HRA Exemption Rules You Probably Got Wrong — Complete Guide
Every March, millions of salaried employees in India submit investment declarations to their HR department — and a surprising number of them get their HRA calculation wrong. Not because they're careless. But because the rule has three components, and most people only check one.
The Confusion Starts With How HRA Is Presented
Look at any salary slip and you'll find HRA listed as a flat figure. Say ₹20,000 per month. That's what your employer pays you. Simple enough.
The problem is that the amount your employer pays and the amount you can actually claim as tax-exempt are two entirely different things. Most people assume the full ₹20,000 is exempt. It rarely is.
The Income Tax Act requires you to compare three separate values and take the lowest one as your exemption. That minimum is almost always less than what you receive — sometimes significantly less.
What Section 10(13A) Actually Says
Section 10(13A) of the Income Tax Act is the provision that governs HRA exemption. Read with Rule 2A, it defines how the exemption is calculated for salaried individuals who live in rented accommodation.
The law doesn't give you a percentage of your HRA or a standard deduction. It gives you a three-way test. Here's what that looks like:
① Actual HRA received from your employer (monthly)
② 50% of (Basic Salary + DA) if metro city — 40% if non-metro
③ Rent actually paid − 10% of (Basic Salary + DA)
✅ HRA Exemption = Minimum of ①, ②, ③
If any one of those three values is very low, your exemption is correspondingly limited. That's by design — the law is trying to prevent people from inflating any single component to game the exemption.
Here's What Most People Get Wrong
The most common mistake is ignoring Component ③. People know they receive ₹20,000 HRA and pay ₹15,000 rent, so they assume ₹15,000 is their exemption. But the formula first subtracts 10% of Basic+DA from rent paid.
If your basic is ₹60,000, that's ₹6,000 deducted from your rent. So ₹15,000 rent becomes ₹9,000 for the purposes of Component ③. Suddenly your exemption drops from what you expected to ₹9,000 — not ₹15,000.
⚠️ The 10% deduction on Basic+DA from rent paid catches almost everyone off guard the first time. It means you must actually pay rent well above 10% of your basic salary to get meaningful HRA exemption.
The second common error is including DA incorrectly. Most private sector employees receive DA as a component that doesn't factor into retirement benefits. In that case, DA should not be included in the HRA formula. Government employees need to verify this with their pay structure.
Metro vs Non-Metro — It Matters More Than You Think
The Income Tax Act specifically classifies four cities as "metro" for HRA purposes: Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, and Chennai. If you live in any of these, Component ② is 50% of your Basic+DA.
For every other city in India — Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Pune, Ahmedabad, Jaipur, Lucknow, all of them — Component ② is 40% of Basic+DA. Bengaluru being the tech capital doesn't change its status under this provision.
This difference creates a real gap for two employees with identical salaries but different cities. The Mumbai employee gets a higher Component ② value, which means more room for exemption. The Bengaluru employee's exemption ceiling is 10 percentage points lower from the start.
Rahul (Mumbai):
① ₹30,000 ② 50% of ₹80,000 = ₹40,000 ③ ₹25,000 − ₹8,000 = ₹17,000
Exemption = ₹17,000
Arjun (Pune):
① ₹30,000 ② 40% of ₹80,000 = ₹32,000 ③ ₹25,000 − ₹8,000 = ₹17,000
Exemption = ₹17,000
When Paying Higher Rent Doesn't Help Your Exemption
There's a ceiling to how much rent can help you. Once your rent minus 10% of Basic+DA exceeds your actual HRA received (Component ①), paying more rent doesn't increase your exemption further. You're already capped by what your employer actually pays you.
This is why increasing rent artificially — without a genuine lease and actual payment — is both ineffective beyond a point and risky from a scrutiny perspective. The exemption is bounded by three walls, and you can't exceed the lowest one.
The practical takeaway: if you're choosing between two rental options, running the calculation helps you understand exactly how much exemption benefit each option gives you. Sometimes the rent difference isn't worth it once taxes are factored in.
