You start a business or join a payroll in Maharashtra, Karnataka, or West Bengal, and a small deduction called professional tax appears. It is a State tax on earning a livelihood, it is capped by the Constitution at ₹2,500 a year, and depending on whether you employ others or work for yourself, you need one of two registrations: a PTRC or a PTEC.
Quick answer: Professional tax is a State-level tax on professions, trades, and employment, allowed up to ₹2,500 per person per year under Article 276 of the Constitution. Employers take a PTRC to deduct and deposit it from salaries. The self-employed and businesses take a PTEC to pay their own professional tax. It applies only in States that levy it.
Professional tax is a tax that some State governments charge on income from a profession, trade, calling, or employment. Despite the name, it covers salaried employees, freelancers, professionals, and business owners alike. The State collects it, the rate follows a slab based on income, and the total a person pays in a year is capped by the Constitution.
Professional tax is levied by State governments under the power in Article 276 of the Constitution of India, through each State's own professional tax Act. The framework is:
Slab rates and filing frequency differ by State, so the exact amount deducted each month and the return dates depend on your State's professional tax Act and rules. A business that both runs operations and employs staff usually needs both a PTEC and a PTRC.
RTI angle: A State's commercial tax or professional tax department is a public authority under the Right to Information Act 2005. If a payment is not reflected, a certificate is delayed, or a refund of wrongly collected professional tax is stuck, an RTI to the department asking for the status of your application or payment is a direct way to get a written answer.
Real-life example: Kavita Shah set up a small design studio in Pune with three employees. On her accountant's advice she took a PTEC to pay the studio's own professional tax and a PTRC to deduct it from her staff's salaries. She paid her annual enrolment amount within the State cap and deposited the deducted tax with the monthly returns. When a payment did not show on the portal, she filed an RTI to the State professional tax office and got a written confirmation, clearing the record.
Professional tax is a State-level tax on income from a profession, trade, calling, or employment. It is collected by States that levy it and is capped at ₹2,500 per person per year under the Constitution.
PTRC, the registration certificate, lets an employer deduct professional tax from employees and deposit it. PTEC, the enrolment certificate, lets a business or self-employed person pay professional tax on their own account.
Article 276 of the Constitution caps professional tax at ₹2,500 per person per year. No State can charge more than this, regardless of its slab rates.
No. States like Maharashtra, Karnataka, West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, and Gujarat levy it, while several States and most Union Territories, including Delhi, do not. Check your State's position before registering.
A self-employed person with no staff usually needs only a PTEC. A business with employees generally needs both: a PTEC to pay its own tax and a PTRC to deduct tax from employees.
Deducting professional tax from salaries and failing to deposit it on time attracts interest and penalty under the State Act, and can also be questioned in audits, so deposit and file returns on time.
You register and pay on your State's commercial tax or professional tax portal, using the PTEC or PTRC number. Slab rates, payment modes, and return due dates are set by that State.