Personal Finance · 8 min read
In-Hand Salary Calculation Explained (With Examples)
A clear, line-by-line walkthrough of how your in-hand salary is calculated from CTC — covering EPF, gratuity, HRA, taxes, and the exact formula to know what hits your bank account each month.
By Jarviix Editorial · Mar 25, 2026
The number on your offer letter and the number that hits your bank account every month are rarely the same. Companies quote CTC; banks quote take-home. Both are correct; both are talking about different things. The mismatch is the single most common source of financial-planning confusion for Indian salaried employees — and the source of more under-saved emergency funds, over-leveraged home loans and missed SIPs than any other input in personal finance.
This guide unpacks exactly how in-hand salary is computed, line by line, so the gap stops being mysterious. By the end, you'll be able to look at any CTC offer and reverse-engineer the in-hand within ₹1,000.
The big picture: CTC vs in-hand
CTC = Gross salary + Employer-funded benefits
Gross salary = In-hand + Employee deductions
Or, expanded:
CTC = Gross + (Employer EPF + Gratuity + Group insurance + Variable pay + Other employer benefits)
In-hand = Gross − (Employee EPF + Income tax + Professional tax + Other monthly deductions)
The two layers — what your employer 'spends on you' (CTC) and what you actually receive (in-hand) — typically differ by 25–35% on a ₹15L CTC. Use our salary calculator to plug your specific numbers.
A worked example — ₹15 lakh CTC
A typical structure for a salaried professional in 2026 with ₹15L CTC:
CTC composition (annual)
| Component | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Basic salary (~40% of CTC) | ₹6,00,000 | Anchor for HRA, EPF, gratuity |
| House Rent Allowance (HRA) | ₹3,00,000 | Typically 40–50% of basic |
| Special / Other allowance | ₹3,17,000 | Adjustment to hit target gross |
| Conveyance / LTA | ₹50,000 | Optional, depends on company policy |
| Performance bonus (variable) | ₹1,50,000 | Notional, paid annually if at all |
| Employer EPF (12% of basic) | ₹72,000 | Doesn't reach your account |
| Gratuity provision (4.81% basic) | ₹28,860 | Vests after 5 years of service |
| Group health insurance | ₹15,000 | Employer-paid premium |
| Total CTC | ₹15,32,860 | Round-tripped to ₹15L for offer |
From CTC to gross salary (annual)
Strip out employer-funded portions:
Gross salary = ₹15L − ₹72,000 (employer EPF) − ₹28,860 (gratuity) − ₹15,000 (insurance) − ₹1,50,000 (variable, if not paid)
= ~₹12,34,140
Monthly gross = ₹1,02,800
(If the variable is paid in full, gross = ₹13.84L → monthly ~₹1,15,400. We assume variable at 0% for the conservative case.)
From gross to in-hand (monthly)
Now strip out monthly deductions:
| Deduction | Annual amount | Monthly amount |
|---|---|---|
| Employee EPF (12% of basic) | ₹72,000 | ₹6,000 |
| Income tax (TDS, New Regime, w/ ₹75k SD) | ₹93,000 | ₹7,750 |
| Professional tax (Karnataka) | ₹2,400 | ₹200 |
| Total deductions | ₹1,67,400 | ₹13,950 |
In-hand = Gross − Deductions
= ₹12,34,140 − ₹1,67,400
= ₹10,66,740 / year
= ~₹88,900 / month
So a ₹15L CTC → ~₹88,900 monthly in-hand under the New Regime, assuming variable pay is held back. That's roughly 71% of CTC showing up as cash flow.
Same employee under Old Regime with full deductions
If this employee:
- Pays rent of ₹25,000/month → claims HRA exemption
- Maxes out 80C (EPF + ELSS)
- Buys ₹25,000 health insurance
- Contributes ₹50,000 to NPS (80CCD(1B))
Total deductions ~ ₹4.50L, taxable income drops to ~₹6.84L, tax liability ~ ₹47,000/year.
