Gross salary is the monthly or yearly salary of an individual before any deductions are made from it. Components such as basic salary, house rent allowance, provident fund, leave travel allowance, medical allowance, Professional Tax etc. are some of the most prominent components of gross salary.
Listed below are the various components that together make up the gross salary.
Let us look individually at each of the components listed above.
Basic Salary:
Basic salary is the exact amount of salary before any deductions are made or extra components are added to the salary. The basic salary for an employee is usually lower than the gross salary or the take-home salary.
Gratuity:
Gratuity is a part of salary that is paid by an employer to an employee to express gratitude for his/her services in the company. The employer may provide gratuity out of its own pocket or can avail a gratuity group plan from an insurance provider. Gratuity is generally paid to an employee on his/her retirement or when he/she leaves the company. However, according to Section 10(10) of the Income Tax Act, gratuity is payable only when an employee has completed 5 years with his/her company. The gratuity received by employees is taxable as “income from salary”.
HRA or House Rent Allowance:
HRA or House Rent Allowance is a salary component paid by employer to employees for meeting the accommodation expense of renting a place for residential purposes. HRA forms an integral component of a person’s salary. HRA is applicable to both salaried as well as self-employed individuals.
Salary Arrears:
Salary Arrears refer to any amount that is paid as a result of salary hike. Generally salary arrears come in lump-sum for more than 1 month of time. For example, if your salary was increased in June but is applicable from the month of January. Then you are eligible to receive arrears worth the last 6 months.
Perquisites:
Perquisites are benefits received by an employee as a result of his/her official position and are payable in addition to the salary received by them. Perquisites or fringe benefits can be taxable or non-taxable depending upon their nature.
These components are taxed separately from the employer’s account so as to maintain transparency and accountability.
Pension:
Pension is defined as a specific amount paid regularly to an employee who has retired from his job. Pension is either paid by your employer or the government in case of government sector employees.
Following are the few things that do not form part of gross salary paid by an employer to an employee.
Difference between Gross Salary and Net Salary?
The difference between gross salary and net salary is that while gross salary is your salary before any deductions are made from the salary, net salary is the salary an employee takes home after all deductions have been made.
Gratuity can be calculated on the Gross Salary of an employee if the employment contract is unclear about the basic salary drawn by the employee.
Basic salary is a rate of pay agreed upon by an employer and employee and does not include overtime or any extra compensation. Gross salary, however, is the amount paid before tax or other deductions and includes overtime pay and bonuses. For instance, if an employee has a gross salary of Rs. 40,000 and a basic salary is Rs.18,000, he or she will get Rs.18,000 as fixed salary in addition to other allowances such as House rent allowance, conveyance, communication, dearness allowance, city allowance or any other special allowance.
Gross Salary is employee provident fund (EPF) and gratuity subtracted from the Cost to Company (CTC). To put it in simpler terms, Gross Salary is the amount paid before deduction of taxes or other deductions and is inclusive of bonuses, over-time pay, holiday pay, and other differentials.
Employee Provident Fund, in India, is an employee-benefit scheme prescribed by the Ministry of Labour which provides employees with facilities such as medical assistance, retirement, education for children, insurance support, and housing. The Employee Provident Fund Organisation (EPFO) has the authority to mandate policies on EPF, pension, and insurance schemes. The employer is required to contribute at least 12% of the employee’s salary towards his/her EPF.
Furthermore, the employee can then withdraw the full amount accrued in his/her PF account at the time of retirement, which is when the employee attain the age of 55 years.
In the occurrence of any of the following situations also, the employee can withdraw the amount accumulated in his/her PF account-
Gross pay for the purpose of PF calculation is different from the term gross pay which is typically used in the payroll context. For the sake of clarity, we will use the term PF Gross in this post to denote the salary to be considered for PF calculation. PF Gross includes Basic, DA, Conveyance, Other Allowance etc. (heads of pay which are included for PF calculation) and excludes House Rent Allowance, Bonus etc. (heads of pay which are excluded for PF calculation) as per the provisions of the PF Act.
For calculation of Income Tax, gross salary minus the eligible deductions are considered. For example, you will have to deduct HRA exemption, any home loan EMI, investments under section 80C and 80D and similar such things for calculation of taxable income.
This taxation process is different for self-employed and salaried individuals.
According to Section 17(1) salary includes the following amounts received by an employee from his employer, during the previous year
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