India Tax Saving & Employee Benefits Guide🇮🇳 India • FY 2025-26
Everything salaried employees need to know about saving tax, understanding EPF and PPF, calculating gratuity, and navigating GST. Covers FY 2025-26 rules.
1. Old vs New Tax Regime (FY 2025-26)
India currently has two income tax regimes. The new regime offers lower slab rates but no deductions. The old regime has higher rates but allows deductions under 80C, 80D, HRA, and more.
Income Slab
Old Regime
New Regime (FY 2025-26)
Up to ₹3L
Nil
Nil
₹3L – 4L
5%
5%
₹4L – 5L
5%
5%
₹5L – 7L
20%
10%
₹7L – 10L
20%
15%
₹10L – 12L
30%
20%
₹12L – 15L
30%
25%
Above ₹15L
30%
30%
When the old regime saves more
If your total deductions (80C + 80D + HRA + 24b + NPS) exceed ₹3.75–5 lakh (varies by income level), the old regime is typically better. This threshold is higher for higher incomes.
When the new regime saves more
If you don't have a home loan, limited HRA, or don't invest aggressively under 80C, the new regime's lower rates may save more tax.
Pro tip: Don't guess — calculate both regimes with your actual numbers. The breakeven depends on your specific salary structure and deductions.
Section 80C is the most popular tax-saving provision. You can claim up to ₹1,50,000 deduction from your taxable income. Here are the best options ranked by effective returns:
Investment
Return
Lock-in
Risk
Tax on Returns
EPF
8.25%
Till retirement
Zero
Tax-free (conditions apply)
PPF
7.1%
15 years
Zero
Completely tax-free (EEE)
ELSS Mutual Fund
10–15%
3 years
Market-linked
12.5% LTCG above ₹1.25L
NPS (80CCD 1B)
8–12%
Age 60
Market-linked
Partially taxable
5-Year Tax-Saver FD
6.5–7.5%
5 years
Zero
Fully taxable
Life Insurance Premium
4–6%
Policy term
Zero
Tax-free (conditions)
Home Loan Principal
Saves interest
Loan tenure
Zero
N/A
Optimal 80C strategy
EPF (automatic): Your employer deducts 12% of basic salary. This fills a large chunk of your 80C limit. Check your EPF growth →
PPF (₹500-12,500/month): Tax-free guaranteed returns. Best for the risk-free portion. Estimate PPF maturity →
ELSS (remaining gap): Highest potential returns with shortest lock-in. Start an ELSS SIP for the remaining 80C gap.
Mistake to avoid: Don't invest in LIC endowment plans or ULIPs just for 80C. Their returns (4-6%) are inferior to PPF (7.1%) and ELSS (10-15%). Buy pure term insurance separately for protection, and invest for returns.
3. EPF vs PPF: Which Provident Fund Is Better?
Both are government-backed savings instruments qualifying under Section 80C, but they serve different purposes:
Feature
EPF
PPF
Interest Rate
8.25% (FY 2025-26)
7.1% (FY 2025-26)
Eligibility
Salaried employees (₹15K+ basic)
Anyone (self-employed, housewives, minors)
Employer Contribution
Yes (12% of basic, split EPF/EPS)
No
Annual Limit
No cap (but tax relief only on ₹1.5L)
₹1.5 lakh per year
Lock-in
Till 58 (partial withdrawal for specific purposes)
15 years (partial after 7 years)
Tax on Interest
Tax-free up to ₹2.5L/year contribution
Completely tax-free
Nomination
Family members only
Anyone
VPF / Extra
Can contribute extra via VPF at same rate
Cannot exceed ₹1.5L/year
EPF's hidden advantage: employer matching
Your employer contributes 12% of your basic salary to EPF (3.67% to EPF + 8.33% to EPS pension). This is essentially free money — a 100% instant return on your contribution. No other investment offers this.
When to choose PPF
You're self-employed or freelancing (no EPF option)
Your EPF already fills your 80C limit, but you want more tax-free guaranteed returns
You want a separate long-term corpus beyond EPF
When to boost EPF with VPF
If your EPF contribution at 12% is modest (low basic salary), you can voluntarily contribute more through VPF at the same 8.25% rate. This is often better than PPF since the rate is higher.
Gratuity is a lump sum paid by your employer when you leave after 5 or more years of continuous service. It's governed by the Payment of Gratuity Act, 1972.
