Old Form 16 vs New Form 130 (Income-tax Rules 2026)

Old Form 16 vs New Form 130 (Income-tax Rules 2026)
Complete Comparative Analysis for Tax Professionals & Salaried Taxpayers
The Income-tax framework applicable from 1 April 2026 (Tax Year 2026-27) introduces renumbered and restructured compliance forms. One of the most discussed changes is the transition from Form 16 to Form 130.
Many taxpayers assume this is a completely new certificate. In reality, the change is largely structural and administrative, aligned with the updated Income-tax legislation and digital reporting architecture.
Letβs understand this properly.
π Legal Background
Under the existing law:
- Form 16 is issued under Section 203 read with Rule 31 of the Income-tax Rules, 1962 for TDS on salary deducted under Section 192.
From Tax Year 2026-27:
- Form numbers are renumbered under the updated Income-tax framework.
- Salary TDS certificate is now designated as Form 130.
- Terminology shifts from βPrevious Year / Assessment Yearβ to βTax Year.β
The purpose remains substantially the same β certification of tax deducted on salary.
π Detailed Comparison Table
Old Form 16 vs New Form 130 (Applicable from 1 April 2026)
| Particulars | Old Form 16 (Up to FY 2025-26) | New Form 130 (From Tax Year 2026-27) |
|---|---|---|
| Statutory Basis | Section 203 r/w Rule 31 of Income-tax Rules, 1962 | Corresponding provision under updated Income-tax legislation and Draft Rules 2026 |
| TDS Section Covered | Section 192 (Salary) | Corresponding salary TDS provision under new Act |
| Effective Period | Up to FY 2025-26 | Applicable from 1 April 2026 |
| Terminology Used | Previous Year (PY) & Assessment Year (AY) | Tax Year concept replaces PY & AY |
| Purpose | Certificate of TDS deducted on salary | Same purpose β certification of salary TDS |
| Issuer | Employer | Employer |
| Structure | Part A and Part B | Structured format aligned with revised rule framework (renumbered but conceptually similar division) |
| Part A Contents | TAN, PAN, employer details, employee details, summary of TDS deposited | Same disclosures with updated form numbering and system integration |
| Part B Contents | Detailed salary computation, exemptions, deductions, tax calculation | Detailed salary computation aligned with updated reporting fields |
| Salary Breakup | Basic salary, allowances, perquisites (may be consolidated depending on employer system) | More standardized component-wise reporting expected |
| Perquisites Reporting | Referenced; detailed annexure if applicable | Structured disclosure aligned with digital reporting |
| Exempt Allowances | Shown under Section 10 exemptions | Section references updated as per new Act numbering |
| Standard Deduction | Shown separately | Shown separately |
| Chapter VI-A Deductions | Section-wise reporting (80C, 80D, etc.) | Section-wise reporting continues (with renumbered references where applicable) |
| Rebate Disclosure | Section 87A rebate shown | Rebate shown under updated statutory reference |
| Surcharge Disclosure | Shown if applicable | Shown separately |
| Health & Education Cess | Shown separately | Shown separately |
| Relief u/s 89 | Disclosed if claimed | Disclosed under corresponding provision |
| Tax Regime Disclosure (115BAC) | Mentioned but not prominently structured | Clear disclosure of regime adopted for the Tax Year |
| Digital Signature Requirement | Mandatory for electronically generated Form 16 | Continues under updated compliance norms |
| Integration with TDS Return | Based on Form 24Q filings | Integrated with updated quarterly TDS statement architecture |
| Alignment with AIS / 26AS | Reconciliation required by taxpayer | Designed for stronger backend reconciliation |
| Issuance Deadline | On or before 15 June following FY | Expected similar timeline under Tax Year concept (subject to rule notification) |
| Applicability to Pensioners | Through employer / bank where applicable | Continues similarly under renumbered framework |
| Transitional Validity | Valid for years up to FY 2025-26 | Mandatory from Tax Year 2026-27 onward |
π What Has Actually Changed?
1οΈβ£ Form Numbering
The biggest visible change is renumbering:
- Form 16 β Form 130
This is part of systematic restructuring of all income-tax forms.
2οΈβ£ Terminology Reform
The dual concept of:
- Previous Year (PY)
- Assessment Year (AY)
is replaced with:
- Tax Year
This simplifies compliance language.
3οΈβ£ Standardization & Digital Integration
The revised framework emphasizes:
- Clearer breakup of salary components
- Better reconciliation with TDS returns
- Reduced mismatch during return filing
4οΈβ£ No Change in Core Purpose
Important for professionals:
- It is NOT a new compliance obligation.
- It does NOT change the nature of salary taxation.
- It is primarily structural and administrative modernization.
π Practical Impact on Stakeholders
For Employers
- Payroll software must update form format.
- Section references may change.
- Reporting fields need realignment.
For CAs & Tax Practitioners
- Be careful while advising for transitional years.
- Ensure correct mapping of section numbers.
- Understand Tax Year concept for ITR planning.
For Salaried Taxpayers
- No additional burden.
- Filing process remains largely similar.
- Better clarity in salary computation.
π― Final Conclusion: Form 130 is essentially the modernized successor of Form 16 under the revised Income-tax framework effective from 1 April 2026.
The transition focuses on:
β Simplification
β Digital alignment
β Structural uniformity
β Updated legislative references
The substance of salary TDS certification remains intact.
Also Read:
1. Income Tax Rules 2026: Major HRA Changes
2. PAN Quoting Requirements Under Draft Income-tax Rules, 2026: Complete List of Mandatory Transactions and Revised Thresholds
Read More: Union Budget 2026 β CA Cult





