
New Delhi, February 10, 2026: In a significant overhaul of India’s direct tax landscape, the Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) has released the Draft Income-tax Rules, 2026. Designed to operationalize the new Income-tax Act, 2025, these rules introduce sweeping changes aimed at modernizing tax administration, easing the compliance burden for honest taxpayers, and bringing digital assets firmly into the regulatory net.
The proposed rules are currently open for public feedback until February 22, 2026, with a planned implementation date of April 1, 2026.
To reduce “compliance friction” for everyday transactions, the government has proposed a substantial increase in the monetary limits that trigger the mandatory quoting of a Permanent Account Number (PAN).
| Transaction Category | Current Threshold | Proposed Threshold (2026 Rules) |
| Cash Deposits/Withdrawals | ₹50,000 (per day) | ₹10 Lakh (aggregate per financial year) |
| Immovable Property | ₹10 Lakh | ₹20 Lakh |
| Motor Vehicles | All (except 2-wheelers) | Above ₹5 Lakh (includes 2-wheelers) |
| Hotel/Restaurant Bills | ₹50,000 | ₹1 Lakh |
Key Takeaway: The shift for bank transactions from a “per day” limit to an “annual aggregate” limit is intended to provide more flexibility to small businesses and individuals while allowing the tax department to focus on high-value cash hoarders.
The 2026 rules signal a “compliance-first” era for Virtual Digital Assets (VDAs). While the tax rate remains at 30%, the reporting framework for crypto exchanges and service providers has been significantly tightened.
In a major step toward normalizing sovereign digital currency, the draft rules formally include the Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) as an accepted mode of electronic payment.
By categorizing CBDC alongside traditional banking channels and UPI, the government is providing a regulatory foundation for the “Digital Rupee” to be used in tax-deductible business expenses and official financial transactions. Unlike private cryptocurrencies, CBDC is treated as a digital form of fiat currency, exempting it from the specific 30% VDA tax.
The overarching goal of the 2026 overhaul is to make the tax system “leaner and smarter.” The CBDT has achieved this through a massive rationalization exercise:
The draft rules also reflect current economic realities by updating the valuation of employee perquisites: