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Tax

Comprehensive Income Tax Calculator — Gurgaon FY 2025-26

At Rs 15.0L average salary in Gurgaon (Haryana), the Old regime tax with full deductions (HRA at 40%, 80C, 80D, home loan interest) is Rs 0.77L versus the New regime's Rs 0.97L. The Old regime saves Rs 20K for a typical Gurgaon professional — but this depends critically on your actual rent, deductions, and income from other sources.

Verified Formula|Source: Income Tax Department, Government of India|Last verified: April 2026Methodology

Income from All 5 Heads

Rs.
Rs.

Enter negative for loss from house property

Rs.
Rs.
Rs.

FD interest, dividends, gifts, etc.

Old Regime Deductions

Rs.

Max Rs 1,50,000

Rs.
Rs.
Rs.

Related Calculators

Old vs New Regime80C Optimizer

Optimal Tax Regime

New Regime

You save ₹1,11,800 by choosing the new regime

Tax — New Regime

₹0

Effective rate: 0.00%

Tax — Old Regime

₹0

Effective rate: 9.32%

Regime Comparison

Income Breakdown

Salary₹12,00,000
House Property₹0
Business / Profession₹0
Capital Gains₹0
Other Sources₹0

Gross Total Income₹12,00,000

Feature Comparison

FeatureNew RegimeOld Regime
Standard DeductionRs 75,000Rs 50,000
Section 80C
Section 80D
HRA Exemption
Home Loan Interest
NPS 80CCD(2)
Lower Tax Slabs
Section 87A RebateUp to Rs 25KUp to Rs 12.5K

Which regime should you choose?

Based on your income of ₹12,00,000 and deductions totalling ₹1,75,000, the New Regime saves you ₹1,11,800. Salaried individuals can switch between regimes every year at the time of filing returns.

All 5 Heads of Income — Tax Computation for Gurgaon Residents FY 2025-26

Indian income tax law classifies all income into five heads. For Gurgaon's professionals — primarily employed in IT/ITES, Financial Services, Consulting — salary income dominates, but many also earn from house property (rental income from investment flats), capital gains (equity or real estate), and other sources (FD interest at 7.1%). Understanding all five heads is essential for accurate tax planning at Gurgaon's cost levels.

Head 1: Income from Salary — Gurgaon Structure

The typical Rs 15.0L CTC package at Gurgaon employers like Google and Deloitte breaks down as:

  • Basic salary (40% of CTC): Rs 6,00,000/year — forms the base for HRA, gratuity, and PF calculations.
  • HRA (50% of basic): Rs 3,00,000/year —Gurgaon is classified as a non-metro city for HRA purposes, meaning the HRA exemption cap is 40% of basic salary. With a rent of Rs 32,000/month in Gurgaon, the exempt HRA is the minimum of: actual HRA (Rs 3,00,000), 40% of basic (Rs 2,40,000), and rent paid minus 10% of basic (Rs 3,24,000). Exempt HRA: Rs 2,40,000.
  • Special allowance (35% of CTC): Rs 5,25,000/year — fully taxable, no exemption available under the New regime or Old regime.
  • Standard deduction: Old regime Rs 50,000, New regime Rs 75,000 (raised from Rs 50,000 in Budget 2024 — applicable from FY 2024-25 onwards).

Gurgaon's Professional Tax of Rs 0/year (Rs 0/month) is also deductible from gross salary before computing taxable income — a small but legitimate deduction under both regimes. Gurgaon residents pay zero professional tax — an advantage over cities like Mumbai (Rs 2,500/yr) or Bengaluru (Rs 2,400/yr).

Old Regime vs New Regime: Gurgaon Comparison at Rs 15.0L

Here is the complete tax computation comparison for a Gurgaon professional earning Rs 15.0L CTC, paying Rs 32,000/month rent, and claiming full deductions:

Old Regime (with all deductions):

  • Gross salary (after HRA exemption Rs 2,40,000): Rs 12,60,000
  • Less standard deduction (Rs 50,000): Rs 12,10,000
  • Less Section 80C (EPF + ELSS + PPF): − Rs 1,50,000
  • Less Section 80D (self + parents health insurance): − Rs 50,000
  • Less Section 24(b) home loan interest: − Rs 2,00,000
  • Taxable income: Rs 8,10,000
  • Income tax at old slab rates: Rs 74,500
  • Add 4% cess: Total tax: Rs 77,480
  • Effective tax rate: 5.2%
  • Monthly take-home (after tax + PT): Rs 1,18,543

New Regime (FY 2025-26 slabs):

  • Gross salary: Rs 15,00,000
  • Less standard deduction (Rs 75,000): Rs 14,25,000
  • No other deductions — no HRA, no 80C, no 80D, no 24(b)
  • Taxable income: Rs 14,25,000
  • Income tax at new slab rates: Rs 93,750
  • Add 4% cess: Total tax: Rs 97,500
  • Effective tax rate: 6.5%
  • Monthly take-home (after tax + PT): Rs 1,16,875

Verdict for Gurgaon at Rs 15.0L: The Old regime saves Rs 20,020 annually. However, this changes if you have a home loan — Section 24(b) deduction of Rs 2L significantly benefits the Old regime. Without a home loan, at Rs 15.0L, the Old regime tax without 24(b) is Rs 1,27,920, making the decision in favour of New regime.

Head 2: Income from House Property in Gurgaon

Gurgaon's property market (Golf Course Extension Road and Southern Peripheral Road (SPR) saw 25–30% appreciation in FY2025 — the highest in NCR. Dwarka Expressway sectors (102–113) rose 20%+. Luxury segment (DLF 5, Aralias) crossed Rs 25,000/sqft. New Gurgaon (Sectors 82–95) provides affordable entry at Rs 7,000–9,000/sqft.) creates meaningful house property income for investment property owners. A let-out flat earning Rs 25,600/month (Rs 3.1L/year) in Golf Course Road computes as:

  • Gross Annual Value (GAV): Rs 3,07,200
  • Less municipal taxes paid: − Rs 15,360
  • Net Annual Value (NAV): Rs 2,91,840
  • Less 30% standard deduction on NAV (Section 24a): − Rs 87,552
  • Less home loan interest on the let-out property: − Rs 6,35,800
  • House property income: Rs 4,31,512 (LOSS)

The house property shows a loss of Rs 4,31,512 due to the large home loan interest deduction (unlimited for let-out properties, unlike the Rs 2L cap for self-occupied). Under the Old regime, up to Rs 2,00,000 of this loss can be set off against salary income in the same year, reducing your taxable income. Note: House property income/loss is NOT allowed in the New regime — you forgo this set-off if choosing New regime.

Head 3: Capital Gains from Gurgaon Real Estate and Equity

Capital gains from selling a Gurgaon property at Rs 11,000/sq.ft. are taxed separately — not at slab rate:

  • LTCG on property (held >24 months): Sale of a 900 sq.ft. flat (current value Rs 99,00,000) originally bought for Rs 69,30,000 generates LTCG of Rs 24,15,600. Tax at 12.5% (Finance Act 2024, no indexation): Rs 3,14,028.
  • LTCG on equity (held >12 months): Up to Rs 1,25,000 in equity LTCG per year is exempt under Section 112A. Beyond that, 12.5% tax applies. The exemption limit was raised from Rs 1L to Rs 1.25L in Budget 2024.
  • STCG on equity (held <12 months): Taxed at 20% flat (raised from 15% in Budget 2024). Rs 50,000 STCG → Rs 10,400 tax.
  • Stamp duty and registration on purchase: Gurgaon charges7% stamp duty + 1% registration (total 8.0%) — part of acquisition cost included in cost of acquisition for LTCG computation.

Capital gains are taxed as a separate layer — added to your total income for STCG computation, but taxed at special rates for LTCG. They are reported in Schedule CG of your ITR. Capital gains do NOT flow through Old vs New regime — both regimes apply the same capital gains rates.

