The Budget shifts intermediary services to a recipient-based place of supply and extends provisional refunds to IDS. The key takeaway is alignment with destination-based GST and improved liquidity.
Budget 2026 introduces focused GST fixes and sweeping Customs reforms. The key takeaway is simplification, export competitiveness, and faster trade flows.
This explains how post-sale discount compliance and refund procedures are eased under the Finance Bill, 2026. The key takeaway is reduced litigation and faster cash flows for taxpayers.
The Budget proposes replacing the Income Tax Act, 1961 with the new Income Tax Act, 2025 from April 2026. The key takeaway is a simplified, modern tax law designed for easier compliance.
Budget 2026 shifts customs policy from layered exemptions to clearer tariff rates embedded in the schedule. The key takeaway is improved certainty and easier compliance for importers and exporters.
The Supreme Court ruled that menstrual hygiene falls within Article 21 and mandated nationwide MHM facilities in all schools. States and UTs must ensure toilets, free sanitary napkins, and safe disposal within three months.
The Budget shifts multiple exemptions into the Customs Tariff, simplifying compliance without raising effective duties. The changes aim to correct duty inversion and strengthen domestic value addition.
Major amendments cover decriminalisation of offences, conversion of penalties into fees, and rationalisation of MAT and TCS rates. The reforms aim to reduce disputes while ensuring proportional enforcement.
Provisional refunds for inverted duty structures and removal of refund thresholds for exports improve working capital. The amendments strengthen liquidity and support small and mid-sized exporters.
This session breaks down the major income tax amendments announced in the Union Budget 2026 in a clear and practical manner. It highlights what has changed and the immediate impact on taxpayers and businesses.