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HRA vs Section 80GG: Rent Deduction Rules Most Salaried Indians Get Wrong

If your salary structure has HRA, you claim under HRA exemption. If it doesn't, Section 80GG kicks in. Both have caps, both have formulas, both confuse retail filers. This guide breaks down the math, the documentation, and the optimisation moves.

8 min readPublished 24 May 2026

Rent paid is one of the easiest tax deductions for salaried Indians — and one of the most miscalculated. Two completely different sections govern it depending on your salary structure: HRA (Section 10(13A)) for those who get House Rent Allowance, and Section 80GG for those who don't. Mixing them up is a common reason ITRs get flagged.

The decision: which section applies?

HRA exemption — the formula

HRA exemption = LEAST of these three:

  1. Actual HRA received from employer
  2. 50% of (Basic + DA) if you live in metro (Mumbai, Delhi, Chennai, Kolkata); 40% if non-metro
  3. Annual rent paid − 10% of (Basic + DA)

Worked example: Basic + DA = ₹6 lakh/year. HRA received = ₹2.4 lakh/year. Rent paid = ₹3.6 lakh/year. Living in Mumbai (metro).

Least = ₹2.4 lakh. That's your HRA exemption. Taxable HRA = ₹2.4 lakh received − ₹2.4 lakh exempt = ₹0.

Use the HRA calculator to plug your numbers.

HRA — Bengaluru / Hyderabad / Pune metro debate

The Income Tax Act defines “metro” as ONLY the 4 cities: Mumbai, Delhi, Chennai, Kolkata. Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Pune, Ahmedabad — all NON-metro for HRA purposes (40% cap).

Practical impact: Bengaluru tech worker on ₹15 lakh basic with ₹6 lakh HRA paying ₹4 lakh rent — capped at 40% × ₹15L = ₹6L on slab #2. Loses ₹1.5L exemption vs Mumbai counterpart.

HRA — the rent receipt rules

Section 80GG — the no-HRA alternative

Deduction = LEAST of these three:

  1. ₹5,000 per month (₹60,000/year cap)
  2. 25% of total adjusted income
  3. Rent paid − 10% of total adjusted income

Conditions: You must file Form 10BA along with ITR. You + spouse + minor child must NOT own residential property at your work location.

The ₹60K annual cap makes 80GG much weaker than HRA. A consultant earning ₹15 lakh paying ₹3 lakh rent in Bengaluru can only deduct ₹60k under 80GG vs potential ₹2.5 lakh under HRA. Hence the standard tax-optimisation move: negotiate HRA component into salary structure.

The salary-structure optimisation

Many new joiners accept flat-salary offers (no HRA, no allowances). This is suboptimal for tax. Always negotiate:

A well-structured ₹20 lakh CTC can save ₹40-60k more in taxes than a flat ₹20 lakh basic. The structure is negotiable at hiring — don't leave money on the table.

The common HRA mistakes

HRA + home loan combination — the genuine cases

Common scenario: bought a flat in Pune (parents live there) but you live in Bengaluru in rented accommodation. Both HRA (Bengaluru rent) + home loan interest deduction (Pune flat) can be claimed.

Conditions:

This combination is legitimate but commonly audited. Keep documentation airtight.

The action checklist

  1. Does your salary slip have HRA component? Yes = use HRA rules. No = use 80GG.
  2. If HRA: compute exemption using the 3-way least formula via the HRA calculator.
  3. If renting > ₹1L/year: ensure landlord PAN on file with employer.
  4. Pay rent via bank transfer (NEFT/UPI/IMPS), not cash.
  5. If structure doesn't have HRA: negotiate at next appraisal cycle.
  6. If 80GG applies: file Form 10BA with ITR for that financial year.

Both HRA and 80GG are old-regime deductions only. New regime offers higher standard deduction (₹75k) but no HRA / 80GG. Compare both regimes using the Income Tax calculator before filing.

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