In-hand under Old Regime = Gross − EPF − Tax − PT = ₹12,34,140 − ₹72,000 − ₹47,000 − ₹2,400 = ~₹93,900 / month
Same CTC. ₹5,000 / month higher in-hand purely from regime + deduction optimisation. That's the reason regime selection matters.
Component by component: what the labels actually mean
Basic salary
The fixed core. EPF is a percentage of basic, HRA is calculated against basic, gratuity is a percentage of basic. Higher basic = higher EPF (good for retirement, bad for liquidity).
HRA (House Rent Allowance)
A cash allowance in your monthly salary. Tax-exempt to the extent of the least of:
- Actual HRA received
- Rent paid minus 10% of basic salary
- 50% of basic (metro: Mumbai/Delhi/Chennai/Kolkata) or 40% (non-metro)
Use our HRA calculator to compute the exact exempt amount.
Special / Other allowance
The 'plug' that makes your CTC math add up. Fully taxable, paid in cash. No exemption attached.
LTA (Leave Travel Allowance)
Tax-exempt for travel within India twice in a 4-year block, on actual travel expenses (subject to fare limits). Often paid as part of CTC but only exempted if you submit travel bills.
Conveyance / fuel reimbursement
Tax-exempt if part of CTC and supported by fuel bills.
Meal vouchers / Sodexo
Tax-exempt up to ₹50/meal × 22 working days × 12 months = ₹13,200/year. Often the simplest 100%-tax-exempt benefit to claim.
Employer EPF
12% of basic, contributed by the employer. Doesn't reach your account; goes into your EPF balance.
Employee EPF
12% of basic, deducted from your salary. Gets added to your EPF along with employer's contribution. Earns 8.25% tax-free (current rate).
Gratuity provision
4.81% of basic salary, set aside annually. Paid out only if you stay 5+ years with the employer. Doesn't reach your monthly salary.
Performance bonus (variable pay)
Quoted as part of CTC. Usually paid 1–4 times a year, often partial, often delayed. Don't plan monthly cash flow assuming 100% bonus payout.
Income tax (TDS)
Deducted monthly from your salary in 12 equal instalments based on your projected annual tax liability. Often back-loaded if HR didn't have your investment declarations early in the year.
Professional tax
State-level tax. Karnataka: ₹200/month. Maharashtra: ₹200/month. Tamil Nadu: ₹208/month. West Bengal: ₹150–250/month. Some states (Delhi, Punjab, Haryana) don't levy it.
A quick rule-of-thumb table
| CTC (annual) | Approximate monthly in-hand (New Regime, no extra benefits) | % of CTC |
|---|---|---|
| ₹6 lakh | ~₹47,000 | 94% |
| ₹8 lakh | ~₹62,000 | 93% |
| ₹10 lakh | ~₹74,000 | 89% |
| ₹12 lakh | ~₹83,000 | 83% |
| ₹15 lakh | ~₹89,000 | 71% |
| ₹20 lakh | ~₹1,16,000 | 70% |
| ₹25 lakh | ~₹1,42,000 | 68% |
| ₹35 lakh | ~₹1,90,000 | 65% |
| ₹50 lakh | ~₹2,64,000 | 63% |
Numbers are rough — assume New Regime, ₹75k standard deduction, basic ~40% of CTC, and no variable pay. Use our salary calculator for an accurate per-component breakdown. The percentage drops sharply once the 30% slab kicks in around ₹15L because tax becomes a meaningful slice.
Why the gap matters for financial planning
Almost every personal-finance number you care about is anchored to in-hand, not CTC.
- Loan eligibility is computed on net take-home (banks specifically exclude employer EPF and notional bonuses). EMI shouldn't exceed 35% of in-hand.
- Emergency fund = 6 months × monthly expenses → expenses must be sustainable from in-hand.
- SIP capacity = the share of in-hand you can lock into an automated debit. Typical recommendation: 25–30% of in-hand.
- Rent affordability = rent should be ≤ 25% of in-hand. The Mumbai professional with a ₹15L CTC should look at rent under ₹22k, not under ₹30k.
Plan monthly cash flows around ~70% of CTC, not 100%. The remaining 25–30% gap is real money — it just doesn't reach your account.