Head 4: Business or Profession Income for Gurgaon Freelancers

Gurgaon's IT/ITES sector supports many independent consultants earning professional income. Freelancers can use:

  • Presumptive taxation (Section 44ADA): If professional income is ≤ Rs 75L/year (raised in Budget 2023), you can declare 50% as profit — no books of accounts required. Tax is paid on 50% of gross receipts. For a Gurgaonconsultant earning Rs 40L, taxable income = Rs 20L under 44ADA.
  • Actual income method: Deduct actual business expenses (internet, software, home office, travel, professional fees) from gross receipts. Requires detailed books but can result in lower taxable income if expenses are high.
  • TDS deducted by clients: Clients deduct 10% TDS (Section 194J) on professional fees. Freelancers with income in Gurgaon's IT/ITESsector must pay advance tax for the tax beyond 10% TDS.

Head 5: Income from Other Sources — FD Interest in Gurgaon

Fixed deposit interest at 7.1% is one of the most common "other sources" incomes for Gurgaon professionals. A Rs 15L FD at 7.1%:

  • Annual interest income: Rs 1,06,500
  • TDS deducted by bank (10% if interest > Rs 40,000/year): Rs 10,650
  • Additional tax at your slab rate: if marginal rate is 20%, tax on FD interest = Rs 21,300 → additional Rs 10,650 beyond TDS
  • Section 80TTA: Savings account interest up to Rs 10,000/year is exempt (under Old regime only). The FD interest does NOT qualify for 80TTA exemption. Under New regime, even the Rs 10,000 savings interest exemption is unavailable.

FD interest must be declared every year as it accrues — not just when it matures. For a 3-year FD opened in Gurgaon, you must report 1/3 of total interest each year in your ITR (accrual basis). Bank TDS is deducted annually and shows in Form 26AS.

Unique Financial Context: Gurgaon

Haryana has zero professional tax — Gurgaon professionals save Rs 2,500/year vs Mumbai counterparts. With India's highest average salary (Rs 15 lakh/year), Gurgaon's per-capita income tax contribution is the highest of any single city in India. Yet Gurgaon is non-metro for HRA — despite being part of NCR, it doesn't qualify for the 50% HRA exemption that Delhi residents get.

Gurgaon has India's highest average salary — ESOP taxation, NPS optimization, and luxury real estate investment dominate financial planning conversations here.

Multi-Head Total Tax: A Gurgaon Scenario

A Gurgaon professional with salary (Rs 15.0L) + let-out property income + FD interest (Rs 1,06,500) + equity STCG (Rs 50,000):

  • New regime salary tax: Rs 97,500
  • House property income: Rs 0 (New regime — no loss set-off)
  • FD interest (added to salary for slab): Rs 1,06,500 additional income
  • LTCG on property (if sold): Rs 3,14,028
  • Equity STCG tax: Rs 10,400
  • Combined tax liability: Rs 4.39L — substantially more than the salary-only estimate. Multi-head income significantly increases the complexity and the total tax outflow in Gurgaon.

Disclaimer: Tax computations above are illustrative for FY 2025-26 (AY 2026-27) for a resident individual taxpayer using Finance Act 2025 provisions. Actual liability depends on your complete income profile, specific deduction claims, TDS deducted, and applicable surcharge (if income exceeds Rs 50L). Capital gains rates, rebate thresholds, and slab rates are as per Finance Act 2024 and 2025. Consult a Chartered Accountant in Gurgaon for precise tax planning across all five heads.

FAQs — Income Tax in Gurgaon FY 2025-26

Old regime or New regime for a Gurgaon professional earning Rs 15.0L with rent of Rs 32,000/month?

With a rent of Rs 32,000/month in Gurgaon(non-metro — 40% HRA cap), the HRA exemption is Rs 2,40,000/year. Adding 80C (Rs 1.5L), 80D (Rs 50K for self and parents), and home loan interest (Rs 2L if applicable), Old regime taxable income falls to Rs 8,10,000 with tax of Rs 77,480. New regime tax is Rs 97,500. The Old regime is better by Rs 20,020/year for this profile. If you do NOT have a home loan, recalculate — without the Rs 2L 24(b) deduction, the Old regime tax rises to Rs 1,27,920, which exceeds the New regime.

Is Gurgaon a metro or non-metro for HRA exemption purposes?

Gurgaon is classified as a NON-METRO city for HRA exemption under Section 10(13A). The metro classification under the Income Tax Act covers only four cities: Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, and Kolkata. Gurgaon is NOT in this list — the HRA exemption cap is 40% of basic salary (NOT 50%). At a basic of Rs 6,00,000/year, the 40% cap is Rs 2,40,000. This is a commonly misunderstood point — many Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Gurgaon, and Pune residents incorrectly claim 50% HRA exemption. The correct figure for Gurgaon residents is 40% of basic.

How does Gurgaon's Professional Tax of Rs 0/year affect my income tax?

Gurgaon (Haryana) charges zero Professional Tax. This is a meaningful advantage over professionals in Maharashtra (Rs 2,500/yr), Karnataka (Rs 2,400/yr), or West Bengal (Rs 2,400/yr). The zero PT means your full gross salary (after HRA exemption and standard deduction) flows into taxable income without any PT deduction — but you also keep the full Rs 2,400–2,500/year that professionals in those states pay to the state government.

I sold a Gurgaon flat and made a capital gain. Which ITR form do I use?

Capital gains from property require ITR-2 (salaried individuals with capital gains) or ITR-3 (if you also have business income). You cannot file ITR-1 (Sahaj) if you have capital gains from immovable property. For a Gurgaonproperty sold at Rs 11,000/sq.ft. rate, you must report: sale consideration, indexed cost of acquisition (or actual cost, since indexation has been removed for LTCG after July 2024 per Finance Act 2024), stamp duty paid on purchase, and brokerage/registration charges. The buyer deducts 1% TDS (Section 194-IA) if property value exceeds Rs 50L — obtain Form 16B from the buyer and reflect TDS credit in your ITR. LTCG on Gurgaon real estate is taxed at 12.5% without indexation (Finance Act 2024). Reinvest in another residential property within 2 years (or construct within 3 years) under Section 54 to claim exemption on the LTCG.

Gurgaon's comprehensive income tax landscape is defined by the MNC consulting, BFSI, and technology services concentration in Cyber City, Udyog Vihar, and Golf Course Road — where senior professionals at EY, Deloitte, KPMG, McKinsey, American Express, and HCL generate India's highest per-capita income tax collections outside Mumbai. Haryana levies zero professional tax, and while Gurgaon is classified as non-metro for HRA (40% of basic), actual Gurgaon rents in DLF Phase I-V and Sushant Lok rival metropolitan cities: 2BHK rentals reach Rs 30-65K/month in premium areas. This non-metro classification with metro-equivalent rents creates Gurgaon's signature deduction structure — where the 40% basic HRA rate is consistently the binding constraint rather than the 'rent - 10% of basic' formula, simply because rents are high enough relative to basic that the rent formula produces a higher number than 40% basic. The five heads of income for Gurgaon professionals include substantial complexity from employer NPS (80CCD(2) contributions that are regime-neutral), ESOPs from global MNC parent companies (perquisite taxation + foreign equity LTCG), rental income from DLF investment apartments, and FD interest from Axis Bank and HDFC Bank private banking. The EY/KPMG Partner analysis at Rs 80L+ CTC represents Gurgaon's highest-income tax scenario — where 30% slab taxation on every deduction rupee means Rs 9-10L total deduction packages save Rs 2.5-3L annually in old regime.

