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New Delhi: As India prepares for the Union Budget 2026–27, a bold idea is gaining traction in financial and policy circles: introducing an optional joint taxation system for married couples. If approved, this would mark one of the most significant changes to Indian personal taxation in decades, moving from a strictly individual‐based assessment to a family‐oriented approach that could offer substantial relief for many households. Present System: Individuals, not families Under India’s current income‐tax framework, every taxpayer is assessed individually, irrespective of marital status or shared family expenses. Each spouse must file a separate return, claim exemptions and deductions on their own income, and cannot benefit from the unused exemptions of the other. Currently, India’s income-tax system treats each individual separately, which creates a clear anomaly for many families. In single-income households, the non-earning spouse’s exemption limit goes completely unused, and even when one partner earns the majority of the household income, being married does not provide any tax advantage. This approach does not reflect the economic reality of many families, where incomes are often pooled, and expenses are shared. Joint taxation seeks to address this gap by allowing married couples to combine their incomes and file a single tax return as a household, rather than filing separately, thereby better aligning taxation with how families actually function financially. Joint taxation would allow a married couple to combine their incomes and file a single tax return as a household, rather than submitting two separate returns. Under this system, the combined income would be assessed under a shared tax slab structure, potentially with a higher basic exemption limit and wider slabs for joint filers. Importantly, the system is expected to be optional, giving couples the flexibility to choose between joint filing and the existing individual-based taxation, depending on what is more beneficial for them. Both spouses would still need valid PANs to be eligible. Overall, the objective of joint taxation is to recognise the household as a single economic unit, more accurately reflecting shared incomes, expenses, and financial responsibilities. Several major economies already follow some form of family-based or joint taxation, providing useful global precedents for India. In the United States, married couples can choose to file their taxes jointly or separately, with joint filing often offering significant tax advantages. Similarly, Germany and several other European countries allow the incomes of spouses to be combined under specific conditions for tax assessment. Supporters of joint taxation in India frequently cite these international models to argue that recognising households rather than just individuals can lead to a more equitable and realistic tax system. What Joint Taxation Could Fix Better utilisation of exemptions Under a separate filing, a non‐earning spouse’s exemption and slab benefits are wasted. Joint taxation would bring these unused limits into play, potentially reducing the effective tax burden of the household. More efficient tax slabs One of the most discussed aspects of joint taxation is the possibility of a redesigned and more efficient tax slab structure for married couples. While these slabs are only illustrative and not part of any official government policy, experts suggest that joint filing could come with wider income bands and a higher basic exemption limit for households. Up to Rs 8,00,000 Nil RS 8,00,001 – Rs 16,00,000 5 per cent Rs 16,00,001 – Rs 24,00,000 10 per cent Rs 24,00,001 – Rs 32,00,000 15 per cent Rs 32,00,001 – Rs 40,00,000 20 per cent Rs 40,00,001 – Rs 48,00,000 25 per cent Above Rs 48,00,000 30 per cent The key advantage of such a structure lies in the doubling of the basic exemption limit and wider slab widths compared to individual taxation. This could significantly reduce the effective tax burden for many families, particularly single-income households, by allowing income to be taxed more gradually rather than being pushed into higher brackets too quickly. Overall, a broader slab system under joint taxation would aim to make tax rates more proportional to household earning capacity and better aligned with shared financial responsibilities. Also Read: Kalyan Magazine Turns 100: Amit Shah lauds Gita Press for promoting Sanatan Dharma and running on a non-profit mission Relief on surcharge Under the current tax system, surcharge provisions apply once an individual’s income crosses a specified high-income threshold. In a joint taxation framework, experts argue that this threshold could be meaningfully raised for households, allowing combined incomes to be assessed before the surcharge becomes applicable. Such a change could provide additional relief to upper-middle-income families and make the surcharge structure more aligned with household-level earning realities, rather than individual incomes alone. Better use of deductions Joint assessment might allow more efficient use of deductions on items like home loan interest, medical insurance premiums, and other eligible investments by allowing them to be shared within the household calculation. Simplified compliance Two separate returns can complicate tax planning for families where investments, assets, or incomes are jointly held. Joint filing could simplify compliance and reduce administrative burden. Who could benefit most? Single‐income households, where only one spouse earns, stand to gain the most. For households where both partners earn similar incomes, the benefit may be less pronounced and, in some cases, could push the combined income into higher tax brackets. The Union Budget 2026–27 will be presented by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on February 1, 2026. If the proposal is introduced, it could provide meaningful relief to many middle-class families and significantly reshape income-tax planning for married couples across the country.