How to Pay less Income Tax post Budget 2017 and beyond

How to Pay less Income Tax post Budget 2017 and beyond.

It is said that nothing in this world is certain except for death and income tax However, you can soften the blow from the latter, legally of course.

It starts with knowing the difference between your salary income and total income and includes minimising tax on allowances that are part of your salary. Your income is from five broad sources:

Salary Income from an employer, including value of perks and allowances House

Gain or loss from the real estate you own

Business

Net profit from any business or profession

Capital Gains

Profit/loss from sale of a capital asset (property, shares, jewellery, mutual fund units)

DEDUCTIONS AVAILABLE

*HRA, medical expense reimbursement, LTA, conveyance allowance etc
*Standard deduction (30% of income post house tax), and interest paid on loan for buying/construction of the property
*Expenditure for business or profession, and losses from previous years
*Depends on asset, holding term, indexation, losses carried forward and investment in specified options
*Dividends are tax free. As are gifts from specified relatives or received on certain occasions. Interest from NRE accounts, PPF account etc.

A taxpayer has to pay tax on certain income even if he/she has not earned it. It includes:

*Income earned through investments in the name of a child (below 18 years). In this case, the minor’s income is clubbed with that of the parent who earns more.
*Income from investments made from the taxpayer’s income in spouse’s name.
*Income deemed to be earned from letting out a second property even if it is lying vacant.

The exemption is limited to the lowest of

1. Rent paid less 10% of salary (Salary means basic salary and dearness allowance)
2. 50% of salary* where the house is situated either in Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata or Chennai, and 40% of salary in other cities
3. Actual HRA received

[If your CTC doesn’t contain HRA, deduction for rent paid is available from gross taxable income, subject to various limits (maximum deduction 5,000 per month). If you live in a house you own, the HRA component is fully taxable].

What if accommodation is provided by the employer?

Tax implications depend on:
*Type of accommodation – hotel, serviced apartment, leased accommodation.
*Whether the property is owned by the employer or leased by the employer for you.
*Whether the accommodation is furnished or not.
*Your salary level.

Depending on a combination of factors, you may check with a tax advisor which is more beneficial to you — claiming HRA or living in flat provided by employer.

Leave travel concession (LTC)

You and your family’s travelling expenses on an annual holiday within India are eligible for a tax break. For eg, if you are travelling by air, it is limited to economy class airfare for the shortest route to your destination. No exemption is available for hotel and local conveyance expenses. Keep the bills handy.

Leave Encashment : If you haven’t availed of your entitled leave, you may have an option to get it encashed. With an increasing realisation that employees who avail of annual leave are more productive, most employers permit such encashment only on retirement or resignation. The maximum aggregate exemption available in a lifetime is 3 lakh.

 

Reimbursements

Reimbursements such as medical expenses of up to 15,000 per year or your telephone expenses, including data charges, are exempt. There is no cap on the maximum amount that can be claimed for phone expenses. However, your employer may pose an internal cap. In addition, if you get meal vouchers, such as Sodexo coupons, these are exempt from tax to the extent of 50 per meal.

Children’s education allowance

This gets you a limited monthly tax break of 100 per child and 300 per child for hostel expenses (both restricted to two children)

Employee Provident Fund (EPF) & gratuity

PF withdrawal after rendering 5 or more years of continuous services is tax-free. However, if you withdraw prior to completion of 5 years of service, the withdrawal becomes taxable under various heads of income. There are a few other scenarios where the PF withdrawal is tax-free such as termination on account of ill health etc. You will be entitled to receive gratuity after rendering 5 years of services and any such payment on termination or retirement is tax exempt up to a maximum of 10 lakh in a lifetime.

Source: ET