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New vs Old Tax Regime Calculator 2026 | Which is Better? | MyeCA.in

Compare Old vs New Tax Regime for AY 2026-27. Real-time analysis of tax savings based on your investments, deductions, and Section 87A rebate.

Tax regime calculator inputs and output

Tax regime calculator helps salaried taxpayers compare old regime and new regime outcomes for AY 2026-27. Use inputs from deduction proofs, Form 16 values, HRA, NPS, and home-loan certificates; the output is a reproducible old regime estimate tied to the selected period, rates, and assumptions.

  • Enter dated old regime inputs instead of remembered amounts
  • Save the Tax regime calculator output period, rates, and assumptions

New regime limits and verification

The output is a planning estimate for salaried taxpayers, with limits created by rate changes, classification questions, omitted fees, and incomplete records. Verify the result against deduction proofs, Form 16 values, HRA, NPS, and home-loan certificates before filing, borrowing, investing, or making a payment decision.

  • Verify the old regime output with the underlying records
  • Recalculate old regime after a material input or rule change

AY 2026-27 next workflow

After reviewing the saved input and output, salaried taxpayers should carry the estimate into the relevant new regime workflow, retain the source records, and resolve any AY 2026-27 limitation before acting.

  • Retain the input file and dated old regime output
  • Salaried taxpayers should use the related workflow after reviewing the estimate to compare old regime and new regime outcomes for AY 2026-27

Frequently asked questions

What does the tax regime calculator compare?

It compares estimated tax under old and new regimes using salary, deductions, rebate, and common planning inputs for AY 2026-27.

Which regime should I choose?

Choose based on verified deductions, exemptions, income level, and employment facts. The calculator gives an estimate, not a filing instruction.

Can salaried taxpayers switch regimes every year?

Salaried taxpayers usually have more flexibility than business taxpayers, but the final choice should be checked against current filing rules.