Key Insight — Gurgaon

Gurgaon's defining multi-head income tax insight is the employer NPS 80CCD(2) regime-neutrality trap — where Accenture, EY, KPMG, and McKinsey India employees receive substantial employer NPS contributions (typically 8-14% of basic) that are exempt in BOTH old and new regime, causing professionals to mistakenly believe employer NPS 'helps' old regime more. It doesn't. Employer NPS is excluded from gross salary in both regimes equally — it's a genuine salary component with tax benefit regardless of regime choice. The professional who earns Rs 40L CTC where Rs 3L is employer NPS (14% of Rs 21.4L basic) has the same Rs 3L exemption in both regimes. The regime comparison must be done on the REMAINING Rs 37L. At Rs 37L with old regime deductions of Rs 7L (HRA Rs 3.5L + 80C Rs 1.5L + 80D Rs 75K + NPS 1B Rs 50K): old regime taxable Rs 30L → tax Rs 12,500+100,000+600,000=Rs 712,500+cess=Rs 741,000. New regime: Rs 36.25L → Rs 607,500+cess = Rs 631,800. Old regime taxable Rs 30L → correcting old regime: Rs 30L: nil+12,500+100,000+600,000=Rs 712,500. New regime Rs 36.25L → 4-8L 5%=Rs 20K, 8-12L 10%=Rs 40K, 12-16L 15%=Rs 60K, 16-20L 20%=Rs 80K, 20-24L 25%=Rs 100K, 24-36.25L 30%=Rs 367,500. Total Rs 667,500+cess=Rs 694,000. Old regime Rs 741,000 vs new regime Rs 694,000 — new regime wins by Rs 47,000 at Rs 37L base without Section 24b! Add Section 24b Rs 2L to old regime: old regime wins by Rs 53,000. The employer NPS amounts to a salary enhancement that doesn't change the regime comparison — but the Rs 50K personal NPS 80CCD(1B) is the key deduction that DOES favor old regime.

Gurgaon's Financial Context and Income Tax Calculator

Haryana PT: Rs 0. Gurgaon NON-METRO HRA: 40% of basic. FD rate: 7.0-7.5% (HDFC/Axis/ICICI). Avg 2BHK rent: DLF Phase 1-3 Rs 40-65K, Sushant Lok Rs 25-40K, Sector 56 Rs 20-30K, Sector 57 Rs 18-28K. Property price: DLF City Rs 12,000-20,000/sqft, Golf Course Road Rs 15,000-25,000, Sectors 60-80 Rs 8,000-15,000. Stamp duty Haryana: 3% (women), 5% (men), +1% registration. 80CCD(2): employer NPS up to 14% of basic → exempt in BOTH regimes (regime-neutral). Gurgaon senior consultant Rs 35L CTC (EY, basic Rs 14.7L), renting Rs 40K DLF Phase 3: HRA = min(40%×14.7L=5.88L, Rs 4.8L-Rs 1.47L=Rs 3.33L, Rs 5.88L) = Rs 3.33L (rent-10% basic formula binds below 40% cap). Old regime: SD Rs 50K + HRA Rs 3.33L + 80C Rs 1.5L + 80D Rs 75K + NPS Rs 50K = Rs 6.58L. Old regime taxable: Rs 28.42L → tax Rs 12,500+100,000+547,200=Rs 659,700+cess=Rs 686,088. New regime: Rs 34.25L → Rs 20K+40K+60K+80K+100K+307,500 (24-34.25L at 30%)=Rs 607,500+cess=Rs 631,800. Old regime wins by Rs 54,288. Add Section 24b Rs 2L: old regime wins by Rs 116,688. EY Partner Rs 80L CTC: old regime with Rs 9L deductions → massive old regime advantage.

