Section 87A Rebate Explained: How to Pay Zero Tax up to Rs 12 Lakh Income in AY 2026-27:

A complete guide to the Section 87A rebate for AY 2026-27, covering eligibility, tax-free income limits, marginal relief, special income rules, and practical tax-saving examples.
How Section 87A Can Eliminate Your Tax Liability in AY 2026-27

Section 87A Rebate Explained: How to Pay Zero Tax up to Rs 12 Lakh Income in AY 2026-27
Budget 2025 comes with the biggest tax relief for middle-class families, which was brought through a rebate under Section 87A and through slab rates.
If you file an income tax return for F.Y 2025-26 (A.Y 2026-27), then understanding of this section is necessary to minimise the tax liability.
What is Section 87A?
Section 87A allows a resident individual taxpayer to claim a rebate (a direct deduction) on their tax liability, provided their total taxable income stays within a specified limit. It does not reduce your total income, but it reduces tax liability fully or partially.
The rebate is applicable on the total tax liability as per slabs, but before adding 4% health and education cess.
Who Can Claim It?
Important exclusion: The rebate does not apply to income, which taxed at special rates i.e short-term capital gain under 111A and long-term capital gain under 112A or any special rate income.
It only applies to income, which is taxed at normal rates.
However, the unexhausted basic exemption limit can be set off against these special rate incomes.
Note: You can claim the benefit of a rebate against the special rate income by opting for the old regime.
How to Calculate It – Step by Step
- Must be a resident individual (not a HUF, LLP, Firm, Company, AOP/BOI)
- Non- resident Indians (NRIS) cannot claim this rebate even if their Indian income is low.
| Regime | Income Limit | Maximum Rebate | Marginal Relief |
| New tax Regime | Up to 12,00,000 | Up to 60,000 | YES |
| Old Tax Regime | Up to 5,00,000 | Up to 12,500 | NO |
- Calculate Gross Total Income (salary, business, capital gains, other sources)
- Subtract eligible deductions (80C, 80D, etc. — only under old regime)
- Arrive at Total Taxable Income
- Compute tax payable as per slab rates
- If income is within the limit, deduct the rebate (capped at Rs 60,000 new regime/Rs 12,500 old regime, or actual tax payable, whichever is lower)
- Add 4% cess on the balance tax
- Standard deduction: Rs 75,000
- Taxable income: Rs 12,75,000 − Rs 75,000 = Rs 12, 00,000
- Tax as per the new regime slabs on Rs 12,00,000 works out to Rs 60,000
- Since taxable income does not exceed Rs 12,00,000, rebate of Rs 60,000 applies in full
- Excess income over Rs 12 lakh (A) = Rs 12,10,000 − Rs 12,00,000 = Rs 10,000
- Tax on Rs 1,210,000 as per slabs (B) = roughly Rs 61,500 (illustrative)
- Since B (Rs 61,500) > A (Rs 10,000), rebate under marginal relief = B − A = Rs 51,500
- Tax payable = B − rebate = Rs 61,500 − Rs 51,500 = Rs 10,000 (equal to the excess income)
- On normal Income: (6,50,000 – 4,00,000)*5% =12,500
- On STCG 111A: 1,00,000*20%=20,000
- Total tax: 32,500
- Less: rebate (12,500)
- Tax Payable: 20,000 +4% HEC = 20,800
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