Tax Regime
Earnings
Deductions
Summary
CTC or Cost to Company is the total annual amount a company spends on an employee. It includes your basic salary, allowances like HRA and LTA, employer PF contribution, gratuity provision, insurance premiums, and any other benefits. Your in-hand salary (take-home pay) is always lower than CTC because it excludes employer-side costs and deducts employee PF, professional tax, and income tax. For most employees in India, in-hand salary ranges from 60% to 80% of CTC depending on the salary structure and applicable deductions.
The formula is straightforward: In-Hand Salary = Gross Salary - Employee PF - Professional Tax - Income Tax (TDS). Gross salary itself is CTC minus employer contributions (employer PF, gratuity, insurance). Here's a worked example for an annual CTC of Rs 10,00,000.
Basic salary is typically 40% to 50% of CTC. For Rs 10 lakh CTC with 40% basic: Basic = Rs 4,00,000. HRA = 50% of basic = Rs 2,00,000. Special allowance = Rs 1,52,000. Employer PF (12% of basic) = Rs 48,000. Gratuity (4.81% of basic) = Rs 19,240. Employer insurance = Rs 10,000. These add up to Rs 10,00,000 (approximate, companies adjust special allowance to balance).
Gross salary = CTC - Employer PF - Gratuity - Employer Insurance = Rs 10,00,000 - Rs 48,000 - Rs 19,240 - Rs 10,000 = Rs 9,22,760.
Employee PF (12% of basic) = Rs 48,000. Professional tax (varies by state, max Rs 2,500/year). Income tax under new regime for Rs 9.2 lakh taxable income after Rs 75,000 standard deduction = approximately Rs 41,600. Total deductions = Rs 92,100. Monthly in-hand = (Rs 9,22,760 - Rs 92,100) / 12 = approximately Rs 69,221.
Every CTC breakup in India follows a similar structure, though companies adjust percentages based on their compensation philosophy. Here's the typical allocation.
| Component | Typical % of CTC | Taxable? | Who Pays |
|---|---|---|---|
| Basic Salary | 40-50% | Yes, fully taxable | Employer to employee |
| House Rent Allowance (HRA) | 40-50% of basic | Partially exempt (Section 10(13A)) | Employer to employee |
| Dearness Allowance (DA) | 0-5% | Yes, fully taxable | Employer to employee |
| Leave Travel Allowance (LTA) | Variable | Exempt for actual travel (Section 10(5)) | Employer to employee |
| Special Allowance | Balancing figure | Yes, fully taxable | Employer to employee |
| Performance Bonus | 5-15% | Yes, fully taxable | Employer to employee |
| Employer PF (12% of basic) | 5-6% | Exempt up to Rs 7.5 lakh/year | Employer to PF account |
| Gratuity Provision | 4.81% of basic | Exempt up to Rs 20 lakh | Employer provision |
| Health Insurance | Rs 5,000-25,000 | Not taxable for employee | Employer to insurer |
The Indian government offers two tax regimes. The new regime (default since FY 2023-24) has lower tax rates but almost no deductions. The old regime has higher rates but allows deductions under Section 80C, 80D, HRA exemption, and others. For most salaried employees with CTC below Rs 15 lakh and limited investments, the new regime works out better. For those with home loans, significant Section 80C investments, and HRA claims, the old regime often saves more.
| Income Slab | New Regime Rate (FY 2025-26) | Old Regime Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Up to Rs 4,00,000 | Nil | Nil (up to Rs 2,50,000) |
| Rs 4,00,001 - Rs 8,00,000 | 5% | 5% (Rs 2.5L - Rs 5L) |
| Rs 8,00,001 - Rs 12,00,000 | 10% | 20% (Rs 5L - Rs 10L) |
| Rs 12,00,001 - Rs 16,00,000 | 15% | 30% (above Rs 10L) |
| Rs 16,00,001 - Rs 20,00,000 | 20% | 30% |
| Rs 20,00,001 - Rs 24,00,000 | 25% | 30% |
| Above Rs 24,00,000 | 30% | 30% |
Professional tax is a state-level tax deducted from your salary. Not all states levy it, and rates vary. The maximum professional tax in India is capped at Rs 2,500 per year by the Constitution. Here are the monthly rates for major states.
| State | Monthly PT (Approx.) | Annual Maximum | Applicable? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maharashtra | Rs 200/month (Rs 300 in Feb) | Rs 2,500 | Yes |
| Karnataka | Rs 200/month | Rs 2,400 | Yes |
| West Bengal | Rs 150-200/month | Rs 2,500 | Yes |
| Tamil Nadu | Rs 208/month (salary > Rs 21K) | Rs 2,500 | Yes |
| Andhra Pradesh | Rs 150-200/month | Rs 2,500 | Yes |
| Telangana | Rs 150-200/month | Rs 2,500 | Yes |
| Gujarat | Rs 0-200/month | Rs 2,500 | Yes |
| Kerala | Rs 0-250/month | Rs 2,500 | Yes |
| Delhi | Not applicable | Rs 0 | No |
| Haryana | Not applicable | Rs 0 | No |
| Rajasthan | Not applicable | Rs 0 | No |
| Uttar Pradesh | Not applicable | Rs 0 | No |
Many employees and even some HR teams make errors when calculating take-home salary from CTC. These are the most frequent ones.
Tax Slabs
Key Features
Tax Slabs
Key Features