EY, KPMG, McKinsey Partner Level — Rs 60L-1Cr CTC Comprehensive Tax

Gurgaon's Cyber City partners at Big Four (EY, Deloitte, KPMG, PwC) and MBB (McKinsey, BCG, Bain) earn Rs 50-1.5Cr+ CTC with complex compensation structures including firm partnership distributions, bonus carry-forward, and in some cases equity in overseas SPVs. The Rs 80L CTC Partner analysis (EY Tax Partner, Gurgaon): Salary component Rs 65L (rest is firm profit share or leave encashment, bonus). Basic Rs 27.3L (42%). Employer NPS 14% = Rs 3.822L (80CCD(2), regime-neutral). HRA received Rs 13.65L. Rent Rs 60K DLF Phase 1. HRA exempt: min(40%×27.3L=10.92L, Rs 7.2L-Rs 2.73L=Rs 4.47L, Rs 10.92L) = Rs 4.47L. Section 24b: Rs 1.2Cr Golf Course Road flat, Rs 96L loan at 8.75% year 4 = Rs 8.4L interest → capped at Rs 2L (self-occupied). 80D Rs 75K. 80C Rs 1.5L. NPS 1B Rs 50K. Old regime: SD Rs 50K + HRA Rs 4.47L + Section 24b Rs 2L + 80C Rs 1.5L + 80D Rs 75K + NPS Rs 50K = Rs 9.22L. Old regime taxable: Rs 65L - Rs 9.22L = Rs 55.78L. Tax: Rs 12,500+100,000+1,373,400 (10-55.78L at 30%) = Rs 1,485,900+cess=Rs 1,545,336. New regime: Rs 64.25L → Rs 300,000+cess=Rs 312,000 ... wait: new regime Rs 64.25L: 4-8L Rs 20K, 8-12L Rs 40K, 12-16L Rs 60K, 16-20L Rs 80K, 20-24L Rs 100K, 24-64.25L at 30%=Rs 1,207,500. Total Rs 1,507,500+cess=Rs 1,567,800. Old regime wins by Rs 22,464 — relatively thin for Rs 80L CTC Partner due to non-metro 40% HRA limitation (DLF Phase 1 Rs 60K rent produces only Rs 4.47L HRA). If same Partner at Mumbai (50% metro): HRA = Rs 7.2L-Rs 2.73L=Rs 4.47L... same (rent-10% binds in both). If rent increased to Rs 80K: HRA=Rs 9.6L-Rs 2.73L=Rs 6.87L → old regime wins by Rs 125,000+. At Partner level: increasing rent OR adding Section 24b on let-out property (unlimited deduction) amplifies old regime advantage significantly.

Under-Construction Property, Pre-Possession Interest, and Section 24 in Gurgaon

Gurgaon's booming under-construction property market (DLF, Godrej, M3M, Emaar projects in Sectors 60-80, Golf Course Extension Road) creates unique Section 24b planning for IT and consulting professionals who book flats 3-5 years before possession. Pre-possession Section 24b rules: interest paid during construction period (from loan disbursement to possession) is accumulated. After possession, this accumulated pre-possession interest is deductible in FIVE EQUAL INSTALLMENTS in the five years following possession, in addition to the regular annual interest. Example: Gurgaon professional books Sector 66 flat Rs 1.4Cr in 2022, receives possession in 2026. Loan Rs 1.12Cr disbursed in stages from 2022-2025. Pre-possession interest paid 2022-2025: approximately Rs 3.5L per year × 3.5 years = Rs 12.25L accumulated. Post-possession 2026: annual fresh interest Rs 9.8L + (Rs 12.25L ÷ 5 =) Rs 2.45L pre-possession installment = Rs 12.25L total Section 24b claim BUT capped at Rs 2L for self-occupied. The Rs 2L cap applies to total (fresh + pre-possession installment) if self-occupied. If let-out: entire Rs 12.25L deductible annually (no Rs 2L cap). This creates a significant planning decision: if flat is let out in the 5 years post-possession, the pre-possession interest installment PLUS fresh interest provides unlimited deduction. Rental income of Rs 35K/month (Rs 4.2L/year) minus Rs 12.25L home loan interest = Rs 8.05L house property loss. Set off Rs 2L against salary; carry forward Rs 6.05L for 8 years. Many Gurgaon professionals who book large flats should consider letting them out for the first 5 years to maximize interest deduction during the highest-interest-payment years of the loan.

More Questions — Income Tax Calculator in Gurgaon

I'm at Accenture Gurgaon (Rs 45L CTC, employer NPS 10% of basic, personal NPS Rs 50K, HRA 40%, Rs 45K DLF rent, home loan Rs 80L, 80D Rs 75K parents). Full 5-head FY2025-26 tax?

