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CTC to In-Hand Salary Calculator India 2026 | TMS

CTC to In-Hand Salary Calculator India 2026: Convert Your CTC to Monthly Take-Home

CTC to Take Home Calculator

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CTC to Take Home Calculator

CTC to In-Hand Salary Calculator India 2026: Convert Your CTC to Monthly Take-Home

The difference between CTC (Cost to Company) and take-home salary confuses most Indian employees. A CTC of Rs 10 lakh does not mean Rs 83,333 in your bank account every month. After deductions for Provident Fund, Professional Tax, TDS, and other components, the actual in-hand salary is typically 65-80% of CTC. This guide explains every component and shows you exactly how to calculate your take-home pay.

Understanding CTC Components

CTC is the total expenditure a company incurs on an employee per year. It includes direct cash payments, deferred benefits, and employer-side contributions that the employee never directly receives.

Direct Cash Components (Credited Monthly):

  • Basic Salary: 40-50% of CTC. This is the foundation of your salary and determines PF, gratuity, and many other calculations. A higher Basic means higher PF deduction but also higher PF accumulation and better gratuity.
  • House Rent Allowance (HRA): 40-50% of Basic Salary. Provides tax exemption for employees paying rent. The exemption is the minimum of: actual HRA received, rent paid minus 10% of Basic, or 50% of Basic (metro cities) / 40% of Basic (non-metro).
  • Special Allowance / Flexible Pay: The balancing figure that makes up the remaining CTC after allocating all other components. Fully taxable.
  • Conveyance Allowance: Some companies provide a fixed conveyance component.
  • Medical Allowance / Wellness Benefit: Rs 15,000/year was previously tax-exempt but is now taxable under the new tax regime. Some companies still include it as a CTC component.

Deductions from Gross Salary (Reduce Take-Home):

  • Employee PF Contribution: 12% of Basic Salary (capped at Rs 15,000 basic for PF purpose, though many companies contribute on actual basic). This is deducted from your salary and deposited into your EPF account.
  • Employee ESI Contribution: 0.75% of Gross Salary, applicable only if gross monthly salary is Rs 21,000 or below.
  • Professional Tax: State-specific deduction, maximum Rs 2,500 per year. Deducted monthly from salary.
  • TDS (Tax Deducted at Source): Income tax deducted monthly based on your projected annual income and declared investments/deductions.

Employer Contributions (Part of CTC but Not Received as Cash):

  • Employer PF Contribution: 12% of Basic (out of which 8.33% goes to EPS and 3.67% to EPF). This is the employer’s cost and does not come from your salary.
  • Employer ESI Contribution: 3.25% of Gross (if applicable).
  • Gratuity Provision: 4.81% of Basic Salary, provisioned annually but paid only after 5 years of service.
  • Group Medical Insurance: Premium paid by employer, typically Rs 5,000-25,000/year per employee.

CTC to Take-Home Calculation: Detailed Example

Scenario: Annual CTC of Rs 10,00,000
Step 1: CTC Breakdown

Component Annual Monthly
Basic Salary (40% of CTC) Rs 4,00,000 Rs 33,333
HRA (50% of Basic) Rs 2,00,000 Rs 16,667
Special Allowance Rs 2,51,200 Rs 20,933
Employer PF (12% of Basic, capped) Rs 21,600 Rs 1,800
Gratuity (4.81% of Basic) Rs 19,240 Rs 1,603
Medical Insurance Premium Rs 7,960 Rs 663
Total CTC Rs 10,00,000 Rs 83,333

Step 2: Gross Salary (What Appears on Your Payslip)

Gross = Basic + HRA + Special Allowance

Gross = Rs 4,00,000 + Rs 2,00,000 + Rs 2,51,200 = Rs 8,51,200/year = Rs 70,933/month

Step 3: Deductions from Gross

Deduction Annual Monthly
Employee PF (12% of Basic, capped at Rs 15,000) Rs 21,600 Rs 1,800
Professional Tax (Maharashtra) Rs 2,500 Rs 200 (approx.)
TDS (estimated, new regime, no deductions claimed) Rs 46,800 Rs 3,900
Total Deductions Rs 70,900 Rs 5,900

Step 4: Monthly Take-Home

Take-Home = Gross Monthly – Total Monthly Deductions

Take-Home = Rs 70,933 – Rs 5,900

Monthly Take-Home = Rs 65,033 (approximately)
Take-Home as % of CTC: 78%

Take-Home Percentage by CTC Range

The take-home percentage varies based on CTC level, primarily due to progressive tax rates:

Annual CTC Approximate Monthly Take-Home Take-Home % of CTC
Rs 3,00,000 Rs 21,000-22,500 84-90%
Rs 5,00,000 Rs 33,000-36,000 79-86%
Rs 8,00,000 Rs 50,000-55,000 75-82%
Rs 10,00,000 Rs 62,000-68,000 74-82%
Rs 15,00,000 Rs 88,000-98,000 70-78%
Rs 20,00,000 Rs 1,10,000-1,25,000 66-75%
Rs 30,00,000 Rs 1,55,000-1,75,000 62-70%
Rs 50,00,000 Rs 2,35,000-2,70,000 56-65%

These ranges assume the new tax regime and typical salary structures. Actual take-home varies based on salary structure, tax regime choice, investment declarations, and state of employment.

Old Tax Regime vs New Tax Regime Impact

Your choice of tax regime significantly impacts take-home salary:

New Tax Regime (Default from FY 2023-24): Lower tax rates but minimal deductions. Standard deduction of Rs 75,000 (from FY 2024-25). No HRA exemption, no Section 80C, no home loan interest deduction.
Old Tax Regime: Higher tax rates but allows deductions under Section 80C (Rs 1.5 lakh), 80D (medical insurance), HRA exemption, home loan interest (Section 24), NPS (Section 80CCD), and others.

For employees with CTC above Rs 15 lakh who have a home loan and maximise 80C investments, the old regime may still result in lower tax and higher take-home. For employees without significant deductions, the new regime is typically better.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q1: Why is my take-home so much less than CTC?

CTC includes employer PF contribution, gratuity provision, and insurance premiums that you do not receive as cash. Additionally, employee PF, professional tax, and income tax are deducted from your gross salary. The gap between CTC and take-home is typically 20-35%.

Q2: Can I opt out of PF to increase take-home?

Employees drawing Basic Salary above Rs 15,000/month can opt out of PF at the time of joining a new organisation (if they have never been a PF member before). However, once enrolled, opting out is not straightforward. Also, PF provides 8.25% tax-free returns, making it one of the best savings instruments available.

Q3: Does bonus count in CTC?

Yes, performance bonuses, retention bonuses, and statutory bonuses are part of CTC. However, variable components may not be guaranteed and should be evaluated separately when comparing offers.

Q4: How do I maximise my take-home salary?

Structure your CTC to maximise tax-efficient components: claim full HRA exemption by providing rent receipts, maximise 80C through ELSS/PPF/NPS, opt for meal vouchers and fuel reimbursements where offered, and use the tax regime (old vs new) that gives you lower tax.

Q5: What is the difference between gross salary and net salary?

Gross salary is your total monthly salary before deductions (Basic + HRA + all allowances). Net salary (take-home) is what gets credited to your bank account after deducting employee PF, professional tax, and TDS.

Need Help Structuring Employee Compensation?

TMS helps companies design tax-efficient salary structures that maximise employee take-home while maintaining statutory compliance.

[Consult TMS on Salary Structuring] | Call: +91-XXXXXXXXXX

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