Tax

New Income Tax Act From April 2026: What Happens To Your Old Tax Notices, Refunds, And Pending Cases?

One of the biggest concerns among taxpayers has been whether old notices or pending tax disputes will become invalid after April 1, 2026. According to the CBDT FAQs, that will not happen

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Summary of this article

  • Income Tax Act 2025 transition will not cancel pending tax notices, appeals

  • CBDT clarifies old income-tax cases continue under Income-tax Act, 1961 provisions

  • PAN, refunds, tax credits, carried-forward losses remain valid after April 2026

  • New Income Tax Act replaces assessment year concept with single tax year system

The government’s proposed Income Tax Act, 2025, has come into effect from April 1, 2026. While the new law aims to simplify the tax system and reduce legal complexity, many taxpayers have been worried about what happens to their old income-tax cases, notices, refunds, and pending appeals once the new framework starts.

To address these concerns, the Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) has released a detailed FAQ document explaining how the transition from the Income-tax Act, 1961, to the new law will work.

The FAQs clarify that taxpayers do not need to panic. Most existing records, proceedings, and tax rights will continue normally even after the new law becomes operational.

1 May 2026

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Old Tax Cases Will Continue

One of the biggest concerns among taxpayers has been whether old notices or pending tax disputes will become invalid after April 1, 2026. According to the CBDT FAQs, that will not happen.

The tax department has clarified that, pending scrutiny proceedings, reassessment cases, rectification matters, appeals, revisions, and even prosecution proceedings started under the Income-tax Act, 1961, will continue under the old framework wherever required.

This means that if a taxpayer has received a notice relating to earlier financial years, the matter will still proceed even after the new law comes into force.

Similarly, pending refunds, tax demands, penalties, and recovery proceedings linked to earlier years will also remain valid.

The FAQs also clarify that earlier returns filed by taxpayers will continue to hold legal value. PAN, TAN, tax credits, and previous compliance records will remain unchanged.

For salaried taxpayers and small investors, this clarification is important because many people feared that they might have to refile documents or face confusion during the transition period.

‘Assessment Year’ Concept To End

Another major change highlighted in the FAQs is the removal of the “assessment year” concept.

Currently, taxpayers deal with two terms — financial year and assessment year — which often creates confusion. Under the new law, the government plans to use only one term: “tax year.”

Tax experts say this could make return filing easier for ordinary taxpayers over time.

The CBDT has also clarified that carried-forward losses, depreciation claims, deductions, and tax benefits allowed under the old law will continue based on transition provisions.

The transition becomes especially relevant now because taxpayers filing income-tax returns in the coming years may continue to deal with proceedings connected to both the old and new systems, depending on the tax year involved.

The FAQs are therefore aimed at reassuring taxpayers that the shift to the new law will be gradual and that existing rights and obligations will largely continue without disruption.

FAQs

Q1. Will my old income-tax notices and pending appeals become invalid after April 1, 2026?

No. The CBDT has clarified that, pending scrutiny, reassessment, appeals, rectification, and prosecution cases under the old law will continue normally.

Q2. Will taxpayers need to refile old returns or apply for a new PAN under the new Income Tax Act?

No. Earlier ITRs, PAN, TAN, tax credits, refunds, and compliance records will continue to remain valid after the transition.

Q3. What is the biggest change ordinary taxpayers may notice in the new law?

The government plans to replace the confusing “assessment year” and “financial year” system with a single concept called “tax year.”

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