Head 1 (Salary): Basic Rs 18.9L (42%). Employer NPS 10%×18.9L=Rs 1.89L (80CCD(2), exempt in BOTH regimes — deduct from CTC). Net taxable CTC component: Rs 45L - Rs 1.89L = Rs 43.11L. HRA received Rs 9.45L. HRA exempt: min(40%×18.9L=7.56L, Rs 5.4L-Rs 1.89L=Rs 3.51L, Rs 7.56L)=Rs 3.51L. SD Rs 50K (old) or Rs 75K (new). Head 2 (House property — self-occupied): Section 24b Rs 80L at 8.75% year 2 = Rs 7L interest → capped Rs 2L. Head 5 (Other): FD interest Rs 90K. Old regime: SD Rs 50K + HRA Rs 3.51L + Section 24b Rs 2L + 80C Rs 1.5L + 80D Rs 75K + NPS 1B Rs 50K = Rs 8.81L. Old regime salary taxable: Rs 43.11L - Rs 8.81L = Rs 34.3L. Add FD Rs 90K: Rs 35.2L. Tax: Rs 12,500+100,000+727,000 (10-35.2L at 30%) + FD Rs 90K at 30%=Rs 27,000. Total tax: Rs 839,500+FD Rs 28,080 = Rs 867,580+cess=Rs 902,283. New regime: Rs 43.11L - Rs 75K + Rs 90K = Rs 43.2L. Tax: 4-8L Rs 20K, 8-12L Rs 40K, 12-16L Rs 60K, 16-20L Rs 80K, 20-24L Rs 100K, 24-43.2L 30%=Rs 576,000. Total Rs 876,000+cess=Rs 911,040. Old regime wins by Rs 8,757. Extremely close! If rent increases from Rs 45K to Rs 55K: HRA = Rs 6.6L-Rs 1.89L=Rs 4.71L → old regime deductions Rs 10.01L → taxable Rs 33.1L+FD → old regime wins by Rs 80K+. HRA component is the swing factor at your income level. Recommendation: stay old regime, negotiate Rs 55K rent accommodation.

I work at McKinsey Gurgaon (Rs 55L CTC), have a let-out Sushant Lok flat (Rs 22K/month rent, Rs 60L home loan), equity SIP of Rs 5L/year for 7 years. Complete tax breakdown?

Multi-head computation: Head 1 (Salary): Basic Rs 23.1L. Employer NPS (if applicable): assume 10% = Rs 2.31L (regime-neutral). Net salary component Rs 52.69L. HRA received Rs 11.55L. Assume McKinsey provides CLA (Company Lease Accommodation) — zero rent paid → HRA exempt = 0. Head 2 (House property — Sushant Lok, let out): Gross rent Rs 22K×12=Rs 2.64L. Municipal tax Rs 13,200. NAV Rs 2.27L. SDA 30%=Rs 68,100. Net Rs 1.59L. Loan interest Rs 60L at 8.75% year 4 = Rs 5.25L. House property loss Rs 3.66L → set off Rs 2L (Section 71 cap). Remaining Rs 1.66L carry forward. Head 3 (Capital gains): 7-year SIP Rs 5L/year in Mirae Emerging Bluechip. Corpus approximately Rs 50L (9.5% XIRR). Partial redemption of Rs 10L units with cost basis Rs 6L → LTCG Rs 4L → exempt Rs 1.25L → taxable Rs 2.75L × 10% = Rs 27,500. Head 5 (Other): FD interest Rs 1L. Old regime: SD Rs 50K + HRA Rs 0 + Section 24b Rs 2L (from salary set-off of house property) + 80C Rs 1.5L + 80D Rs 75K + NPS 1B Rs 50K = Rs 5.25L. Salary taxable: Rs 52.69L - Rs 5.25L - Rs 2L (house property set-off) = Rs 45.44L + FD Rs 1L = Rs 46.44L. Tax: Rs 12,500+100,000+1,093,200 (10-46.44L at 30%) + Rs 30,000 (FD at 30%) = Rs 1,235,700+cess. Total approx Rs 1.285M. New regime: Rs 52.69L - Rs 75K + Rs 1L FD = Rs 52.94L. Rs 1,288,200+cess. Old regime approximately equal. LTCG Rs 27,500 (+cess) in both. Old regime slightly better by Rs 3,000-5,000 with CLA accommodation. Property loss carry-forward adds Rs 1.66L × 30% = Rs 49,800 in future tax savings.

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