Calculate Gratuity
What is Gratuity?
Gratuity is a lump-sum amount paid by an employer to an employee as a token of appreciation for services rendered. It is governed by the Payment of Gratuity Act, 1972 and applies to establishments with 10 or more employees.
Eligibility
- Minimum 5 years of continuous service (relaxed for death/disability)
- Payable on retirement, resignation, superannuation, or death
- Applies to all employees in establishments with 10+ workers (factories, mines, plantations, companies, shops)
- Service of 4 years and 240 days (190 days for mines) counts as 5 years in some interpretations
Gratuity Formula
Not covered: Gratuity = Salary × 15/30 × Years of Service
Government: Gratuity = Salary × 15/26 × Years of Service (different DA rules)
Note: "Salary" = Last drawn Basic + Dearness Allowance. The 15/26 factor means 15 days' wages for every year of service, with 26 working days in a month. Service exceeding 6 months in the last year is rounded up to 1 year.
Gratuity Tax Rules
Under Section 10(10) of the Income Tax Act:
| Employee Type | Tax Exemption |
|---|---|
| Government employees | Entire gratuity is tax-free (no limit) |
| Covered under Gratuity Act | Least of: (a) Actual gratuity, (b) ₹20 lakh, or (c) 15/26 × last salary × years of service |
| Not covered under Act | Least of: (a) Actual gratuity, (b) ₹20 lakh, or (c) half month's salary × years of service (based on average of last 10 months) |
The maximum tax-free gratuity was raised from ₹10 lakh to ₹20 lakh effective 29 March 2018. Any amount above the exempt limit is taxed as per your income tax slab.
Gratuity Calculation Examples
Example 1: Private Sector (10 Years)
Rajesh has a last drawn basic + DA of ₹50,000 and has served 10 years:
- Gratuity = 50,000 × 15/26 × 10 = ₹2,88,462
- Tax-exempt: Full amount (below ₹20L cap)
Example 2: Long Service (25 Years)
Priya has basic + DA of ₹1,20,000 and has served 25 years:
- Gratuity = 1,20,000 × 15/26 × 25 = ₹17,30,769
- Tax-exempt: Full amount (below ₹20L cap)
Example 3: High Salary, Exceeds Cap
Vikram has basic + DA of ₹2,00,000 and has served 30 years:
- Formula gratuity = 2,00,000 × 15/26 × 30 = ₹34,61,538
- Capped at ₹20,00,000 under the Act
- Employer may pay more as ex-gratia, but only ₹20L is tax-exempt
What Counts as "Years of Service"?
- Rounding rule: If you've served more than 6 months in the last year, it rounds UP to the next year. E.g., 7 years 8 months = 8 years for calculation.
- Continuous service: Includes authorized leaves, maternity leave, and layoffs due to shortage of work (up to specified limits).
- Does NOT include: Unauthorized absences, strike days (unless deemed legal), or trainee/apprentice periods (usually).
- Contract/Fixed-term: Fixed-term employees are eligible for gratuity on a pro-rata basis, even for periods shorter than 5 years (per 2018 amendment).
Forfeiture of Gratuity
Gratuity can be forfeited partially or fully under specific conditions:
- Termination for misconduct: If an employee is terminated for riotous or violent behavior, or for any act constituting a criminal offense (offense must be related to employment).
- Willful damage: If the employee willfully caused damage to employer's property, gratuity can be forfeited to the extent of the damage.
- Moral turpitude: If terminated for an offense involving moral turpitude committed during course of employment.
Important: Mere resignation, poor performance, or simple violation of company policy does NOT constitute grounds for forfeiture.
