Union Minister Nirmala Sitharaman speaks in the Lok Sabha during the Budget session of Parliament. Photo | PTI
Nation

New Income Tax Bill to be taken up for discussion in monsoon session: Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman

The simplified Income Tax Bill, which is half the size of the 1961 Income Tax Act, seeks to achieve tax certainty by minimising the scope of litigation and fresh interpretation.

PTI

NEW DELHI: The new Income Tax Bill will be taken up for discussion in the monsoon session of Parliament, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said on Tuesday.

Replying to the discussions on the Finance Bill 2025 in the Lok Sabha, Sitharaman said the new income tax bill, which was introduced in the House on February 13, is currently being vetted by the Select Committee.

The Select Committee has been mandated to submit its report by the first day of the next session of Parliament.

"...we will take it (new income tax bill) up in the monsoon session," Sitharaman said.

The monsoon session of Parliament is usually convene in July and runs through August.

The simplified Income Tax Bill, which is half the size of the 1961 Income Tax Act, seeks to achieve tax certainty by minimising the scope of litigation and fresh interpretation, the Income Tax department had earlier said.

The new bill has a word count of 2.6 lakh, lower than 5.12 lakh in the I-T Act.

The number of sections is 536 against 819 effective sections in the existing law.

The number of chapters has also been halved to 23 from 47.

The Income Tax Bill 2025 has 57 tables compared to 18 in the existing Act and removed 1,200 provisos and 900 explanations.

PM Modi speaks to Iran President, flags threats to maritime security, supply chains amid West Asia conflict

West Asia conflict batters Gujarat's industries, textile units enforce two-day shutdown per week

LIVE | West Asia war: US eases Iran oil sanctions to curb price shock as Trump hints at ‘winding down’ war

CPM–BJP ‘secret understanding’ evident in Palakkad, says K C Venugopal

RSS advices BJP leaders in Uttar Pradesh to avoid controversial statements ahead of 2027 polls

SCROLL FOR NEXT