house rent: salaried preferred over self employed
house rent: salaried preferred over self employed
Query 1]
I am
paying a house rent for Rs 14,000/- per month and additional Rs. 1,200/-
towards maintenance for which receipt is being given to me every month. Will I get
HRA exemption on Rs. 14,000/- or Rs 15,200/-. Please clarify. [N.K.Panda-niroj_p@yahoo.com]
Opinion:
With
handful of options to save tax for the salaried taxpayers, one can definitely
explore the possibility of reducing tax bill by revisiting the exemption &
deduction provision. One such tool is claiming an exemption towards rent
payment of residential accommodation.
Employees generally receive a house rent allowance (HRA) as a part
of the salary package, in accordance with the terms and conditions of
employment. HRA is given to meet the cost of a rented house taken by the
employee for his stay. Exemption on HRA is available under Section 10(13A) of
the Income Tax Act and Rule 2A of the Income Tax Rules.
Taxpayer
would be surprised to see that there is no amount wise upper ceiling on HRA
exemption.
An employee can claim exemption on his HRA under the Income Tax
Act if he stays in a rented house and is in receipt of HRA from the employer.
In order to claim the deduction, an employee must actually pay rent for the
house occupied. [HRA exemption benefit can be claimed only by the salaried taxpayer.
Self employed person may save little tax by claiming deduction u/s 80GG if they
are staying in a rented premise. Interestingly, deduction U/s 80GG cannot exceed
Rs. 24,000/- p.a. whereas there is no such ceiling while claiming exemption u/s
10(13A). May be it is where salaried taxpayer have better favoring tax law
provision as compared to self employed.]
In case one stays in an own house, nothing is deductible and the
entire amount of HRA received is subject to tax. Exemption from HRA will be lowest
of the following
three factors:
1. Actual HRA received
from the employer
2. Actual house rent
paid by employee minus 10% of basic salary
3. 50% of the basic
salary if employee live in a metro or 40% of basic salary if lives in a
non-metro.
Minimum of above is
allowed as income tax exemption on HRA. Salary here means basic salary which includes dearness
allowance if the terms of employment provide for it, and commission based on a
fixed percentage of turnover achieved by the employee. The deduction will be
available only for the period during which the rented house is occupied by the
employee and not for any period after that.
Whether HRA & Home
loan benefit could be availed simultaneously?
Misconception
prevails that HRA exemption is not available if taxpayer also have availed
housing loan. It’s wrong. If the taxpayer is staying in a rented house, HRA
benefit can be claimed despite the fact that he owns another house (whether
rented out or vacant, whether in the same city or elsewhere) & is claiming
the tax benefit available on home loan also. The tax benefits against home loan
and HRA are two separate independent deductions and have no direct bearing on
each other. As long as employee is paying rent for rented accommodation
occupied by him, HRA exemption could be claimed while also availing tax
benefits of other self owned house property.
Whether PAN of the
Landlord is mandatory for HRA claim:
Employees have to furnish the PAN of the
landlord if the rent payment exceeds Rs. 1 Lacs p.a. [Circular No. 8/2013 Dated
10.10.2013 issued by CBDT]. In case the landlord does not have a PAN, a
declaration to this effect from the landlord along with the name and
address of the landlord should be filed with the employer by the employee.
[Though
incurring actual expenditure on payment of rent is a pre-requisite for granting
exemption under section 10(13A) by the employer, as
an administrative measure, salaried employees drawing house rent
allowance up to Rs. 3,000/- per month are exempted from
production of rent receipt to the employer/ disbursing authorities
. It may, however, be noted that this concession is only
for the purpose of tax deduction at source, and, in the regular
assessment of the employee, the Assessing Officer will be free to make such
enquiry as he deems fit for the purpose of satisfying himself that the
employee has incurred actual expenditure on payment
of rent.]
Present Query:
Present Query:
Coming
to your query, HRA exemption is available towards rent payment. The question
here is what type of payment could be considered as rent. Whether payment
towards maintenance, electricity, additional amenities & facilities could
be considered for HRA exemption?
Given
the clear cut wordings of the section 10(13A) & without any precedent as of
now stretching the meaning of “Rent”, I am of the view that exemption would be
admissible only towards Rent payment and not payment done towards electricity,
maintenance charges etc. If however, you make the lump-sum payment to the
landlord towards rent who in turn makes the payment of maintenance charges or
others, the exemption u/s 10(13A) could not be denied.
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