions operating as registered trusts pay effectively zero income tax on income applied for the approved purpose. Even private coaching institutes and hospitals can be operated as educational/medical trusts. However: (a) Registration is mandatory – unregistered trusts are taxed at maximum marginal rate; (b) Trust cannot benefit its founders/trustees monetarily (no distribution of profit); (c) IT provisions disqualify trusts whose income benefits specific persons; (d) Trust’s commercial activities beyond a threshold risk losing exemption. Professional management and proper fund application records are essential.
4. HUF – Separate Entity, Second Basic Exemption
A Hindu Undivided Family (HUF) is a separate taxable entity under the Income Tax Act – distinct from its individual members. It has its own PAN, files its own ITR, and gets its own basic exemption limit. This creates a legitimate income-splitting opportunity for Hindu families.
Parameter
Individual (New Regime, ITA 2025)
HUF (New Regime, ITA 2025)
Basic exemption
₹4 lakh (nil tax)
₹4 lakh (separate nil tax for HUF)
Tax slabs
Same progressive slabs
Same progressive slabs
§156 rebate (= §87A)
₹60,000 rebate for income ≤₹12L
NOT available to HUF – only resident individuals
Chapter VIII deductions (§123/§80C etc.)
Available (under old regime)
Available (under old regime) – HUF can invest in ELSS, PPF, LIC, housing loan repayment etc.
Who qualifies?
All individuals
Hindu/Sikh/Jain/Buddhist families – Karta is the senior most male or female member
Formation
N/A
Automatic upon marriage + joint property; no formal registration needed; apply for PAN
ITR deadline TY 2026-27
31 July 2027
31 July 2027
What Income Can Go into an HUF?
Income from ancestral property (joint family property)
Gifts received by the HUF from non-relatives (up to ₹50,000; above this taxable under §92 ITA 2025)
Business income from HUF business (not a profession of individual members)
Investment income on HUF corpus
Rental income from property owned by HUF
Capital gains on HUF assets
What cannot go into HUF: Professional income of individual members (CA/doctor/lawyer’s personal fees) CANNOT be transferred to HUF – it is taxed in the individual’s hands (Baldev Singh case principle). Salary income of individual member cannot be HUF income. Diverting personal income to HUF without genuine basis = tax evasion, not planning. HUF strategy works for genuine joint family property and investments.
HUF Tax Saving Example – TY 2026-27
Sharma family (HUF): HUF earns ₹8 lakh rental income from ancestral property. Mr. Sharma individually earns ₹20 lakh salary.
Without HUF
With HUF
₹8L rental taxed as Mr. Sharma’s income → total ₹28L; tax at applicable slabs (30%)
₹8L HUF income taxed separately: HUF pays tax at ₹8L slab (lower slab); Mr. Sharma’s personal income stays at ₹20L slab
Tax on ₹8L rental in Mr. Sharma’s hands (at 30%): ~₹2.4L
HUF tax on ₹8L (new regime): ₹4L×0 + ₹4L×5% = ₹20,000. Saving: ~₹2.18L
5. §58 ITA 2025 – Presumptive Taxation: Zero Tax for Small Businesses
§58, ITA 2025(= §44AD / §44ADA / §44AE, ITA 1961) – Presumptive Taxation:
Small businesses and professionals can declare income as a flat percentage of turnover – without maintaining detailed profit/loss accounts. Combined with the §156 (ITA 2025) rebate of ₹60,000 for income up to ₹12 lakh under the new tax regime – many small businesses have zero income tax liability.
GST payable on taxable supplies (separate from income tax)
Note: Ram Lal has ₹1.5 crore in receipts but pays zero income tax. This is perfectly legal. He does not need to maintain detailed books of accounts. He must file ITR (§263 ITA 2025 = §139) and GST returns. The zero-tax is on income tax – not GST.
6. Startup 3-Year Holiday – §140, ITA 2025 (= §80-IAC)
A startup with ₹50 lakh annual profit: zero income tax for 3 years = ₹37.5 lakh total saving at 25% corporate tax rate. The IMB application is worth the effort for any profitable startup in the first 10 years.
