Edition · Tuesday, 14 July 2026
Economy, Inflation & Tax

Is a ₹12 Lakh Salary Really Tax-Free in 2026? Yes — But Two Myths Will Cost You

It genuinely is tax-free. The internet is still lying to you about how — and the lie has a price.

Short answer: Yes. For FY 2025-26, a salaried person earning up to ₹12.75 lakh pays zero income tax under the new regime — that’s ₹12 lakh of taxable income after the ₹75,000 standard deduction. But it is a rebate, not a magic tax-free slab, and that one distinction is where two very popular myths quietly empty people’s pockets.

First, the part that’s actually true

Under the new regime, income up to ₹12 lakh attracts a Section 87A rebate of up to ₹60,000 — which wipes the tax to nil. Add the ₹75,000 standard deduction that salaried people get, and a salary of ₹12.75 lakh lands at exactly ₹12 lakh of taxable income. Zero tax. No 80C gymnastics, no rent receipts, no insurance you didn’t want. For most salaried Indians under ₹12.75 lakh, the new regime isn’t just simpler — it’s a clean win.

So far, so good. Now the two lies.

Myth 1: “₹12 lakh is a tax-free slab, so my first ₹12 lakh is always safe”

It isn’t a slab. It’s a rebate — a discount the government hands you only if your total taxable income stays at or below ₹12 lakh. The moment you cross that line, the discount vanishes in full. It does not shrink politely; it leaves the building.

Earn ₹15 lakh and you don’t pay tax “only on the ₹3 lakh above ₹12.” You pay the regular slab tax on everything from ₹4 lakh upward:

Taxable income (new regime)Rate
Up to ₹4,00,000Nil
₹4,00,001 – ₹8,00,0005%
₹8,00,001 – ₹12,00,00010%
₹12,00,001 – ₹16,00,00015%
₹16,00,001 – ₹20,00,00020%
₹20,00,001 – ₹24,00,00025%
Above ₹24,00,00030%

The person who thinks “₹12 lakh is always free” budgets for a tax bill that doesn’t match reality the day they get a raise. The slab table doesn’t care about your feelings, and neither does the rebate.

Myth 2: “Earn one rupee over ₹12 lakh and a tax bomb goes off”

This is the opposite panic, and it’s just as wrong. People hear the rebate “disappears” above ₹12 lakh and imagine that ₹12,01,000 of income triggers tax on the whole amount — a sudden bill of tens of thousands for earning a thousand more.

That bomb exists only on WhatsApp. The government actually defused it, with something called marginal relief: between ₹12 lakh and roughly ₹12.75 lakh, your tax is capped at about the amount you earned over ₹12 lakh. Cross the line by ₹10,000 and you pay roughly ₹10,000 — not a five-figure penalty. The cliff everyone fears is, in this narrow band, a gentle ramp.

The real danger was never the rupee that takes you over ₹12 lakh. It’s not knowing that the rebate was a one-time gift the slab table takes back the instant you stop being eligible.

So who should actually worry?

Not the person at ₹11 lakh — they’re fine. Not the person at ₹12.2 lakh — marginal relief has their back. The person who gets hurt is the one sitting at ₹13–16 lakh who still half-believes their “first ₹12 lakh is free,” and is quietly under-budgeting their tax all year. If that’s you, run your real number through the official calculator before March, not after.

What to do

  • Under ₹12.75 lakh salary? Pick the new regime and stop overthinking it. You owe nothing.
  • Just over ₹12 lakh? Don’t panic-invest to “get back under” — marginal relief already protects you up to ~₹12.75 lakh.
  • Comfortably above ₹12.75 lakh? The rebate is gone. Now it’s the old genuine question — do your deductions (80C, HRA, home loan) beat the new regime’s lower rates? Run both. Then choose.

Take action

Sources

  • Income Tax Department — slab rates, new regime FY 2025-26 (incometax.gov.in)
  • Finance Act 2025 — Section 87A rebate, new tax regime
  • CBDT — marginal relief under the new regime, FY 2025-26
Frequently asked

Is ₹12 lakh tax-free for everyone or only salaried people?

Up to ₹12 lakh of taxable income is tax-free under the new regime for any resident individual. Salaried people get to ₹12.75 lakh of salary because the ₹75,000 standard deduction first cuts taxable income down to ₹12 lakh.

If I earn ₹12,01,000, do I lose the whole rebate and pay full tax?

No. That is the myth. Marginal relief caps your tax at roughly the amount you earn above ₹12 lakh, until about ₹12.75 lakh — so you do not fall off a cliff for crossing the line by a little.

Does the ₹12 lakh rebate also apply in the old regime?

No. In the old regime the Section 87A rebate only makes income up to ₹5 lakh tax-free. The ₹12 lakh figure is a new-regime benefit.

I earn ₹15 lakh. Is my first ₹12 lakh still tax-free?

No — and this is the costliest mistake. Once taxable income crosses ₹12 lakh, the rebate disappears entirely. You then pay normal slab tax on income from ₹4 lakh upward, not just on the bit above ₹12 lakh.