News View Non-AMP

Indian Govt’s New Tax Law: Officials Can Access Your Emails & Social Media from April 2026!

Published by
Mustafa Mulla

India’s New Income Tax Bill, proposed in 2025, has raised serious concerns about digital privacy. If passed, the bill would allow tax officials to access individuals’ emails, social media, and trading accounts starting from April 1, 2026. The government claims this measure is necessary to curb tax evasion, but many are worried about potential misuse and privacy violations.

Digital Locks No Longer Safe

Currently, tax officials do not have direct authority to check digital records, which has led to legal confusion. The new bill seeks to remove these uncertainties by officially granting them the power to access:

  • Email servers
  • Online banking and investment platforms
  • Social media accounts
  • Digital storage and applications

Beginning April 1, 2026, tax officers will have the legal right to investigate a person’s digital presence if they suspect tax evasion. 

This means they could check emails, social media activities, bank accounts, trading records, and even personal messages to look for undisclosed income, gold, jewelry, or other valuable assets on which taxes have not been paid.

What does the Law say?

Under the current Income Tax Act, of 1961, officials can enter properties and seize documents if they believe someone is hiding financial details. The new bill takes this a step further by giving them access to digital records. 

This means tax officers could check personal messages, emails, and online accounts if they think someone is evading taxes. While the government insists these powers will only be used in serious cases, many people worry about the lack of clear rules.

A Threat to Digital Freedom?

While the bill aims to improve tax compliance, legal experts and privacy advocates worry it could lead to excessive government surveillance. They argue that without proper safeguards, authorities might gain too much control, increasing the risk of harassment and misuse of personal financial data.

  • Possible harassment of taxpayers
  • Unnecessary scrutiny of personal information
  • Threats to digital rights and privacy

Critics fear that businesses and individuals could face unfair investigations, and there are questions about how sensitive data will be handled and protected.

Bill is Currently In a Review

The bill is currently being reviewed by a parliamentary committee, and changes might be made before it becomes law. While the government sees this as a step toward better tax enforcement, concerns over privacy and misuse remain.

Mustafa Mulla

Mustafa has been writing about Blockchain and crypto since many years. He has previous trading experience and has been working in the Fintech industry since 2017.

Recent Posts

DeFi Dev Corp Acquires Additional 47.2k Solana: What Next for SOL Price?

DeFi Development Corp. (NASDAQ: DFDV), a company focused on building a Solana treasury strategy, has…

July 9, 2025

Eigen Labs Sends Home 25% of Its Employees to Focus on a16z-backed EigenCloud

Eigen Labs, the blockchain company behind the EigenLayer (EIGEN) protocol that pioneered the crypto restaking…

July 9, 2025

Are You Selling Your Bitcoin to Institutions? Top Reasons to Reconsider and Hold BTC

Over the past year, there’s been a massive shift in Bitcoin’s ownership whereinthe institutional players…

July 9, 2025

ReserveOne to Launch $1 Billion Bitcoin-Dominated Digital Asset Reserve

ReserveOne, a newly formed firm inspired by the proposed U.S. strategic Bitcoin Reserve, has announced…

July 8, 2025

Cronos (CRO) Price Explodes After Truth Social Files Crypto Blue-Chip ETF—Can it Secure $0.1 Today?

The recent filing of the Truth Social Crypto Blue-Chip ETF has sparked renewed interest in…

July 8, 2025

A Brewing War? How Jupiter, BullX, and Axiom are Grappling with AI‑Powered “Vibe” Traders

What happens when retail traders get smart? The house fights back. In this context, one…

July 8, 2025