Translation unavailable - this article is shown in English. View English version
Summary
House Rent Allowance (HRA) is a salary component that can be partially or fully exempt from income tax if you live in rented accommodation. The exemption is the minimum of three amounts: actual HRA received, rent paid minus 10% of salary, or 50%/40% of salary depending on the city. HRA exemption is only available under the old tax regime.
How it works
The three-part formula
The HRA exemption under Section 10(13A) read with Rule 2A is the least of:
- Actual HRA received from your employer
- Rent paid minus 10% of salary (Basic + DA)
- 50% of salary if you live in a metro city (Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai), or 40% of salary if non-metro
“Salary” for HRA purposes means Basic salary + Dearness Allowance (DA). Commission received on a fixed percentage of turnover is also included.
Eligibility conditions
- You must be a salaried employee receiving HRA as part of your salary
- You must actually pay rent for accommodation you occupy
- HRA is only exempt under the old tax regime
- If rent exceeds Rs 1,00,000 per year, you must provide the landlord’s PAN
- Rent paid to a spouse does not qualify for exemption
Worked example
Basic: Rs 50,000/month, HRA: Rs 20,000/month, Rent: Rs 22,000/month, Metro city
Monthly calculation:
- Actual HRA: Rs 20,000
- Rent - 10% of Basic: Rs 22,000 - Rs 5,000 = Rs 17,000
- 50% of Basic (metro): Rs 25,000
- Exempt HRA: min(20,000, 17,000, 25,000) = Rs 17,000/month
- Taxable HRA: Rs 20,000 - Rs 17,000 = Rs 3,000/month
Annual tax saving (at 30% slab): Rs 17,000 x 12 x 30% = Rs 61,200
Non-metro example: Basic Rs 40,000, HRA Rs 16,000, Rent Rs 15,000
- Actual HRA: Rs 16,000
- Rent - 10%: Rs 15,000 - Rs 4,000 = Rs 11,000
- 40% of Basic: Rs 16,000
- Exempt: min(16,000, 11,000, 16,000) = Rs 11,000/month
Inputs explained
- Basic salary — monthly basic pay (plus DA if applicable)
- HRA received — the HRA component in your salary
- Rent paid — actual monthly rent
- City type — metro (Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai) or non-metro
Outputs explained
- Exempt HRA — the portion of HRA that is tax-free
- Taxable HRA — the portion that is added to taxable income
- Annual tax saving — how much income tax you save from the exemption
- Optimal rent — the rent level that maximizes your HRA exemption
Assumptions & limitations
- HRA exemption is not available under the new tax regime. If you switch to the new regime, your entire HRA becomes taxable.
- If you own a home in the same city, you can still claim HRA if you rent and live elsewhere, though this may attract scrutiny.
- Self-employed individuals cannot claim HRA but can claim rent deduction under Section 80GG (up to Rs 5,000/month or 25% of total income).
- The calculation is done on a monthly basis if salary or rent changes during the year.
출처
Related calculators
Take-Home Pay
Calculate your take-home pay after income tax, PF, and professional tax. New and old regime comparison. FY 2025-26 rates.
Old vs New Regime
Compare old and new income tax regimes for FY 2025-26. See which regime saves you more tax based on your salary, HRA, 80C, 80D, and NPS deductions.
Salary Breakup
Optimise your CTC salary breakup to maximise take-home pay. See how basic salary percentage affects HRA, EPF, tax, and in-hand salary.