Section 80C is now Section 123. Tax audit moved from 44AB to 63. Return filing went from 139 to 263. The Income-tax Act, 2025 compressed 819 sections into 536, and from 1 April 2026 the new numbers are the law. This page is the cross-reference — the sections and forms you will actually meet, in two clean tables, plus how to read old references in notices during the transition.

One thing before the tables. The renumbering changed addresses, not substance. The 80C limit is still ₹1.5 lakh. The audit thresholds are still ₹1 crore and ₹50 lakh. If you want the full story of what changed and what did not, start with our pillar guide to the Income-tax Act 2025 vs the 1961 Act.

And a note on when each set of numbers applies. The new numbers govern income from tax year 2026-27 onwards (from 1 April 2026) and all forms filed from that date. The old numbers continue to govern every year up to FY 2025-26 — including the return you file during 2026. Bookmark this page; you will be translating in both directions for a while.

Section mapping: 1961 Act → 2025 Act

1961 Act2025 ActSubject
66Residential status (keeps its number)
10 (exemptions)11 (with Schedules II–VII)Incomes not included in total income
44AA62Books of account
44AB63Tax audit
44AD / 44ADA / 44AE58 (single section)Presumptive taxation, residents
44B / 44BB / 44BBA / 44BBB61Presumptive taxation, non-residents
5482Capital-gains exemption — sale of residence
54B83Capital-gains exemption — agricultural land
54EC85Capital-gains exemption — specified bonds
54F86Capital-gains exemption — investment in a house
80C / 80CCC / 80CCE123 (with Schedule XV)LIC / PF / ELSS deduction (₹1.5 lakh limit unchanged)
80CCD124NPS contributions
80D126Health insurance
80E129Education-loan interest
80G133Donations
80-IAC140Startup tax holiday
80TTA / 80TTB153Interest on deposits
87155Rebate computation
87A156Rebate (up to ₹60,000; ₹12 lakh income, unchanged)
90 / 90A159DTAA relief
115BAA20022% domestic-company option
115BAC202New (default) tax regime
139263Return of income
139A / 139AA262PAN / Aadhaar
140A266Self-assessment tax
140B267Updated-return tax (48-month window)
192 (salary TDS)392TDS on salaries
194-series & 195 (all non-salary TDS)393 (table-based)393(1): payments to residents; 393(2)/(3): payments to non-residents
197395Lower / nil TDS certificates

Three patterns in this table are worth noticing, because they explain most of the new Act's structure. First, the deduction chapter was renumbered as a block: the old 80-series now lives in the 120s to 150s, in roughly the same order. Second, several old sections merged — the three presumptive schemes (44AD, 44ADA, 44AE) became one Section 58, and the entire non-salary TDS family became one Section 393, with the rate and threshold for each payment type sitting in a table inside the section rather than in a separate section per payment. Third, where the old Act used suffixes (115BAA, 115BAC), the new Act uses clean consecutive numbers (200, 202). Once you see the patterns, the new map is easier to hold in your head than the old one ever was.

Form mapping: old forms → new forms (from 1 April 2026)

Old formNew formPurpose
Form 13Form 128Application for lower / nil TDS certificate (under s.395)
Form 15CAForm 145Remitter's declaration for foreign remittance
Form 15CBForm 146CA certificate for taxable foreign remittance above ₹5 lakh per FY
Form 16Form 130Salary TDS certificate
Form 26ASForm 168Annual tax statement
Form 24QForm 138Quarterly salary-TDS statement
Forms 26QB / 26QC / 26QD / 26QEForm 141Single challan-cum-statement for TDS under s.393(1) (property, rent, contractors, VDA)
Form 10FForm 42Non-resident treaty-relief particulars (with TRC)
Form 10EForm 39Arrears relief (new s.157, old s.89)

Two transition notes on forms. Old Forms 15CA/15CB filed for remittances completed on or before 31 March 2026 remain valid. And for the return you file in 2026 (AY 2026-27), the familiar ITR-1 to ITR-7 continue, because that filing is still under the 1961 Act.

How to read old references during the transition

For the next several years you will see both numbering systems in the wild. Three rules keep you oriented:

1. Date the document, then pick the Act

Ask one question first: which year of income does this relate to? Anything up to FY 2025-26 lives under the 1961 Act, so old section numbers are correct on it — a 2027 assessment notice for AY 2025-26 will rightly quote Section 143, not a new number. Anything from tax year 2026-27 onwards should quote the 2025 Act.

2. Old certificates and registrations do not lapse by renumbering

A Section 197 certificate, an 80G approval, a 12A registration — these were issued under the 1961 Act and the new Act's repeal-and-savings framework preserves what was validly done under the old law. The renumbering alone does not invalidate them. Where fresh applications are made from 1 April 2026, they cite the new sections and forms.

3. Watch for mixed references in the transition year

During 2026 the systems deliberately overlap: TDS deducted from April 2026 falls under Sections 392/393 and the new forms, while the return being filed in the same months is an old-Act return for AY 2026-27. A salary slip quoting Section 392 and a tax return quoting Section 139 can both be correct on the same day. The mechanics are walked through in our guide to filing your first return under the new Act; NRIs should also see the NRI-specific renumbering guide.

When a client forwards a notice, the first thing we check is not the section number — it is the year. The year tells you which Act the number belongs to.

4. Translate carefully where sections merged

One-to-one renumbering is mechanical: 80D is 126, full stop. Merged sections need more care. If your old reference is "44ADA", the new reference is Section 58 — but you then need the right limb of Section 58, because it now houses three former schemes. Likewise, "TDS under 194-IA" becomes "TDS under Section 393(1)" plus the relevant row of the table. When updating engagement letters, board resolutions, loan covenants or software configurations, translate to the sub-section and table row, not just the section number.

Keep the map handy, but verify the substance

A mapping table answers "where did it go". It does not answer "does it still apply to me" — thresholds, conditions and elections still need to be read in the new text, especially where several old sections merged into one (the presumptive schemes into Section 58, the TDS family into Section 393). And remember which documents need updating on your side: standing instructions to banks that cite 195, payroll software that prints 192 on payslips, rent agreements that reference 194-I. None of these break overnight, but each will eventually confuse someone if left untranslated. For business and personal positions that turn on the detail, our taxation practice works with both Acts daily and can map your specific references.

Frequently asked questions

Section 123 of the Income-tax Act 2025, read with Schedule XV. The deduction limit of ₹1.5 lakh and the eligible investments (LIC, PF, ELSS and so on) are unchanged.

Section 63 of the 2025 Act. The thresholds are unchanged: ₹1 crore for business (₹10 crore where cash receipts and payments are each 5% or less) and ₹50 lakh for professions (₹75 lakh where cash receipts are 5% or less).

They were consolidated into a single table-based Section 393. Sub-section 393(1) covers payments to residents (property, rent, contracts, professional fees and so on); 393(2) and 393(3) cover payments to non-residents. Salary TDS sits separately in Section 392 (old 192).

Form 130, from 1 April 2026. Similarly Form 26AS becomes Form 168, Form 24Q becomes Form 138, Form 13 becomes Form 128, Forms 15CA/15CB become Forms 145/146, and Forms 26QB to 26QE merge into Form 141.

Almost certainly yes. Proceedings for periods up to FY 2025-26 continue under the 1961 Act and correctly cite old section numbers. Check the year the notice relates to first; the section number should match the Act that governs that year.

Yes — Section 6, on residential status, keeps the same number in the 2025 Act. It is the notable exception; nearly everything else moved.

Received a notice or document and not sure which Act it speaks? Send it across — the firm will place it for you.