Basic+DA = ₹57,000
① ₹18,000
② 50% of ₹57,000 = ₹28,500
③ ₹14,000 − 10% of ₹57,000 = ₹14,000 − ₹5,700 = ₹8,300
What Counts as "Rent Paid" — and What Doesn't
The rent must be for accommodation you actually occupy. You can't claim HRA for a second property you own or for a house you've given to someone else. The accommodation must be your primary residence during that period.
You can pay rent to parents and claim HRA — this is a legitimate tax planning strategy. Your parent must have an ownership claim on the property and must declare the rent income in their tax return. A formal rental agreement is strongly advisable, and bank transfer records help substantiate the transaction.
Paying rent to a spouse, however, is generally not accepted by the Income Tax Department. The relationship creates a presumption of shared benefit, and most assessments disallow such claims under scrutiny.
Documentation Requirements You Shouldn't Ignore
If your annual rent crosses ₹1 lakh — which means ₹8,334 or more per month — you must furnish the landlord's PAN to your employer when submitting investment proofs. Without this, your employer is required to deduct TDS on the full HRA.
Even if rent is below ₹1 lakh annually, maintaining rent receipts is good practice. If your return is picked up for scrutiny, the assessing officer can ask for proof of rent paid. Receipts, rental agreements, and bank statements form the documentation chain you need.
📋 Keep rent receipts for at least 6 years from the relevant assessment year. The Income Tax Department can reopen assessments within that window in most cases.
HRA and the New Tax Regime — The Trade-Off Explained
Since Assessment Year 2021-22, salaried employees can opt for the new tax regime under Section 115BAC. The new regime offers lower slab rates but requires you to forgo most exemptions and deductions — including HRA.
Whether this trade-off works in your favour depends entirely on your numbers. If your HRA exemption, Section 80C investments, and other deductions together add up to more than the tax benefit from lower slabs, the old regime wins for you. If your deductions are small, the new regime might save more.
There's no universal answer. We recommend running both calculations before the deadline each year. The regime choice is now the single biggest variable in annual tax planning for most salaried employees.
A Real-World Scenario That Shows the Full Picture
Basic: ₹90,000 | DA: ₹0 | HRA Received: ₹36,000 | Rent Paid: ₹22,000
① ₹36,000
② 40% of ₹90,000 = ₹36,000
③ ₹22,000 − 10% of ₹90,000 = ₹22,000 − ₹9,000 = ₹13,000
How HRA Fits Into Total Tax Planning
HRA exemption is one component of a broader set of deductions available under the old regime. It works alongside Section 80C (up to ₹1.5 lakh for investments like PPF, ELSS, and life insurance), Section 80D (health insurance premiums), and standard deduction of ₹50,000.
When you stack these up, many mid-income earners find the old regime gives them a meaningfully lower effective tax rate despite higher headline slab rates. The math is always in the details — and HRA exemption is often the largest single component for people living in rented accommodation in metros.
The key is to calculate your total exemptions and deductions, compare the resulting taxable income under both regimes, and then apply the applicable slab rates. Don't assume one regime is better — check every year, because salary changes, rent changes, and the government changes the rules.
HRA Across the World — How Other Countries Handle It
India's HRA system is relatively unique in structuring rent relief as an employer-provided allowance rather than a direct deduction. In the United Kingdom, there's no equivalent employer allowance, but rental income tax treatment for landlords has specific rules. In the United States, employees don't receive tax-free rent allowances — housing benefits from employers are generally included in taxable income unless specific exceptions apply.
Germany allows certain housing cost deductions primarily for self-employed individuals, not salaried workers. Japan provides similar employer-provided housing allowances that can be structured to minimise tax liability, but the rules differ significantly from India's three-way formula approach.
What makes India's HRA structure distinctive is the formula's built-in constraints — the three-way minimum ensures the benefit scales with actual need rather than being a blanket percentage, which is both its strength and the source of most confusion.
HRA Across Languages — A Quick Reference
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