The gratuity formula
Gratuity = (Last Drawn Basic + DA) × 15 / 26 × Years of Service
For employees not covered under the Act: Gratuity = (Last Drawn Basic + DA) × 15 / 30 × Years of Service
Tax treatment
Government employees: Gratuity is fully tax-exempt.
Private sector (covered by Act): Tax-exempt up to ₹20 lakh or the actual gratuity received or the formula amount, whichever is lower.
Amount exceeding ₹20 lakh is added to taxable income for the year.
Key rules to know
Eligibility: Minimum 5 years of service (4 years 8 months rounds up to 5 in some cases).
Maximum amount: No cap under the Act, but tax exemption is capped at ₹20 lakh.
Death/disability: Gratuity is payable regardless of service length if the employee dies or becomes disabled.
Forfeiture: Only if the employee is terminated for willful damage or misconduct involving moral turpitude.
Example: After 20 years with a last basic salary of ₹80,000, your gratuity = 80,000 × 15/26 × 20 = ₹9,23,077. This is fully tax-free (below ₹20L).
Registration threshold: ₹40L turnover for goods, ₹20L for services (₹20L/10L for special category states).
Composition scheme: Businesses under ₹1.5 Cr turnover can pay 1% GST (goods) or 6% (services) with simplified returns.
Input Tax Credit (ITC): GST paid on business purchases can be offset against GST collected on sales. This is the core mechanism that prevents tax cascading.
How your salary is structured matters more than the total CTC. Here's how to optimize:
Key salary components and tax treatment
Basic salary (40-50% of CTC): Fully taxable but determines EPF, gratuity, and HRA amounts. A higher basic means more EPF and gratuity.
HRA (House Rent Allowance): Partially exempt if you pay rent. Exemption = minimum of (actual HRA, rent minus 10% of basic, or 50%/40% of basic for metro/non-metro).
Special allowance: Fully taxable. Minimize this component.
NPS employer contribution: Up to 14% of basic is tax-free under Section 80CCD(2). Ask your employer to add this.
The gratuity-EPF connection
Both gratuity and EPF are calculated on basic salary. If your employer keeps basic low (say 30% of CTC), your gratuity and EPF contributions are lower, reducing your retirement corpus. Discuss with HR about restructuring to 40-50% basic.
7. Terminal Benefits: Your Complete Retirement Payout
When you retire or change jobs after long service, you receive multiple payouts. Here's the complete picture:
Benefit
Typical Amount (20yr, ₹80K basic)
Tax Treatment
EPF Balance
₹50–80 lakh (with growth)
Tax-free if 5+ years service
EPS Pension
₹7,500–15,000/month
Taxable as income
Gratuity
₹9.2 lakh (formula-based)
Tax-free up to ₹20 lakh
Leave Encashment
₹3–8 lakh (varies by policy)
Tax-free up to ₹25 lakh
PPF (if maintained)
₹30–50 lakh
Completely tax-free
Combined, a salaried employee with 20-25 years of service can expect ₹1–2 Cr+ in terminal benefits. The key is to protect these: don't withdraw EPF when switching jobs, and maintain PPF consistently.
Use our Retirement Calculator to see if these benefits (plus additional investments) will sustain your desired lifestyle in retirement.
8. Your Tax-Saving Action Plan
Here's a step-by-step plan to maximize tax savings and employee benefits:
Calculate both tax regimes: Use the Income Tax Calculator with your actual salary and deductions. Don't assume one regime is always better.
Maximize EPF: Check your EPF contribution. If basic salary is low, discuss restructuring with HR. Consider VPF for additional guaranteed returns. Project your EPF →
Open a PPF account: Start contributing ₹500-12,500/month for tax-free long-term growth. Estimate returns →
Fill 80C gaps with ELSS: After EPF and PPF, invest the remaining 80C gap in ELSS mutual funds via SIP. Shortest lock-in (3 years) with highest potential returns.
Claim HRA properly: If you pay rent, submit rent receipts to your employer. The HRA exemption can save ₹30,000-1,00,000+ in tax annually.
Don't forget 80D: Health insurance premiums up to ₹25,000 (₹50,000 for seniors) are deductible. Add parents' insurance for extra ₹25-50K deduction.
Use NPS 80CCD(1B): An extra ₹50,000 deduction beyond the 80C limit. Saves ₹15,000+ in tax for the 30% bracket.
File before deadline: ITR filing deadline is July 31. Filing by December 31 avoids late fees. After March 31, you lose the ability to file for that year.