Gratuity vs Other Terminal Benefits
When leaving a job, employees receive multiple terminal benefits. Here's how they compare:
| Benefit | Eligibility | Calculation | Tax Treatment | Max Limit |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gratuity | 5 years service | Salary × 15/26 × Years | Tax-free up to limit | ₹20 Lakh |
| EPF | From day 1 | 12% contribution + interest | Tax-free after 5 years | No cap |
| Leave Encashment | Unused earned leave | Daily salary × unused days | Tax-free up to limit | ₹25 Lakh (govt: full) |
| EPS Pension | 10 years service | Pension formula (monthly) | Taxable as salary | ₹7,500/month max |
| Notice Period Pay | As per contract | 1-3 months salary | Fully taxable | No cap |
| Bonus/Ex-Gratia | Company policy | Varies | Fully taxable | Company-specific |
Among these, gratuity and EPF together form the core of retirement benefits for Indian employees. Always ensure both are properly accounted for in your exit settlement.
How Gratuity Works Across Industries
IT & Software Industry
With average tenures of 2-3 years, many IT employees never reach the 5-year threshold. Companies include gratuity in CTC at 4.81% of basic (~₹1,200-2,500/month), but employees forfeit it upon leaving early. Tip: If you're at 4.5 years, consider staying 6 more months — the gratuity payout can be ₹2-5 lakh.
Manufacturing & Traditional Sectors
Longer tenures (10-25 years) make gratuity a significant payout. A worker earning ₹35,000/month after 20 years would receive approximately ₹4.04 lakh. Many senior employees receive the ₹20 lakh cap and sometimes additional ex-gratia from employers.
Banking & Financial Services
Banks and NBFCs typically have generous gratuity policies that exceed the statutory minimum. Some PSU banks pay gratuity with a higher multiplier (e.g., half-month salary per year instead of 15/26). Always check your specific institution's policy.
Government Employees
Central and state government employees receive gratuity calculated at half-month salary per half-year of qualifying service, capped at 16.5 months' salary. Under the 7th Pay Commission, the ceiling was raised to ₹20 lakh and is periodically revised upward with each commission.
Real-World Gratuity Examples
| Employee | Last Salary (Basic + DA) | Service | Type | Gratuity Amount |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Software Engineer | ₹45,000 | 5 years | Covered | ₹1,29,808 |
| Bank Manager | ₹85,000 | 15 years | Covered | ₹7,35,577 |
| Factory Worker | ₹22,000 | 25 years | Covered | ₹3,17,308 |
| Senior Executive | ₹2,00,000 | 20 years | Covered | ₹20,00,000 (capped) |
| Consultant | ₹75,000 | 8 years | Not covered | ₹3,00,000 |
Notice how the Senior Executive's gratuity is capped at ₹20 lakh even though the formula gives ₹23.08 lakh. Many companies voluntarily pay the excess as ex-gratia, but this additional amount is fully taxable.
8 Tips Every Employee Should Know About Gratuity
- 1. Keep track of your joining date: Even one day short of 5 years disqualifies you (unless you've served more than 4 years and 6 months in your last year of service — courts have ruled this as rounding up in several cases).
- 2. Negotiate a higher basic salary: Since gratuity is calculated on basic + DA, a higher basic directly increases your gratuity. ₹10,000 more in basic = ₹2,885 extra per year of service.
- 3. File a nomination (Form F): Nominate your family member with your employer. In case of death, this ensures quick disbursement without legal complications.
- 4. Check if your employer has gratuity insurance: Companies with 10+ employees must maintain gratuity insurance (LIC or approved insurer) or operate an approved trust. This protects employees if the company shuts down.
- 5. Know the 30-day rule: Employers must pay gratuity within 30 days of it becoming due. If delayed, they must pay simple interest (not less than the rate notified by the government) for the delay period.
- 6. Use Form I for disputes: If your employer refuses or delays gratuity, you can file a complaint with the Controlling Authority (usually the Labour Commissioner) using Form I under Rule 7.
- 7. Factor gratuity into CTC negotiations: When comparing job offers, remember that gratuity (4.81% of basic) is a DEFERRED benefit. You only receive it after 5 years. A higher in-hand component may be more valuable if you don't plan to stay long.
- 8. Plan around the ₹20L tax-free limit: If your calculated gratuity exceeds ₹20 lakh, the excess is taxable. Consider timing your retirement or discussing with a tax advisor about structuring the payout across financial years.
Related Calculators
Plan your complete terminal benefits and retirement: