How to Save Tax on Salary🇮🇳 India • FY 2025-26
A complete guide to reducing your income tax liability legally. Explore every deduction, exemption, and regime choice available to salaried employees in India for FY 2025-26.
1. Understanding Your Salary Structure
Before optimising taxes, understand what makes up your salary:
Basic Salary — The core component. HRA exemption and EPF contributions are calculated on this. Typically 40-50% of CTC.
House Rent Allowance (HRA) — Tax-exempt under Section 10(13A) if you pay rent. Usually 40-50% of Basic.
Special Allowance — Fully taxable. No deductions available.
Employer EPF Contribution — Not part of your taxable income (up to 12% of Basic).
Other Allowances — LTA, food coupons, car lease, internet reimbursement — some are partially exempt.
Every salaried employee gets a flat ₹75,000 deduction (FY 2025-26, new regime) or ₹50,000 (old regime) from gross salary. No proof or investment required — it's automatic.
Example: If your gross salary is ₹10,00,000, your taxable salary starts at ₹9,25,000 (new regime) or ₹9,50,000 (old regime) after standard deduction.
3. Section 80C — The Big ₹1.5 Lakh Deduction
Section 80C is the most popular tax-saving provision. You can claim up to ₹1,50,000 deduction per year from these investments (old regime only):
Investment
Lock-in
Returns
Risk
Best For
ELSS Mutual Fund
3 years
10-15%
Market-linked
Highest returns + shortest lock-in
PPF
15 years
7.1%
Zero
Risk-free, EEE tax status
EPF (Employee share)
Till retirement
8.25%
Zero
Auto-deducted, guaranteed returns
NSC
5 years
7.7%
Zero
Fixed returns, post office scheme
Tax Saver FD
5 years
6.5-7.5%
Zero
Simple, bank-based
SSY
21 years
8.2%
Zero
Daughter's future, highest safe return
Life Insurance Premium
Policy term
4-6%
Low
Only for pure term plans
Home Loan Principal
Loan tenure
N/A
N/A
Already paying EMI? Claim it
Children Tuition Fee
N/A
N/A
N/A
Up to 2 children, full-time education
Pro tip: Your EPF contribution (employee share) already counts towards 80C. If your Basic is ₹50,000/month, your EPF contribution is ₹6,000/month = ₹72,000/year. You only need ₹78,000 more to max out 80C.
The National Pension System offers an additional ₹50,000 deduction under Section 80CCD(1B) — over and above the ₹1.5 lakh 80C limit. This is available in both old and new regime.
Total NPS tax benefit: ₹2,00,000 (₹1.5L under 80C + ₹50K under 80CCD(1B))
Employer NPS contribution: Up to 14% of Basic (central govt) or 10% (private sector) is tax-free under 80CCD(2)
Expected return: 8-10% (equity-heavy allocation)
Lock-in: Till age 60 (partial withdrawal allowed after 3 years for specific purposes)
For the 30% tax bracket: ₹50,000 NPS investment saves ₹15,600 in tax (including cess). That's a guaranteed 31.2% return in year one, before any market returns.
If you have a home loan, you get two separate deductions:
Section 24(b): Up to ₹2,00,000 deduction on home loan interest (self-occupied property)
Section 80C: Up to ₹1,50,000 deduction on principal repayment (part of your 80C limit)
Section 80EEA: Additional ₹1,50,000 for first-time buyers (loan sanctioned before March 2022, stamp value under ₹45 lakh) — check if extended
Rented out property: No limit on interest deduction for let-out properties. The entire interest paid is deductible, though loss from house property is capped at ₹2,00,000 per year for set-off against salary.
If old regime: Max out 80C (EPF + ELSS/PPF) + 80D (health insurance) + NPS 80CCD(1B)
Potential savings: ₹50,000-80,000 in tax
Salary ₹15-25 Lakh
Old regime often wins here with full deductions
80C: ₹1.5L (EPF + ELSS + PPF)
80D: ₹25K-50K (health insurance for self + parents)
NPS: ₹50K under 80CCD(1B)
HRA: Claim full exemption if paying rent
Potential savings: ₹1-2 lakh in tax
Salary ₹25 Lakh+
Maximise every deduction: 80C + 80D + NPS + HRA + Section 24
Consider home loan for Section 24 benefit (₹2L interest deduction)
Employer NPS contribution under 80CCD(2) is extra — negotiate with employer
Potential savings: ₹2-4 lakh in tax
10. Common Tax Saving Mistakes
Last-minute investing in March — Plan at the start of the financial year. SIPs spread across 12 months are better than lump sum in March.
Buying insurance for tax saving — Endowment and ULIP plans give poor returns (4-6%). Buy a pure term plan for insurance, invest separately via ELSS/PPF.
Ignoring NPS 80CCD(1B) — This extra ₹50K deduction saves ₹15,600 at the 30% bracket. Many people miss it.
Not claiming HRA — If you pay rent, always claim HRA exemption. Keep rent receipts and landlord PAN (if rent exceeds ₹1 lakh/year).
Choosing wrong regime — Always calculate both regimes before choosing. The optimal choice depends on your specific deductions.
Not submitting proofs on time — Submit investment proofs to your employer before their deadline (usually January-February). Otherwise, higher TDS will be deducted.
Ignoring employer-provided benefits — NPS employer contribution, food coupons (₹2,200/month tax-free), car lease, and internet reimbursement can reduce tax significantly.
Start Saving Tax Today
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