7. GIFT City / IFSC – 20-Year Holiday – §147, ITA 2025 (= §80LA)
IFSCA-licensed entities at GIFT City IFSC: 100% income tax deduction for any 20 consecutive years out of 25
Finance Act 2026: Holiday extended from 10/15 to 20/25 years; post-holiday rate: 15%
MAT under §206, ITA 2025: 9% for IFSC entities (vs 15% for regular companies); OBUs exempt from MAT
GST: Zero-rated on offshore services; no STT/CTT on exchange trades
Commencement deadline: 31 March 2030
8. New Manufacturing Companies – 15% Corporate Tax (§201, ITA 2025 = §115BAB, ITA 1961)
§201, ITA 2025(= §115BAB, ITA 1961):
A domestic company incorporated after 1 October 2019 that commences manufacturing/production before the prescribed deadline can opt for a 15% base corporate tax rate. This is the lowest corporate tax rate available for manufacturers in India, with effective rate approximately 17% including surcharge and cess.
Parameter
§201 (New Mfg Co)
§200 (Existing Co)
Normal (above ₹400Cr)
Base tax rate
15%
22%
30%
ITA 2025 / ITA 1961 ref
§201(§115BAB)
§200(§115BAA)
Default chapter
Effective rate (incl. surcharge + cess)
~17.01%
~25.17%
~34.94%
MAT applicability
MAT NOT applicable
MAT NOT applicable
MAT applicable at 15%
Deductions allowed
Most deductions NOT allowed
Most deductions NOT allowed
All deductions allowed
Key condition
New manufacturing company; commence production; no prior business carried on
Existing company; opt in; no specific deductions
Default rate
§201, ITA 2025 (§115BAB) for India’s PLI beneficiaries: New manufacturing companies set up to avail Production Linked Incentives (PLI schemes in electronics, pharma, EVs, textiles, food processing, semiconductors etc.) benefit from both the PLI subsidy and the 15% tax rate – a powerful combination. The low tax rate makes India increasingly competitive vs. manufacturing in higher-tax jurisdictions.
9. SEZ Units – Profit-Linked Income Tax Exemption (§144)
§144, ITA 2025 (10AA, ITA 1961 equivalent):
Units established in notified Special Economic Zones (SEZs) get profit-linked income tax exemption on export profits:
Period from Commencement
Income Tax Exemption on Export Profits
Year 1 – Year 5
100% of export profits
Year 6 – Year 10
50% of export profits
Year 11 – Year 15
50% of profits reinvested in Special Economic Zone Re-investment Reserve Account within 3 years
MAT still applies to SEZ units: SEZ units claiming §144 exemption are still subject to MAT at 15% on book profits. The §144 exemption reduces the income tax base but does not eliminate MAT. The effective tax during the first 5 years = MAT at 15% on book profits (not 0% as commonly misunderstood). After the 15-year exemption period, SEZ units pay full corporate tax.
10. Cooperative Societies – Near-Zero Tax via §149
Cooperative societies engaged in specific activities get deductions under §149, ITA 2025 (80P, ITA 1961) that effectively bring their taxable income to near zero.
Type of Cooperative
§149 Deduction
Result
Primary cooperative engaged in banking/credit (credit cooperative societies)
100% of income from such business
Effectively zero tax on banking/credit income
Primary cooperative engaged in activities for cottage industries
100% of income
Zero tax
Primary cooperative engaged in marketing of agricultural produce of members
100% of income
Zero tax
Primary cooperative engaged in supply of agricultural implements, seeds, livestock
100% of income
Zero tax on qualifying income
Primary cooperative engaged in processing of agricultural produce without aid of power
100% of income
Zero tax
Primary cooperative – consumer stores for members
Up to ₹1 lakh deduction
Partial benefit
Other cooperative societies
Lower tax rates; limited §149 deduction
Moderate benefit
11. §202 ITA 2025 – New Tax Regime: Zero Tax Up to ₹12 Lakh
New Tax Regime (default from TY 2026-27) – §202, ITA 2025(= §115BAC, ITA 1961):
Income Slab (TY 2026-27)
New Regime Rate
Old Regime rate
Up to ₹4 lakh
Nil
₹2.5 lakh-₹5 lakh 5%
₹4L – ₹8L
5%
5% (₹2.5 lakh-₹5 lakh); 20% (₹5L-₹10L)
₹8L – ₹12L
10%
20% (₹5L-₹10L); 30% Above ₹10L
₹12L – ₹16L
15%
30%
₹16L – ₹20L
20%
30%
₹20L – ₹24L
25%
30%
Above ₹24L
30%
30%
Rebate §156 ITA 2025 (= §87A)
₹60,000 rebate for resident individuals with total income ≤₹12 lakh → Zero tax on income up to ₹12L
Standard deduction (salaried)
₹75,000
₹50,000
Who should choose new regime vs old regime? New regime is better if: your deductions (§123/§80C, §126/§80D, HRA, home loan interest) total less than ~₹3-4 lakh. Old regime is better if: you have significant §80C investments (₹1.5L), §80D premiums, home loan interest deduction (₹2L), HRA, and other exemptions. For most salaried individuals with standard investments, a quick calculation (GCA Income Tax Calculator on guptachandanassociates.com) will show which regime is optimal for your specific income profile.
12. Capital Gains Optimization – Holding Periods & Reinvestment Exemptions
Capital Gains Tax Rates – TY 2026-27
Asset
Short-Term (STCG)
Long-Term (LTCG)
LTCG Holding Period
Listed equity / equity MFs (STT paid)
§196 – 20% (Budget 2024 raised from 15%)
§198 – 12.5% (₹1.25L exempt); no indexation
12 months
Unlisted equity, startup shares
Slab rate
12.5% (Budget 2024; no indexation)
24 months
Real estate / property
Slab rate
12.5% (Budget 2024; no indexation); 20% with indexation option for pre-July 2024 property
Reinvestment Exemptions – Zero Tax on Capital Gains
Exemption
ITA 2025
ITA 1961
How it Works
Reinvest house property LTCG in new house
§82
§54
Invest proceeds in 1 new residential house within 2 years (purchase) or 3 years (construction). Full LTCG exempt.
Reinvest any LTCG in NHAI/REC bonds
§85
§54EC
Invest up to ₹50L in NHAI/REC/PFC specified bonds within 6 months. 5-year lock-in. LTCG on that portion exempt.
Reinvest non-house LTCG proceeds in new house
§86
§54F
Invest entire sale consideration (not just gains) in 1 new residential house within deadlines. LTCG exempt proportionally.
NR investors in GIFT City IFSC AIF/MF
§11 Schedule VI
§10(4D)/§10(4E)
Non-residents investing in IFSC funds: capital gains fully exempt
13. Key Chapter VIII Deductions (§123–§156, ITA 2025)
These deductions are available ONLY under the old tax regime. New tax regime (§202 ITA 2025) does NOT allow most Chapter VIII deductions – except a few specific ones.
Deduction
ITA 2025
ITA 1961
Maximum Limit
LIC, ELSS, PPF, NSC, home loan principal, tuition fees
§123
§80C
₹1,50,000
NPS (employee contribution)
§124
§80CCD(1)
Within §123 ₹1.5L limit
NPS (additional self contribution)
§124
§80CCD(1B)
Additional ₹50,000
Health insurance premium
§126
§80D
₹25,000 self + ₹25,000 parents (₹50,000 if senior citizen)
Home loan interest (self-occupied)
§22
§24(b)
₹2,00,000 per year
Education loan interest
§129
§80E
100% of interest; no cap; 8 years
Additional home loan interest (first-time buyer)
§130/§131
§80EE/§80EEA
₹1,50,000 additional (if not claimed §123); limited eligibility
Donations to PM Relief Fund, approved NGOs etc.
§133
§80G
50%–100% of donation depending on type; some with 10% of adjusted gross total income cap
Rebate for income ≤₹12L
§156
§87A
₹60,000 rebate; only resident individuals; not available for HUF, firms, companies
14. What NOT to Do – Crossing from Legal to Illegal
Common Abuse
Why it’s Illegal
Consequence
Claiming fake “agricultural income” without land/cultivation records
Fabricated agricultural income – misreporting under §439 ITA 2025
200% penalty; potential prosecution under §478 ITA 2025
Diverting professional income to HUF
Individual’s personal professional fees cannot legally be HUF income (Baldev Singh principle)
Income assessed in individual’s hands; penalties for under-reporting
Trust used for personal benefits of promoters/trustees
§13 ITA 1961: trust income used for benefit of specified persons → registration cancelled; income taxed at max marginal rate
Loss of §11 exemption; tax on entire income at MMR; no appeal benefit
§58 presumptive declaration with actual profits much higher (undisclosed)
Under-reporting under §439 if actual profits >> declared 6%/8%/50%
100-200% penalty; back-taxes; interest
Round number SEZ export profits with domestic sales disguised as exports
Fabricated export invoices – BNS forgery + income tax fraud
§144 benefit denied; BNS prosecution; PMLA risk
Manufacturing company claiming §201/§115BAB AND §140/§80-IAC together
Legally incompatible – §201 (§115BAB) requires foregoing most deductions including §140 (§80-IAC)
Incorrect return; reassessment; interest and penalty
15. Practical Case Studies
Case 1: Family with 3 Legal Tax Entities – Total Tax Minimization
New regime §202; std deduction ₹75K; taxable ₹29.25L; no §156 rebate (income >₹12L)
~₹5L at progressive slabs
Mrs. Agarwal (individual)
₹8L rental from jointly held property in her name
New regime §202; ₹4L×nil + ₹4L×5% = ₹20,000; income ≤₹12L → §156 full rebate
₹0 (full rebate)
HUF (Agarwal HUF)
₹9L investment income from ancestral corpus
New regime §202 for HUF; ₹4L nil + ₹4L×5% + ₹1L×10% = ₹30,000; note: §156 rebate NOT for HUF → pay ₹30,000
₹30,000
Total family tax: ~₹5.3L on ₹47L total family income. Without HUF / splitting strategies, Mr. Agarwal’s tax at 30% on bundled income would be significantly higher.
Case 2: IT Consultant – §58 Presumptive with §156 Zero Tax
Priya (freelance IT consultant, individual). Annual receipts: ₹90 lakh (all digital/bank transfers). No employees. Home office.
§58 ITA 2025 (= §44ADA): Professional (IT consultant = “technical consultancy”) → 50% of ₹90L = ₹45L deemed income
Tax at ₹45L income (new regime §202): ₹4L×nil + ₹4L×5% + ₹4L×10% + ₹4L×15% + ₹4L×20% + ₹4L×25% + ₹21L×30% = ₹11.1L approx
§156 rebate? Income ₹45L > ₹12L threshold – no §156 rebate
Tax payable: ~₹11.1L on ₹90L receipts (effective ~12.3% of receipts)
To reduce further (old regime): Max §123 (₹1.5L) + §126 (₹50K) + NPS §124 (₹50K) = ₹2.5L deductions → reduces taxable income to ₹42.5L → saves ~₹75,000 in tax (at 30% slab)
Key insight: §58 presumptive taxation saves Priya the compliance burden of maintaining detailed accounts – trading some deductions for simplicity
Case 3: Manufacturing Company – §201 (§115BAB) Route
NewMake Pvt. Ltd., incorporated January 2022, commenced manufacturing electronic components in an SEZ in June 2022. Annual profit: ₹1 crore.
Tax Option
Corporate Tax
MAT
Total Tax
§201 / §115BAB (15% rate)
₹1Cr × 15% = ₹15L
MAT NOT applicable
₹15L + surcharge + cess = ~₹17L
Normal rate (30%)
₹1Cr × 30% = ₹30L
Applicable at 15%
~₹34.94L
§200 / §115BAA (22%)
₹1Cr × 22% = ₹22L
MAT not applicable
~₹25.17L
NewMake saves ~₹17-18L annually in corporate tax vs normal rate, or ₹8L vs §200/§115BAA, by qualifying for §201/§115BAB. Note: §115BAB does not allow claiming §144 (10AA) SEZ exemption simultaneously — choose the more beneficial option.
16. Frequently Asked Questions
Q1. Can a person with ₹2 crore turnover really pay zero income tax legally?
Yes – in specific circumstances. Under §58, ITA 2025 (= §44AD ITA 1961) presumptive taxation: a sole proprietor (individual) with ₹2 crore digital turnover declares 6% as income = ₹12 lakh. Under the new tax regime (§202 ITA 2025), income up to ₹12 lakh attracts tax of ₹30,000. The §156 rebate (= §87A) of ₹60,000 for income ≤₹12 lakh eliminates this tax entirely. Net result: zero income tax on ₹2 crore turnover. Key conditions: (a) must be an individual (not company/LLP); (b) turnover ≤₹3 crore; (c) 95%+ digital receipts for the 6% rate; (d) file ITR under §263 ITA 2025; (e) no opting out of presumptive scheme for 5 years if opted. Note: GST is separate – ₹2 crore turnover requires GST registration and monthly/quarterly GSTR filing.
