Ramesh, a 52-year-old branch manager at a public sector bank, is offered a Voluntary Retirement Scheme payout of Rs 11 lakh. His first worry is not the cheque, it is the tax. He has heard that VRS money is tax-free, but nobody can tell him whether that means all of it or only a slice. This guide answers exactly that question, with the law, a checklist and a worked calculation.
Direct answer: Compensation received on voluntary retirement or voluntary separation is exempt from income tax up to a maximum of Rs 5,00,000 under Section 10(10C) of the Income-tax Act 1961, provided the scheme follows the guidelines in Rule 2BA of the Income-tax Rules. Anything above Rs 5 lakh is taxable as salary. The exemption can be claimed only once in a lifetime.
The Rs 5 lakh exemption is not automatic. Your employer's scheme must satisfy every condition in Rule 2BA. Run down this checklist before you sign:
For companies other than public sector companies, the scheme must additionally be approved by the Chief Commissioner or Director General of Income Tax.
VRS exemption at a glance
| ① Max exempt | ② Governing law | ③ Scheme rule | ④ Frequency |
| Rs 5,00,000 | Section 10(10C) | Rule 2BA | Once in a lifetime |
Ramesh Kulkarni, Pune, FY 2025-26
Ramesh receives Rs 11,00,000 under his bank's VRS. The scheme meets every Rule 2BA condition.
The Rs 6 lakh balance is added to his salary income for the year and taxed at his applicable slab rate. The first Rs 5 lakh escapes tax entirely. Ramesh cannot also claim Section 89 relief on this same Rs 6 lakh if he takes the 10(10C) exemption.
The exemption is the least of three figures: Rs 5 lakh, the Rule 2BA amount-ceiling computation, and the actual amount received. For most retiring employees with long service, the Rs 5 lakh cap is the binding number.
Section 10(10C) carries a strict one-shot rule. If the exemption has been allowed to you in any one assessment year, it cannot be claimed again in any other assessment year. So if you change jobs and a second employer later offers another VRS, you cannot exempt that second payout. Plan accordingly: take the exemption against the larger payout if you ever expect two.
You cannot stack the 10(10C) exemption on top of Section 89 relief for the same money. The statute is explicit: if relief under Section 89 has been allowed to you for any amount received on voluntary retirement, separation or termination in any assessment year, then the Section 10(10C) exemption shall not be allowed to you for any other assessment year, and vice versa. Pick the route that saves you more tax. For most people the flat Rs 5 lakh exemption is simpler and larger; Section 89 spreading may help only in unusual cases.
No. Only up to Rs 5,00,000 is exempt under Section 10(10C). Any amount above Rs 5 lakh is taxable as salary income at your slab rate.
Yes. Since the Finance Act 1992, the benefit extends beyond public sector companies to any other company, provided the scheme meets Rule 2BA and, for non-PSU companies, is approved by the Chief Commissioner or Director General of Income Tax.
No. If you have claimed the Section 10(10C) exemption in any assessment year, you cannot claim it again in any other year. It is strictly a once-in-a-lifetime benefit.
You need either 10 years of completed service OR 40 years of age. This condition is waived for employees of a public sector company retiring under that company's voluntary separation scheme.
No. The law does not allow both on the same VRS amount. If Section 89 relief is allowed for the VRS money, the 10(10C) exemption is denied, and vice versa. Choose whichever saves more tax.
The maximum exemption under Section 10(10C) is Rs 5,00,000. The actual exempt figure is the least of Rs 5 lakh, the Rule 2BA computed ceiling, and the amount actually received.
No. Rule 2BA excludes directors of a company or of a co-operative society from the scheme, so their payouts do not qualify for the 10(10C) exemption.
Public sector companies, any other company, an authority or local authority, a co-operative society, a university, an Indian Institute of Technology, notified institutes of management, and certain notified bodies, as listed in Rule 2BA.
If your employer is vague about whether its scheme is Rule 2BA compliant, or a public sector employer will not share the scheme document, you can file an RTI. Use the AI RTI Drafter to draft a clean application asking for the certified VRS scheme document and the approval order. Public sector banks, PSUs and government bodies are public authorities under the RTI Act 2005.