Gratuity Withheld for Not Vacating Company Quarters?

Yes, your employer can hold back part of your gratuity if you stay on in the company flat after retirement, but only within strict limits. The Supreme Court in 2026 allowed a public sector employer to adjust penal rent of up to Rs 1,000 per month for the extra retention period, and it barred any interest on the gratuity held back. The employer cannot simply forfeit the whole amount.

If you are short on time, jump to “What to do if your gratuity is wrongly withheld” below and file an application with the controlling authority under the Payment of Gratuity Act, 1972.

This rule comes from a specific situation: a public sector unit gave retired staff notice to vacate official accommodation, some did not move out, and the employer adjusted rent against their gratuity. The Court treated handing over the flat and receiving the gratuity balance as linked obligations. So the employer can recover a capped, reasonable rent, not punish you by keeping the full payout.

Note: this is about company or PSU quarters that are not vacated. It is not a general power to forfeit gratuity, and it is different from withholding gratuity while a departmental or criminal case is pending.

Worked example: how the Rs 1,000 cap works

Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak retires from a PSU. He is allowed a short grace period to vacate his quarter, but he stays on for 6 months beyond that permitted period before handing back the keys.

His employer cannot keep his whole gratuity. It can only adjust penal rent at the capped rate the Court fixed.

Item Amount
Penal rent rate set by Court Rs 1,000 per month
Retention beyond permitted period 6 months
Maximum rent adjustable from gratuity Rs 6,000
Interest charged on the withheld gratuity Rs 0 (none)

So if Dr. Pathak's gratuity is, say, Rs 8,00,000, the employer may adjust at most Rs 6,000 and must release the balance of Rs 7,94,000. It cannot demand market rent or sit on the money and charge interest.

What the Supreme Court decided in 2026

The case is Steel Authority of India Ltd v. Sada Nand Singh (the lead case in a batch of connected appeals, one of which involved Shambhu Prasad Singh), 2026 INSC 263, decided on 18 March 2026 by a two-judge bench of the Supreme Court.

The Court held the following.

  • A public sector employer may withhold or adjust gratuity where a retiree does not surrender vacant possession of the company quarter. Handing over the flat and receiving the balance gratuity are treated as reciprocal obligations.
  • The withholding here rested on the employer's own service rule. SAIL had Rule 3.2.1© of the SAIL Gratuity Rules, 1978, which lets it withhold gratuity for non-compliance with company rules, including non-vacation of accommodation.
  • The recovery is capped. A sum of Rs 1,000 per month may be fixed as reasonable penal rent, to be adjusted from gratuity for the period of retention beyond the permitted or grace period.
  • No interest is payable on the gratuity amount withheld for the period of unauthorised occupation after superannuation.

Read carefully: the Court allowed this because the employer had a specific rule and the quarter was tied to service. A private employer with no such rule is not automatically on the same footing. This judgment is about adjusting a capped penal rent, not a licence to forfeit your gratuity.

When gratuity can and cannot be touched (Payment of Gratuity Act)

This is the general law and it sits apart from the SAIL service-rule point above. Do not read the Act as giving every employer power to hold gratuity over a flat.

Gratuity is governed by the Payment of Gratuity Act, 1972.

  • Section 4(1) gives you the right to gratuity on retirement, resignation, death, or disablement after 5 years of continuous service.
  • Section 4(6) allows forfeiture only in narrow cases. Gratuity can be forfeited to the extent of damage or loss caused to the employer's property. It can be forfeited wholly or partly where service is terminated for riotous or disorderly conduct, or for an act involving moral turpitude in the course of employment.
  • Section 7 covers determination of the amount and interest on delayed payment. Normally simple interest runs if the employer delays a payable amount, but the 2026 ruling carved out no interest for the unauthorised-occupation period in the quarters situation.

So under the Act alone, mere failure to vacate a flat is not one of the listed grounds to forfeit gratuity. The PSU outcome turned on the employer's specific rule plus the reciprocal-obligation reasoning.

Your rights as a retiree

  • Your gratuity cannot be forfeited in full just because you are still in the company flat.
  • Any recovery for unvacated quarters is limited to reasonable penal rent, capped at Rs 1,000 per month for the retention period beyond the permitted period.
  • The employer cannot charge you interest on the gratuity it holds back for that period.
  • Once you hand over vacant possession, the balance gratuity should be released without further deduction beyond the capped rent.
  • If your employer has no service rule allowing this and you are not in a PSU quarters dispute, the narrow forfeiture grounds in Section 4(6) are what apply.
  • You can challenge a wrongful or excessive deduction before the controlling authority under the Act.

What to do if your gratuity is wrongly withheld

  1. Vacate the quarter and get proof. Hand over vacant possession and keep the dated handover or surrender letter. This stops any further penal rent and triggers release of the balance.
  2. Send a written demand. Ask your employer in writing to release the gratuity and to show the exact rent adjusted and the period. Keep a copy and proof of delivery.
  3. Check the deduction against the cap. Confirm the rent charged does not exceed Rs 1,000 per month for the retention period, and that no interest has been added on the withheld amount.
  4. File Form N with the controlling authority. If the employer refuses or over-deducts, apply to the controlling authority for the area under the Payment of Gratuity Act, 1972. This is the officer who decides gratuity disputes.
  5. Claim interest on any wrongly delayed balance. For amounts the employer simply sat on outside the unauthorised-occupation period, ask for interest under Section 7.
  6. Use RTI if you are a PSU or government retiree. File a Right to Information application to get the file notings, the rule relied on, and the calculation behind the deduction. See The RTI Playbook for how to frame the request and escalate.

Frequently asked questions

Can my employer keep my entire gratuity because I am still in the company flat?

No. The 2026 Supreme Court ruling does not allow full forfeiture for not vacating quarters. The employer may only adjust capped penal rent of up to Rs 1,000 per month for the extra retention period and must release the rest.

Does this judgment apply to private companies too?

Not automatically. The case turned on a public sector employer that had a specific service rule allowing the withholding, plus the link between handing over the flat and getting gratuity. A private employer with no such rule must rely on the narrow forfeiture grounds in Section 4(6).

Can the employer charge interest on the gratuity it holds back?

No, not for the period of unauthorised occupation after retirement. The Court expressly said no interest is payable on the gratuity withheld for that retention period and up to one month after you vacate.

Is Rs 1,000 per month the rent or the cap?

It is the cap the Court fixed as reasonable penal rent for the retention period beyond the permitted period. The employer cannot demand market rent or a higher figure to be adjusted from gratuity in this situation.

How is this different from gratuity withheld during a departmental case?

That is a separate regime. Withholding gratuity while a departmental or criminal proceeding is pending follows pension and service rules, not the quarters logic in this judgment. See the related article on withholding pending proceedings below.

Where do I complain if my gratuity is wrongly withheld?

File an application with the controlling authority under the Payment of Gratuity Act, 1972, for your area. The authority can order release of the balance and interest on amounts wrongly delayed outside the unauthorised-occupation period.

Sources

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