Q2. What is the difference between §200/§115BAA (22%) and §201/§115BAB (15%) for companies?
Both are optional lower corporate tax rates – §200, ITA 2025 and §201, ITA 2025 respectively. §200, ITA 2025 (= §115BAA, ITA 1961, 22%): Available to ALL existing domestic companies from AY 2020-21 onwards; requires forgoing most Chapter VIII deductions (§80-IAC, §10AA etc.) and claiming no additional depreciation; effective rate ~25.17% with surcharge and cess; MAT not applicable. §201, ITA 2025 (= §115BAB, ITA 1961, 15%): Available ONLY to companies incorporated after 1 October 2019 that commence manufacturing; lowest available corporate tax rate; effective ~17.01%; MAT not applicable; also cannot claim Chapter VIII deductions. For a new manufacturing startup: §201 at 15% is better than §200 at 22% if the company qualifies. If it also qualifies for §140/§80-IAC (startup holiday), compare: 0% under §140 (3 years) vs 15% under §201 – §140 is superior during the holiday period. After 3 years of §140 holiday, §201 at 15% may be the better long-term rate.
Q3. Can I set up a charitable trust to reduce my tax on business income?
Not directly – businesses cannot simply “donate to their own trust” to eliminate tax. Here’s what actually works: (1) A charitable trust can legitimately operate educational institutions, hospitals, or welfare activities – income applied for these purposes is exempt; (2) An individual or company can claim §133 deductions for genuine donations to approved trusts – reducing taxable income (50%-100% of donation amount, subject to 10% of adjusted gross total income limit in some cases); (3) A business with genuine CSR obligations (Companies Act: 2%+ of 3-year average net profit for qualifying companies) can direct CSR funds to registered trusts for approved purposes. What you CANNOT do: set up a trust where you (as trustee/beneficiary) personally benefit from the trust income – ITA disqualifies the exemption and the income is taxed at maximum marginal rate. The trust must genuinely serve public/charitable purposes.
Q4. Is HUF strategy still viable in 2026 after Finance Act changes?
Yes – HUF remains a legitimate and effective income-splitting structure for joint Hindu families in 2026. The HUF gets its own separate basic exemption (₹4 lakh under new regime) and progressive slab rates – exactly the same as an individual. Key 2026 update: the §156 rebate (= §87A) of ₹60,000 is available only to resident individuals – NOT to HUFs, firms, or companies. So HUF cannot achieve zero tax on ₹12L income (unlike an individual who can). But HUF still provides significant tax splitting on income above the basic exemption. HUF is viable for genuine joint family property income – ancestral property, investments, HUF-specific business. For professionals whose personal income is being diverted to HUF – this remains legally problematic. Consult GCA for HUF setup and optimal income allocation.
Tax Planning for Zero/Low Tax – GCA: Legitimate, Documented, Compliant
GCA helps businesses and individuals structure their activities for minimum legal tax – HUF formation, trust registration (Form 104/105 ITA 2025), startup IMB application (§140), GIFT City IFSC setup (§147), presumptive taxation (§58) optimization, new vs old regime analysis, capital gains reinvestment planning (§82/§85/§86), and all Chapter VIII deduction maximization. Every strategy is documented, disclosed, and sustainable. Pan-India, 100% digital.
Disclaimer: Educational purposes only. ITA 2025 applicable from TY 2026-27 (1 April 2026); ITA 1961 applies for FY 2025-26. Tax Year 2026-27 new regime slabs and rebate per Budget 2025-26 / Finance Act 2025 as applicable to FY 2025-26 (AY 2026-27 – old Act). §156 rebate (= §87A ₹60,000): for resident individuals with income ≤₹12L; NOT available to HUF, firms, companies. §58 ITA 2025 (= §44AD/44ADA). §140 startup holiday, §147 GIFT City holiday, §123 deductions, §156 rebate. Budget 2026-27 cooperative reforms from Finance Ministry indiabudget.gov.in/doc/taxreform.pdf. Consult a qualified CA for specific tax planning advice before implementing any structure – individual circumstances vary significantly.
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