After ₹7 lakh, will the ₹12 lakh tax rebate trigger another investing wave?

After ₹7 lakh, will the ₹12 lakh tax rebate trigger another investing wave?

The ₹12 lakh tax rebate under the new regime could have implications far beyond lower tax outgo. Historical income tax data suggests that the earlier ₹7 lakh rebate coincided with rising participation in mutual funds, stocks and other financial assets, raising questions about whether another wave of investing may be on the horizon.

Advertisement
Data from the Income Tax Department suggests that the earlier ₹7 lakh rebate introduced under the new tax regime had effects that went beyond reducing tax outgo. Data from the Income Tax Department suggests that the earlier ₹7 lakh rebate introduced under the new tax regime had effects that went beyond reducing tax outgo.
Basudha Das
  • Jun 10, 2026,
  • Updated Jun 10, 2026 9:35 PM IST

The increase in the tax-free income threshold to ₹12 lakh under the new tax regime may do more than boost disposable income. If recent tax-filing trends are any indication, the move could potentially accelerate India's shift from traditional savings towards financial assets such as mutual funds and stocks.

Advertisement

Data from the Income Tax Department suggests that the earlier ₹7 lakh rebate introduced under the new tax regime had effects that went beyond reducing tax outgo. According to ClearTax CEO Archit Gupta, the change altered how many Indians save and invest.

“The ₹7 lakh tax rebate was never just about saving tax. Look at what it quietly did to how India earns and invests,” Gupta said.

A shift became visible

The impact of the policy change first emerged in Assessment Year (AY) 2024-25. Returns filed by taxpayers in the ₹5 lakh-₹10 lakh income bracket surged sharply, rising from 1.38 crore in AY 2023-24 to 3.37 crore in AY 2024-25. By AY 2025-26, the number increased further to 3.84 crore.

Advertisement

At the same time, taxpayers earning up to ₹5 lakh declined from 5.66 crore in AY 2023-24 to 3.81 crore in AY 2024-25 and further to 2.76 crore in AY 2025-26.

Gupta believes the additional money initially flowed into traditional tax-saving instruments such as the Employees' Provident Fund (EPF), Public Provident Fund (PPF) and National Pension System (NPS), rather than directly into equities.

MUST READ: TDS refund explained: Who can claim it, how to get it through ITR and check status

“The easy assumption is that all of it rushed into the stock market. Initially, a large portion of it went into tax-saving instruments like NPS, EPF and PPF,” he said.

Income sources

Tax-return patterns also indicate that Indians are increasingly reporting income beyond salaries.

Advertisement

ITR-1 filings, generally associated with straightforward salary income, fell 2.87% in AY 2025-26 to 3.52 crore returns.

Meanwhile, ITR-2 filings—which include capital gains and multiple income sources—rose nearly 35% in AY 2024-25 and edged higher again in AY 2025-26 to 1.23 crore returns. ITR-3 filings climbed 4.02% year-on-year to 1.62 crore.

MUST READ: Pension vs family pension: What retirees and taxpayers should know before filing ITR for AY 2026-27

“We started seeing people draw a salary, park money in safe assets, and test the capital markets. Bit by bit, a simple paycheck was evolving into a portfolio,” Gupta said.

Could the ₹12 lakh threshold amplify the trend?

With incomes up to ₹12 lakh effectively becoming tax-free under the new regime, experts believe a larger pool of middle-income earners could have greater investible surplus.

That could benefit financial assets ranging from mutual funds and exchange-traded funds to direct equities and retirement products. India has already witnessed record SIP inflows and rising retail participation in the stock market over the past few years.

Advertisement

The larger implication may be behavioural rather than fiscal.

MUST READ:ITR filing AY 2026-27: From unrealised rent to two house properties -- key changes taxpayers must know

If the ₹7 lakh rebate encouraged households to move from saving to investing, the ₹12 lakh threshold could potentially deepen that trend by creating a bigger base of investors and accelerating the shift from salary-dependent finances to diversified wealth creation.

“Worth watching where this ₹12 lakh rebate goes from here,” Gupta said.

The answer may become clearer over the next few assessment years, but the tax data so far suggests that tax policy is increasingly shaping how Indians allocate their money—and how they build wealth.

The increase in the tax-free income threshold to ₹12 lakh under the new tax regime may do more than boost disposable income. If recent tax-filing trends are any indication, the move could potentially accelerate India's shift from traditional savings towards financial assets such as mutual funds and stocks.

Advertisement

Data from the Income Tax Department suggests that the earlier ₹7 lakh rebate introduced under the new tax regime had effects that went beyond reducing tax outgo. According to ClearTax CEO Archit Gupta, the change altered how many Indians save and invest.

“The ₹7 lakh tax rebate was never just about saving tax. Look at what it quietly did to how India earns and invests,” Gupta said.

A shift became visible

The impact of the policy change first emerged in Assessment Year (AY) 2024-25. Returns filed by taxpayers in the ₹5 lakh-₹10 lakh income bracket surged sharply, rising from 1.38 crore in AY 2023-24 to 3.37 crore in AY 2024-25. By AY 2025-26, the number increased further to 3.84 crore.

Advertisement

At the same time, taxpayers earning up to ₹5 lakh declined from 5.66 crore in AY 2023-24 to 3.81 crore in AY 2024-25 and further to 2.76 crore in AY 2025-26.

Gupta believes the additional money initially flowed into traditional tax-saving instruments such as the Employees' Provident Fund (EPF), Public Provident Fund (PPF) and National Pension System (NPS), rather than directly into equities.

MUST READ: TDS refund explained: Who can claim it, how to get it through ITR and check status

“The easy assumption is that all of it rushed into the stock market. Initially, a large portion of it went into tax-saving instruments like NPS, EPF and PPF,” he said.

Income sources

Tax-return patterns also indicate that Indians are increasingly reporting income beyond salaries.

Advertisement

ITR-1 filings, generally associated with straightforward salary income, fell 2.87% in AY 2025-26 to 3.52 crore returns.

Meanwhile, ITR-2 filings—which include capital gains and multiple income sources—rose nearly 35% in AY 2024-25 and edged higher again in AY 2025-26 to 1.23 crore returns. ITR-3 filings climbed 4.02% year-on-year to 1.62 crore.

MUST READ: Pension vs family pension: What retirees and taxpayers should know before filing ITR for AY 2026-27

“We started seeing people draw a salary, park money in safe assets, and test the capital markets. Bit by bit, a simple paycheck was evolving into a portfolio,” Gupta said.

Could the ₹12 lakh threshold amplify the trend?

With incomes up to ₹12 lakh effectively becoming tax-free under the new regime, experts believe a larger pool of middle-income earners could have greater investible surplus.

That could benefit financial assets ranging from mutual funds and exchange-traded funds to direct equities and retirement products. India has already witnessed record SIP inflows and rising retail participation in the stock market over the past few years.

Advertisement

The larger implication may be behavioural rather than fiscal.

MUST READ:ITR filing AY 2026-27: From unrealised rent to two house properties -- key changes taxpayers must know

If the ₹7 lakh rebate encouraged households to move from saving to investing, the ₹12 lakh threshold could potentially deepen that trend by creating a bigger base of investors and accelerating the shift from salary-dependent finances to diversified wealth creation.

“Worth watching where this ₹12 lakh rebate goes from here,” Gupta said.

The answer may become clearer over the next few assessment years, but the tax data so far suggests that tax policy is increasingly shaping how Indians allocate their money—and how they build wealth.

Read more!
Advertisement