
Tax & Finance
5 min read
- By Saumya Mishra
The HRA Loophole: How Much of Your Rent Is Actually Tax-Free?
Rohan, 28, Bengaluru, Rs. 16 lakh CTC, pays Rs. 32,000 monthly rent to a friend. He claims HRA. Wrong. His friend is not declaring the income. Rohan gets a notice 18 months later and pays Rs. 78,000 back with interest. HRA is the second-most-claimed deduction and the second-most-botched.
By the end, you will know exactly how much HRA you can claim and the three documentation mistakes that unravel it.
Read this first
The three-number formula
HRA exemption under section 10(13A) equals the LOWEST of three: (1) actual HRA received from employer, (2) rent paid minus 10% of basic salary, (3) 50% of basic in a metro city (40% non-metro). Whichever is smallest becomes exempt. The rest is taxable as salary.
Metro claim
Rs. 2,40,000
50% basic cap
Non-metro claim
Rs. 1,92,000
40% basic cap
The four cities that count as metro
Only Mumbai, Delhi, Chennai, and Kolkata qualify for 50% of basic. Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Pune, Gurugram. All count as non-metro for HRA purposes, even when rents there exceed Delhi or Mumbai. This trips up every Bengaluru IT hire.
Rent > Rs. 1 lakh a year needs landlord PAN
Paying rent to family counts. With two riders
No HRA in new regime
Key Takeaways
- HRA exempt = minimum of (actual HRA, rent minus 10% of basic, 50/40% of basic).
- Metro = only Mumbai / Delhi / Chennai / Kolkata. Bengaluru is non-metro.
- Rent > Rs. 8,333/month to get landlord PAN or the claim fails.
- Rent to parents is allowed if the money actually flows and they declare it.
- HRA does not exist in the new regime. A renter is almost always better on old.
Read Next
After 80C and HRA, the next untapped Rs. 50,000 sits in section 80CCD(1B). An NPS-only carve-out sitting on top of the main 80C cap. Here is the trap most filers walk past.
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