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HRA Exemption Planner
Estimate annual HRA exemption with a simpler flow
Enter annual salary, DA, rent and HRA figures to estimate exemption under Section 10(13A) based on metro or non-metro rules.
Input format
Annual INR values
Output
Estimated exemption
Enter annual HRA details
Keep figures in yearly INR amounts for consistent comparison.
Before you calculate
- Basic salary and DA should be annual totals.
- If you are in Mumbai, Delhi, Kolkata or Chennai, select metro.
- This tool gives an estimate for planning and documentation support.
How this HRA estimate is calculated
Exemption is computed as the lowest of: actual HRA received, rent paid minus 10% of salary, and 50% (metro) or 40% (non-metro) of salary.
Rule 1
Actual HRA received from employer.
Rule 2
Rent paid minus 10% of salary.
Rule 3
50% salary for metro, otherwise 40% salary.
Detailed HRA planning guide for salaried taxpayers
The HRA calculator helps you estimate deductible house rent allowance under Section 10(13A). You can use this estimate while selecting tax regime, planning deductions, and preparing for annual tax filing.
What affects HRA exemption
Basic salary, dearness allowance, annual rent, annual HRA received, and whether you live in a metro city directly impact the final exemption amount.
When this tool is most useful
Use this calculator before declaration cycles, when changing city, while renegotiating salary structure, or before comparing old vs new regime outcomes.
How to improve result accuracy
Enter yearly figures from payslips, include full rent paid for the period, and recheck metro selection. Small entry errors can materially change exemption.
Important filing note
Keep rent receipts, PAN details (if applicable), and salary breakup records. This page provides estimate support and does not replace professional tax advice.
HRA calculator FAQs
Can I claim HRA and home loan benefits together?
Yes, in eligible cases both can be claimed based on property use and tax rule conditions. Verify final applicability with your advisor.
Should I enter monthly or yearly values?
This page is designed for annual values. If you have monthly numbers, multiply by 12 before entering.
Is this result enough for filing?
It is an estimate for planning. Final filing should use complete payroll records and current tax rules.
Tax Planning: Detailed Guide
This tax calculator helps you estimate your liability using the inputs you provide and current rule assumptions in this tool. Use it to build a practical tax strategy around income, deductions, capital gains, withholding, and advance payments. The output is best used as a planning estimate and should be reviewed with your actual documents, filing status, and eligible exemptions before final tax filing.
For better planning quality, test multiple scenarios across income levels, deduction usage, holding periods, and tax rates. Small changes in taxable income, exemption eligibility, or surcharge and cess exposure can materially impact final outgo. Recalculate during the year whenever salary structure changes, investment actions occur, or tax rules are updated for your filing year.
How to use tax calculators effectively
Start with accurate numbers from Form 16, AIS/TIS, broker statements, rent receipts, loan certificates, and investment records. Split your calculations by salary, business, capital gains, and other income heads so you can identify where optimization opportunities actually exist.
Common tax planning mistakes to avoid
Taxpayers often mix financial-year and assessment-year data, miss deduction limits, or assume all gains are taxed at slab rates. Another frequent mistake is waiting until the filing deadline instead of planning across the year, which reduces options for better tax efficiency.
Build a complete tax strategy
Use income tax, HRA, section-based deduction, capital gains, TDS, and refund estimators together for a complete view. This integrated approach helps you improve compliance, reduce surprises at filing time, and make better cash-flow decisions through the year.