Key Changes in ITR-1 and ITR-4 Forms for AY 2025–26: A Detailed Guide
The Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) has notified new Income Tax Return (ITR) forms for the Assessment Year (AY) 2025–26, bringing significant changes to ITR-1 (SAHAJ) and ITR-4 (SUGAM). These are among the most commonly used return forms by salaried individuals, pensioners, and small business owners or professionals under presumptive taxation.
The updates aim to simplify return filing while enhancing the granularity of disclosures, enabling the Income Tax Department to improve compliance checks and reduce tax avoidance.
Below is a comprehensive breakdown of the changes, their implications, and what taxpayers need to keep in mind
I. Overview of ITR-1 (SAHAJ): What’s Changed?
What is ITR-1?
ITR-1 is applicable to resident individuals (not ordinarily resident) with a total income up to ₹50 lakh from the following sources:
Salary or pension
One house property
Other sources (excluding winning from lottery, racehorses, etc.)
Major Change: Inclusion of LTCG under Section 112A
Historically, any capital gains, whether short-term or long-term, made a taxpayer ineligible to use ITR-1. However, for AY 2025–26, a key relaxation has been introduced:
Taxpayers earning Long-Term Capital Gains (LTCG) under Section 112A can now file ITR-1.
Section 112A pertains to capital gains from the sale of:
Listed equity shares
Units of equity-oriented mutual funds
Units of business trusts
The gains must be subject to Securities Transaction Tax (STT) and must not exceed the ₹1 lakh exemption threshold for taxability.
Who Benefits from This?
This amendment is especially advantageous for:
Salaried employees with minor equity investments
Retired individuals receiving pensions and occasional capital gains
First-time filers with limited stock market activity
Important Note: Taxpayers with other types of capital gains (e.g., property sales, debt mutual funds, or unlisted shares) are still not eligible to use ITR-1
II. Key Updates in ITR-4 (SUGAM): More Clarity, More Disclosure
What is ITR-4?
ITR-4 is used by:
Resident Individuals
Hindu Undivided Families (HUFs)
Firms (excluding LLPs)
...who have opted for presumptive taxation under:
Section 44AD (small businesses)
Section 44ADA (professionals)
Section 44AE (transport businesses)
Major Changes:
1. Expanded Disclosures
Taxpayers filing ITR-4 must now disclose more detailed information, including:
Nature and category of business
Gross receipts segregated into digital and cash modes
Breakdown of deductions under Chapter VI-A (like 80C, 80D, etc.)
Bank account details for refund and verification purposes
This increased granularity is designed to:
Ensure accurate income reporting
Minimize misuse of presumptive taxation schemes
Improve data analytics for compliance monitoring
2. Alignment with the New Tax Regime
ITR-4 now includes dedicated fields allowing taxpayers to:
Opt in or out of the new tax regime under Section 115BAC
Provide declaration if they are continuing with the old regime
Choose between regimes clearly while filing

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