You retired after 22 years, your old firm paid ₹14 lakh gratuity, and now you are scared the income tax department will eat half of it. Here is the plain truth: most private-sector gratuity is fully tax-free, and even when part is taxable, Section 89(1) relief can shrink the extra tax to almost nothing.
Quick answer: Private-sector gratuity is exempt from income tax under Section 10(10) up to the least of three amounts: the actual gratuity received, the ₹20 lakh lifetime cap, or the 15-days-per-year formula. Anything above that is taxable salary, but Section 89(1) relief filed through Form 10E can cut the extra tax. This exemption and this relief both apply in the old AND the new tax regime.
Gratuity is the lump sum your employer pays for long service when you retire, resign, or are let go. For private staff the law does not tax the whole amount. Section 10(10) of the Income Tax Act exempts a calculated slice. Only the portion above that exempt slice is added to your salary income and taxed at your slab rate for that year.
Three laws work together here.
Important regime note: Section 10(10) is an exemption, and Section 89(1) is a relief, not Chapter VI-A deductions like 80C. The new tax regime, which is the default from FY 2023-24, removes most 80C-type deductions but keeps the Section 10(10) gratuity exemption and Section 89(1) relief. So you get this benefit whether you are on the old regime or the new default regime.
Government employees, for contrast, get gratuity that is fully exempt under Section 10(10)(i). There is no ₹20 lakh cap on them. This guide is for private-sector and other non-government staff.
Need help drafting an information request to your old employer or the labour office about your gratuity dues? Try the AI RTI Drafter.
Kashvi Pathak, a private-sector manager in Pune, retired after 22 years and 8 months of service. Her last drawn basic plus DA was ₹80,000 a month, and her firm is covered by the Payment of Gratuity Act. She received ₹16 lakh gratuity.
Her completed years count as 23 because the 8 months over the last full year round up. The formula gives ₹80,000 × 15 / 26 × 23 = ₹10,61,538. The least of three is: actual ₹16,00,000, cap ₹20,00,000, formula ₹10,61,538. So ₹10,61,538 is exempt and the remaining ₹5,38,462 is taxable salary.
Because this lump sum pushed her into a higher slab in the retirement year, Kashvi filed Form 10E online and claimed Section 89(1) relief, which spread the tax burden against her earlier years and saved her a large slice of extra tax. She did all of this on the new tax regime, where the benefit still applies.
To: HR / Payroll Department Subject: Request for gratuity computation breakup for ITR and Form 10E Dear Sir or Madam, I am requesting a written breakup of the gratuity paid to me on [date], so I can correctly claim the Section 10(10) exemption and, if needed, Section 89(1) relief through Form 10E. Please confirm: 1. Total gratuity amount paid and the date of payment. 2. Whether our establishment is covered by the Payment of Gratuity Act 1972. 3. My last drawn basic pay plus dearness allowance. 4. My total years of completed service used in the calculation. 5. The Section 10(10) exempt amount and the taxable balance, if any, reported in my Form 16. Kind regards, [Name, employee ID, contact]
No. It is exempt under Section 10(10) only up to the least of three amounts: the actual gratuity, the ₹20 lakh lifetime cap, or the 15-days-per-year formula. Any excess is taxable salary.
The lifetime cap is ₹20 lakh, raised from ₹10 lakh for events on or after 29 March 2018, per CBDT Notification No. 16/2019. It is cumulative across all employers in your working life.
Yes. Section 10(10) is an exemption and Section 89(1) is a relief, not Chapter VI-A deductions. Both apply in the old regime and in the new default regime.
Yes. Form 10E is online only and must be filed before you file your return. If you claim Section 89 relief without filing Form 10E, the ITR is processed but the relief is disallowed.
No. Gratuity received by central, state, defence and local-authority employees is fully exempt under Section 10(10)(i), with no ₹20 lakh cap. This contrasts with private-sector treatment.
Only basic pay plus dearness allowance, not your full cost-to-company. Covered employees use the last drawn monthly figure, while not-covered employees use the average of the last 10 months.
For employees covered by the Payment of Gratuity Act, any part over 6 months counts as a full year. For not-covered employees, any fraction of a year is ignored and only completed years count.