Common in-hand salary myths
- 'Higher CTC means I can afford more.' Only true if the CTC structure is favourable. Two ₹15L CTCs from different companies can have a ₹15,000/month in-hand difference.
- 'Variable pay is part of my regular salary.' It isn't. Plan with the fixed component; treat variable as a windfall when paid.
- 'EPF is wasted money.' Far from it — EPF is one of the highest-yielding tax-free instruments in Indian personal finance (8.25% tax-free in 2026). It's locked, but the money compounds at sovereign-grade safety with no equivalent in the open market.
- 'Switch to a smaller basic to maximise in-hand.' True for short-term liquidity, but lower basic = lower EPF, gratuity, HRA exemption, and home loan eligibility. Optimise for total wealth, not month-1 cash flow.
- 'My TDS is too high; HR is wrong.' TDS is back-loaded if you submit declarations late. Submit Form 12BB by April with your investment plan to flatten TDS across the year.
Pro tips to maximise your in-hand
- Submit your investment declarations in April, not January. TDS will be spread across 12 months instead of bunched in Q4.
- Restructure CTC for tax efficiency. Most companies allow flexi-CTC: increase HRA (exempt up to a limit), add NPS employer contribution (10% of basic, fully deductible), claim meal vouchers, internet reimbursement, fuel reimbursement.
- Use the tax calculator to compare regimes — the wrong regime can cost ₹1L+ a year in unnecessary tax.
- Compute in-hand before accepting an offer. Two offers with the same CTC can have wildly different in-hand depending on the basic / HRA / variable mix.
- Claim every tax-exempt component. Fuel bills, meal vouchers, internet reimbursement, LTA — most go unclaimed simply because nobody chases the paperwork.
Conclusion
In-hand salary isn't a mystery — it's just CTC with employer-funded benefits and personal deductions stripped out. Once the math is in your head, you'll never be surprised by a salary credit again, and you'll plan loans, SIPs and emergency funds against the right number from day one.
Use the salary calculator when negotiating an offer or restructuring CTC. Compute your tax in both regimes. Maximise tax-exempt components. Anchor every personal-finance decision to in-hand, not CTC. Done that way, the same job pays you visibly more — without any change in your underlying compensation.
Frequently asked questions
How is in-hand salary calculated from CTC?
In-hand = Gross salary − (Employee EPF + Income tax + Professional tax + Other monthly deductions). Gross salary itself = CTC − Employer EPF − Gratuity − Other employer-funded benefits. As a quick rule of thumb, your in-hand is typically 65–75% of your CTC for salaries between ₹8L–₹25L. The exact percentage depends on your CTC structure and tax regime.
Why is my in-hand salary so much less than CTC?
Because CTC is the company's total cost of employing you, not the cash that reaches your bank account. CTC includes employer EPF (~₹86k/year on a ₹15L CTC), gratuity provision (~₹54k), employer-paid health insurance, performance bonus that may not pay out fully, and notional benefits. Your in-hand strips all of those out plus your own EPF contribution and income tax.
Does in-hand salary change every month?
It can. The most common reasons: (a) tax deducted at source (TDS) is back-loaded — usually higher in Q3–Q4 once your annual tax liability gets recalculated, (b) bonus or variable pay months show a higher gross with disproportionately higher TDS, (c) reimbursement claims (medical, internet, fuel) add to one specific month's in-hand. The fixed-component in-hand stays steady; variable months fluctuate.
Is HRA part of in-hand salary?
Yes — HRA is paid in cash with your monthly salary and counts as part of in-hand. The exemption under HRA only reduces your taxable income (and therefore your TDS); it doesn't change the cash hitting your bank. So a higher HRA component means more cash in hand AND a smaller tax bill if you live in rented accommodation.
What's the difference between gross salary and in-hand salary?
Gross salary is your total earned compensation per month before deductions — basic + HRA + special allowance + LTA + other allowances. In-hand is what remains after EPF, income tax (TDS), professional tax and any other monthly deductions are removed from gross. The gap between gross and in-hand is typically 15–25% depending on your tax slab.
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