NGOs Reclassified as RNPOs Under the Income Tax Act, 2025: Major Compliance Changes Every Non-Profit Must Know.
The Income Tax Act, 2025 introduces the new RNPO framework for NGOs, Trusts, and Section 8 Companies from 1 April 2026. Learn about RNPO registration, taxation rules, donor compliance, 85% application norms, ITR-7 changes, and key compliance requirements for charitable organisations in India.
NGOs Reclassified as RNPOs Under the Income Tax Act, 2025: A Complete Guide for Trusts, NGOs & Section 8 Companies
India’s non-profit sector is entering a major regulatory transformation with the introduction of the Income Tax Act, 2025, which will replace the Income Tax Act, 1961 with effect from 1 April 2026. One of the most significant reforms under the new legislation is the introduction of the concept of Registered Non-Profit Organisations (RNPOs).
This reform consolidates the tax treatment, registration, exemption, and compliance requirements applicable to charitable and religious organisations into a single integrated framework.
Public Charitable Trusts, NGOs, Societies, Religious Trusts, Educational Institutions, Hospitals, and Section 8 Companies must now understand the implications of this shift and prepare for the new compliance regime.
What is an RNPO Under the Income Tax Act, 2025?
The Income Tax Act, 2025 introduces a dedicated chapter titled:
“Special Provisions for Registered Non-Profit Organisations”
This framework is incorporated under Chapter XVII Part-B and replaces the fragmented provisions earlier spread across Sections 11, 12, 12A, 12AB, 13, 10(23C), and 80G of the 1961 Act.
The Government’s objective is to:
- Simplify compliance for charitable institutions
- Eliminate overlapping exemption regimes
- Create uniform registration procedures
- Improve transparency and accountability
- Rationalise taxation of non-profit entities
Under the new law, all eligible charitable and religious entities will be classified as RNPOs (Registered Non-Profit Organisations).
Definition of Charitable Purpose Under Section 2(23)
The new Act continues the traditional concept of “charitable purpose” with refined drafting under Section 2(23).
The following activities qualify as charitable purposes:
- Relief of the poor
- Education
- Yoga
- Medical relief
- Preservation of environment
- Preservation of monuments or places/objects of artistic or historic interest
- Advancement of any other object of general public utility
Only organisations established in India exclusively for charitable or religious purposes and holding assets under an irrevocable structure for public benefit will qualify.
Which Organisations Qualify as RNPOs?
The following entities may qualify as RNPOs:
- Public Charitable Trusts
- Religious Trusts
- Registered Societies
- Section 8 Companies
- Educational Institutions
- Hospitals and Medical Institutions
- Government-funded charitable bodies
- Other approved public welfare institutions
The organisation must:
- Operate for public benefit
- Maintain irrevocable charitable structure
- Avoid private profit distribution
- Comply with investment and application norms
Old vs New Framework: Key Structural Changes
1. Registration Provisions Replaced
Earlier Regime
- Sections 12A / 12AA / 12AB
- Section 10(23C)
New Regime
All registrations are now consolidated under:
Section 332 – RNPO Registration
This creates a unified registration system for all charitable and religious entities.
2. Income Classification Completely Revamped
Under the old law, exempt income was governed largely by Sections 11 to 13.
The new Act introduces three distinct categories of income:
A. Regular Income – Section 335
This income remains exempt subject to application rules.
Includes:
- Voluntary contributions
- Donations
- Property income
- Incidental business income
- Activity-based income
- Grants and funding
Exemption Condition
At least:
85% of income must be applied or accumulated for charitable purposes.
B. Specified Income – Section 337
Specified income is taxable at:
Flat 30% Tax Rate
This category includes:
- Anonymous donations
- Benefits provided to related parties
- Income applied outside India without approval
- Investments violating prescribed modes under Section 350
- Improper accumulation usage
- Misapplied charitable funds
This provision is expected to increase scrutiny on governance and fund utilisation practices.
C. Residual Income – Section 355(J)
Residual income is taxed at normal slab rates.
Includes:
- Income outside approved objects
- Prior period income
- Non-charitable activities
- Unexplained receipts not covered elsewhere
Organisations must therefore classify income carefully to avoid adverse tax consequences.
Major Relief for Existing NGOs and Trusts
One of the biggest relief measures under the new regime is the automatic migration provision.
Automatic Transition to RNPO Status
Existing registrations under:
- Section 12A
- Section 12AA
- Section 12AB
- Section 10(23C)
will automatically continue as RNPO registrations.
No Immediate Re-Registration Required
The existing approval remains valid for its remaining approval period.
This prevents unnecessary duplication of registration procedures for existing charitable entities.
End of Dual Exemption Regimes
The earlier system created confusion because many organisations operated simultaneously under:
- Section 11-13 regime
- Section 10(23C) regime
The new law eliminates this dual structure entirely.
Important Change
Fresh applications under Section 10(23C) have already been discontinued after:
1 October 2024
Upon expiry of old approvals, organisations must transition entirely into the RNPO framework.
Revised Application and Accumulation Rules
The new law introduces several practical improvements.
Donation to Another RNPO
Under the revised framework:
- 85% of donations made to another RNPO can be treated as application of income.
This provides flexibility for collaborative charitable work.
Corpus Reinvestment Relief
The new law allows:
- Corpus reinvestment
- Loan repayment within 5 years
to qualify as valid application of income.
This resolves several long-standing practical difficulties faced by NGOs.
Relaxation in Deemed Application Rules
Under the old regime, procedural timelines were extremely strict.
The new Act allows:
- Shortfall below 85% to be treated as deemed application
- Application can occur in current or next financial year
Important Relief
The due date is now linked to:
- Income Tax Return filing date
instead of:
- Two months before filing
This significantly eases compliance burdens.
Consolidation of Donor Approval Mechanism
Another landmark reform is the merger of 80G approval into the RNPO framework.
Separate 80G Approval Removed
Earlier:
- Organisations required both:
- 12AB registration
- Separate 80G approval
Now:
- RNPO registration itself will govern donor deduction eligibility.
This reduces duplication and administrative complexity.
New Forms and Compliance Framework
The Government has already notified:
- Income-tax Rules, 2026
- Updated forms on 20 March 2026
Updated ITR-7 Introduced
The revised ITR-7 includes:
- Rationalised reporting
- Simplified capital gains disclosure
- Enhanced transparency requirements
- Streamlined compliance reporting
All RNPOs must ensure timely migration to updated filing systems from:
1 April 2026
Key Compliance Risks for NGOs and RNPOs
Despite simplification, compliance responsibilities remain significant.
Organisations Must Carefully Monitor:
1. Income Classification
Incorrect classification into “Specified Income” may trigger:
- 30% taxation
- Penalties
- Compliance scrutiny
2. Related Party Transactions
Benefits to trustees, founders, or related persons may attract adverse tax treatment.
3. Investment Compliance
Investments violating prescribed modes under Section 350 may lose exemption benefits.
4. Foreign Application of Funds
Applying income outside India without approval may become taxable.
5. Documentation Standards
Proper accounting, audit trails, board resolutions, and utilisation records will become even more critical.
Impact on Section 8 Companies
Section 8 Companies registered under the Companies Act must now align:
- Corporate governance compliance
- MCA filings
- Income-tax RNPO framework
- Donor reporting obligations
Finance teams and compliance officers should undertake a complete review of:
- Objects clauses
- Funding structures
- Related party arrangements
- Investment portfolios
- Accounting systems
Strategic Action Plan for NGOs Before 1 April 2026
Immediate Steps Recommended
Review Existing Registrations
Verify validity period of:
- 12AB registration
- 10(23C) approvals
- Existing donor approvals
Revisit Accounting Systems
Ensure accounting software can separately classify:
- Regular Income
- Specified Income
- Residual Income
Strengthen Governance
Implement:
- Board oversight mechanisms
- Related-party approval policies
- Internal audit controls
Train Finance Teams
Compliance teams must understand:
- New application rules
- Deemed application provisions
- Revised filing obligations
Prepare for Updated ITR-7
Review:
- Disclosure formats
- Capital gains reporting
- Audit documentation
Conclusion
The Income Tax Act, 2025 marks one of the most significant reforms in India’s non-profit taxation landscape.
The introduction of the RNPO framework aims to:
- Simplify compliance
- Create uniformity
- Improve accountability
- Reduce duplication
However, NGOs, Trusts, Societies, Religious Institutions, and Section 8 Companies must proactively prepare for:
- New income classifications
- Revised exemption rules
- Enhanced compliance reporting
- Stricter governance expectations
Entities that modernise their accounting, governance, and compliance systems early will be best positioned to continue enjoying tax exemptions and donor confidence under the new regime.
Professional Advisory & Compliance Support for NGOs, Trusts & Section 8 Companies
Organisations seeking assistance with:
- RNPO Registration
- NGO Tax Compliance
- Trust Structuring
- Section 8 Company Advisory
- 12AB & 80G Transition
- ITR-7 Filing
- Audit & Tax Assessments
- Governance Frameworks
- Charitable Trust Tax Planning
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- Email: intellex@intellexconsulting.com
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