Calculate your HRA tax exemption under Section 10(13A). Adjust the values to see how much of your HRA is tax-free.
How HRA Exemption is Calculated
The tax-exempt portion of your HRA is the minimum of these three:
- Actual HRA received from your employer.
- 50% of basic salary if you live in a metro city (Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, Kolkata), or 40% for non-metro cities.
- Rent paid minus 10% of basic salary.
The rest of your HRA is added to your taxable income.
Example
If your basic salary is ₹50,000/month, HRA is ₹20,000/month, and you pay ₹18,000/month rent in Bangalore (non-metro):
- Actual HRA = ₹20,000
- 40% of basic = ₹20,000
- Rent - 10% of basic = ₹18,000 - ₹5,000 = ₹13,000
Minimum = ₹13,000/month is tax-exempt. The remaining ₹7,000/month is taxable.
Important Notes
- HRA exemption is only available under the old tax regime. The new tax regime does not allow HRA deductions.
- You need rent receipts as proof. For rent above ₹1 lakh/year, you also need your landlord’s PAN.
City Type
Metro: Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, Kolkata
₹
₹1,00,000
₹50,00,000
₹
₹0
₹20,00,000
₹
₹0
₹30,00,000
₹
₹0
₹50,00,000
HRA Exemption (Tax-Free)
₹2,40,000
₹20,000/month
HRA Received
₹2,40,000
Exempt
₹2,40,000
Taxable HRA
₹0
Exemption is minimum of:
① Actual HRA received
₹2,40,000
② 50%/40% of (Basic + DA)
₹3,00,000
③ Rent paid − 10% of (Basic + DA)
₹2,40,000
Minimum (exempt amount)
₹2,40,000
Estimated tax saved:
If you're in the 30% tax bracket, this exemption saves you approximately
₹74,880 in tax
(including 4% cess).
HRA exemption calculation is based on the Income Tax Act. Consult a tax professional for your specific situation. The calculations shown are for illustrative purposes only and should not be considered as financial advice.