What the New Income Tax Bill Says About Your Data — And What Citizens Can Ask For

Written by Dear Sarkar — February 4, 2026
Please complete the required fields.



TL;DR: A new income tax bill is being discussed in Parliament. It may give tax authorities more power to access our phones, emails, and social media during checks. We have the right to know what is proposed and to send our views to the Finance Ministry and the Parliamentary Committee. This post explains what we can ask for (clear grounds, time limits, and a way to complain) and how to give feedback.

Who this helps: Any citizen who files income tax or uses a phone and email. Small business owners, salaried persons, and taxpayers who want to understand their rights.

Understanding the issue

The government has proposed a new law that will replace the old Income Tax Act. In the new bill, tax authorities may get broader powers to look at digital data — such as data on your phone, email, or social media — when they carry out searches or surveys.

Many citizens and experts are asking: what are the safeguards? When can such access happen? Who can approve it? How long can data be kept? Without clear answers, we cannot be sure our privacy and fairness are protected.

Why this matters to us

Tax laws affect every taxpayer. If the rules on data access are vague, we may not know when we can say no, or how to challenge misuse. Knowing what the bill says and how to respond helps us take part in the law-making process in a meaningful way.

Your rights in the process

Under our democratic process, a bill is discussed in Parliament. Often, it is sent to a Standing Committee. That committee can invite feedback from the public. Citizens can send their views in writing to the Committee or to the Ministry of Finance. This is our right to participate.

Right to information: We can read the bill and official summaries (e.g. on the Ministry of Finance or Parliament website).

Right to be heard: When the Committee or Ministry invites comments, we can send our suggestions in a respectful, clear way.

Right to privacy: Courts have held that privacy is part of our fundamental rights. So any law that affects our data must have clear limits and safeguards.

What we can do (three steps)

Step 1: Get the facts. Find the official text of the bill and any summary. Check the Ministry of Finance website (finmin.nic.in) or the Parliament website (loksabha.nic.in / rajyasabha.nic.in). Note which sections talk about search, survey, and access to data.

Step 2: Decide what safeguards you want. For example: clear grounds before access; a time limit for how long data can be kept; a grievance mechanism if you think your data was misused; and independent oversight. Write these in simple language.

Step 3: Send your feedback. When the Standing Committee on Finance or the Ministry of Finance invites comments, send your views by the given date. Use the official email or portal they specify. Keep a copy of your submission.

Where to get help

Ministry of Finance: finmin.nic.in. Parliament: loksabha.nic.in, rajyasabha.nic.in. For the exact committee and contact, check the Parliament website when the bill is referred to a committee.

Related on DearSarkar: Our citizen brief (weDocs) on the Income Tax Bill and your digital rights; our petition asking for clear safeguards; our forum discussion on what safeguards citizens want; and our Q&A on what the bill allows and how to give feedback.

Last updated: February 2025. Laws and bills change. Check official sources for the latest text and feedback dates.

Related Articles
Civic Participation February 4, 2026

How Citizens and the Sarkar Can Work Better Together

TL;DR: When citizens raise issues in a clear, respectful way and the ... more

Grievance Redress February 4, 2026

Understanding Public Services: What We Can Expect and What We Can’t

TL;DR: Public services — water, roads, health centres, schools, grievance redress — ... more

How-to & Guides February 4, 2026

Common Civic Mistakes Citizens Make (And How to Avoid Them)

TL;DR: Many citizens make the same mistakes when raising a civic issue: ... more

Civic Participation February 4, 2026

Why Respectful Civic Communication Gets Better Results

TL;DR: When we raise an issue with the government in a clear, ... more

Local Governance February 4, 2026

How Local Governance Works — In Plain Language

TL;DR: Local governance is the third tier of government — panchayats in ... more

Grievance Redress February 4, 2026

What Happens After We Report a Civic Issue? Explained Simply

TL;DR: After you report a civic issue, the system should acknowledge it, ... more

How-to & Guides February 4, 2026

From Complaint to Solution: How Citizens Can Raise Issues the Right Way

TL;DR: Raising an issue the right way means: state the problem clearly, ... more

How-to & Guides February 4, 2026

Who Is Responsible for This Public Service? A Simple Guide for Citizens

TL;DR: When a public service fails — water supply, roads, street lights, ... more

Civic Participation February 4, 2026

Why Small Civic Issues Become Big Problems — And How We Can Fix Them Early

TL;DR: Small civic issues — a broken street light, a blocked drain, ... more

Local Governance February 4, 2026

Your Panchayat Just Got a Report Card — Here’s What the Devolution Index Means for You

The Devolution Index ranks states on how much power and resources have ... more

Write a Reply or Comment

You should Sign In or Sign Up account to post comment.