Salary Structuring to Save Maximum Tax

29 Apr, 2026
Salary Structuring to Save Maximum Tax

Introduction

Salary structuring is a strategic way of designing your salary components to legally reduce tax liability while maximizing take-home income. Many salaried individuals focus only on deductions like Section 80C, but the real opportunity lies in how salary is broken into components such as allowances, reimbursements, and perquisites.


A well-structured salary ensures:


  • Lower taxable income

  • Efficient use of exemptions

  • Improved financial planning

  • Compliance with tax laws


In today’s evolving tax system, especially with the choice between old and new tax regimes, salary structuring has become more important than ever.

What is Salary Structure?

Salary structure is the detailed composition of your Cost to Company (CTC). It defines how your salary is divided into different heads, each having different tax implications.

Key Components:

  • Basic Salary – Core component, fully taxable

  • Allowances – HRA, LTA, special allowance, etc.

  • Perquisites – Non-cash benefits like car, accommodation

  • Reimbursements – Expenses reimbursed by employer

  • Retiral Benefits – PF, gratuity


Salary structure directly impacts:

  • Tax liability 

  • Net take-home salary

  • Investment and savings potential

Why Salary Structuring is Important for Tax Saving

Without proper structuring, a large portion of your salary becomes taxable unnecessarily.

Importance:

  • Tax Optimization – Use exemptions effectively

  • Higher Take-Home Pay – Reduce unnecessary tax outflow

  • Better Financial Planning – Align salary with investments

  • Flexibility – Customize salary as per personal needs


Example: Two employees earning ₹20 lakh can pay different taxes depending on salary structure.

Taxability of Salary Components (Detailed Breakdown)

Understanding taxability helps identify which components to increase or reduce.

 Fully Taxable Components:

  • Basic Salary

  • Dearness Allowance

  • Bonus & Incentives

  • Special Allowance

 Partially Taxable Components:

  • HRA (based on exemption rules)

  • LTA (only for travel expenses)

 Tax-Free / Conditional:

  • Reimbursements (if supported by bills)

  • Certain allowances within limits


The goal is to shift salary from fully taxable to partially/conditionally exempt components.

Key Salary Components to Optimize Tax

1. Basic Salary

Basic salary is the foundation of your pay and affects multiple calculations like PF, gratuity, and HRA.

  • Ideally kept between 40%–50% of CTC

  • Higher basic = higher tax liability

  • Lower basic = better flexibility but must comply with labor norms

2. House Rent Allowance (HRA)

HRA is one of the most effective tax-saving components.

Exemption is calculated as least of:
  • Actual HRA received

  • 50% of salary (metro) / 40% (non-metro)

  • Rent paid – 10% of salary


Proper planning (rent agreement + receipts) can significantly reduce taxes.

3. Leave Travel Allowance (LTA)

  • Covers domestic travel expenses

  • Available for 2 journeys in a block of 4 years

  • Only travel cost (not hotel/food) is exempt


Requires actual travel proof and bills

4. Standard Deduction

  • Flat deduction of ₹50,000 (old regime)

  • Automatically reduces taxable salary

  • No documentation required


Simplifies tax calculation

5. Bonus & Incentives

  • Fully taxable

  • Paid as performance-linked income


Strategy: Keep the bonuses balanced or convert part into tax-efficient benefits

Tax-Saving Allowances You Should Include

Allowances can significantly reduce tax if structured properly.

Common Tax-Efficient Allowances:

  • Meal Coupons – Tax-free within limits

  • Telephone/Internet – Reimbursed against bills

  • Conveyance/Fuel – For official use

  • Uniform Allowance

  • Children Education Allowance


These reduce taxable income when supported by documentation

Perquisites & Reimbursements  

Perquisites are benefits provided in addition to salary.

Examples:

  • Company car

  • Rent-free accommodation

  • Employer-paid insurance

  • Laptop/mobile

Reimbursements:

  • Medical bill’s

  • Travel expenses

  • Office-related costs


These are tax-efficient alternatives to direct salary

Deductions You Can Maximize Along with Salary Structuring

Even with structured salary, deductions play a major role.

Key Sections:

  • 80C – Investments up to ₹1.5 lakh

  • 80D – Health insurance premium

  • Section 24 – Home loan interest

  • 80CCD(1B) – NPS additional ₹50,000


Combining deductions + structuring gives maximum tax benefit

Old vs New Tax Regime: Which is Better for Structured Salary?

Old Tax Regime:

  • Allows deductions and exemptions

  • Ideal for structured salary

New Tax Regime:

  • Lower tax rates

  • Minimal deductions allowed


 If you actively use HRA, LTA, and deductions → Old regime is better
If you prefer simplicity → New regime

Ideal Tax-Efficient Salary Structure (Example)

Example: ₹20 Lakh CTC

Component

Amount

Basic Salary

₹8,00,000

HRA

₹4,00,000

Special Allowance

₹2,00,000

Reimbursements

₹1,50,000

Bonus

₹2,50,000

PF

₹2,00,000

Proper allocation reduces taxable income significantly

Read the rest in 'Salary Structuring to Save Maximum Tax Part 2— Click Here