🎁 Gratuity Calculator
Enter your last drawn Basic + DA salary and years of service to instantly calculate your gratuity under the Payment of Gratuity Act 1972. Compares covered and non-covered formulas, checks your ₹20 lakh tax exemption, flags eligibility, and shows year-wise gratuity accrual from 5 to 35 years.
🎁 Gratuity Calculator
Employee Type
📈 Year-wise Gratuity Accrual
How your gratuity builds up year by year (based on current salary - actual will vary as salary changes).
| Year | Basic+DA (mo) | Gratuity at this yr | Cumulative | Growth |
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⚖️ Covered vs Non-Covered Comparison
Compare gratuity under Act (covered) vs employer discretion (non-covered) for the same employee.
📐 Gratuity Calculation - How It Works
Formula - Covered Employees (Payment of Gratuity Act 1972)
Formula - Non-Covered Employees
Eligibility & Key Rules
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Gratuity Calculator India - Payment of Gratuity Act 1972 Formula Explained
Gratuity is one of the most significant retirement benefits for Indian employees, yet many people don't know their exact entitlement until they're about to leave a job. Understanding the formula, the eligibility rules, the difference between covered and non-covered employee calculations, and the tax exemption limits helps you plan better and ensures you receive what you're entitled to.
The Two Gratuity Formulas - Covered vs Non-Covered Employees
The Payment of Gratuity Act 1972 applies to establishments with 10 or more employees. Employees working at such organisations are "covered" and benefit from the more generous formula using 26 as the divisor (representing working days in a month). Employees at smaller organisations or those outside the Act's scope use 30 (calendar days).
Covered Employees (Act Applies)
- Formula: (Basic+DA × 15 × Years) ÷ 26
- Applies to: organisations with 10+ employees
- Partial year: 6+ months rounds up to a full year
- Statutory maximum: ₹20 lakh
- Employer cannot pay less than this formula
- Example: ₹40,000 × 15 × 10 ÷ 26 = ₹2,30,769
Non-Covered Employees (Act Does Not Apply)
- Formula: (Basic+DA × 15 × Years) ÷ 30
- Applies to: organisations with fewer than 10 employees
- Partial year: counted only as completed full years
- No statutory maximum - employer determines
- No legal obligation to pay (but many do voluntarily)
- Example: ₹40,000 × 15 × 10 ÷ 30 = ₹2,00,000
What Counts as "Last Drawn Salary" for Gratuity?
This is one of the most misunderstood aspects of gratuity calculation. The Payment of Gratuity Act defines "wages" for gratuity purposes as Basic Salary + Dearness Allowance (DA) only. The following are explicitly excluded:
- House Rent Allowance (HRA)
- Special allowances
- Transport/conveyance allowance
- Medical allowance
- Performance bonus or variable pay
- Overtime pay
- Any other allowances beyond Basic + DA
This means a CTC of ₹15 lakh may have a Basic + DA of only ₹5–6 lakh, resulting in a much lower gratuity than employees expect if they calculate on total CTC. Always use the Basic + DA from your salary slip, not your gross salary or CTC.
Gratuity Tax Exemption - Understanding the ₹20 Lakh Limit
Under Section 10(10) of the Income Tax Act:
- Government employees: Entire gratuity amount is fully tax-exempt, with no upper limit.
- Private sector employees covered by the Act: Tax-exempt up to ₹20,00,000 (₹20 lakh).
- Private sector employees not covered by the Act: Tax-exempt up to the least of: actual gratuity received, ₹20 lakh, or half a month's salary for each year of service (using 10-month average).
- Lifetime limit: The ₹20 lakh exemption is a cumulative lifetime limit across all employers. If you received ₹8 lakh gratuity from Employer A, only ₹12 lakh remains exempt from Employer B. Any gratuity above the remaining exempt amount is taxable at your income slab rate.
Most employees in standard service periods well below 35 years will receive gratuity below ₹20 lakh, making the question of taxation largely academic for mid-career employees. Senior executives and long-serving employees in high-salary roles may approach this threshold.
The 5-Year Rule - The Most Common Eligibility Question
The most frequent cause of gratuity disputes is the 5-year minimum service requirement. Key points:
- Exactly 5 years required for resignation, termination (other than misconduct), and superannuation.
- 4 years and 240 days - courts have generally accepted this as equivalent to 5 years based on the interpretation that 240 working days = 12 months × 26 working days = 312 days... actually courts count 6+ months of the fifth year as completing it. The commonly cited threshold is "5 years and 240 days" as a practical rule.
- Death or permanent disability: Gratuity payable from day one, regardless of service duration. Nominees or legal heirs receive the entitlement.
- Termination for misconduct: Employer may forfeit gratuity partially or fully for willful omission or negligence causing damage, or for moral turpitude offences - but not for ordinary performance dismissal.