Income Tax on ₹6 Lakh Salary in India (FY 2025-26 / AY 2026-27)
Estimated tax calculation under new and old regime. Monthly take-home. Based on AY 2026-27 public guidance and shown assumptions; verify before filing.
✓ AY 2026-27 source checked✓ Assumptions shown✓ Marginal relief applied
Updated May 29, 2026 · Source: Income Tax Department AY 2026-27 guidance · public source links shown below
🎉 Great news — you pay ZERO income tax on ₹6 Lakh salary!
Under the new tax regime, salaried employees earning up to ₹12.75 lakh pay zero income tax. ₹75,000 standard deduction + ₹60,000 Section 87A rebate = complete tax relief. No investment required.
📊 SOURCE-CHECKED ESTIMATE — Tax on ₹6 Lakh Salary
Annual Tax
₹0
New regime
Monthly Tax
₹0
Per month
Monthly Take-Home
₹50,000
After tax only
Step-by-Step Calculation (New Regime)
Gross annual salary
₹6,00,000
Less: Standard deduction (salaried)
− ₹75,000
Taxable income
₹5,25,000
Tax on slabs (Income Tax Department guidance, Income Tax Department slab guidance)
₹6,250
Less: Section 87A rebate
− ₹6,250
Total income tax payable
₹0
Effective tax rate: 0.00% of gross salary · Source: Income Tax Department guidance (Income Tax Department slab guidance) · official Income Tax Department guidance
New Regime vs Old Regime — ₹6 Lakh Salary
The right regime depends on your deductions. Here's the comparison assuming typical ₹80C (₹1.5L) + ₹80D (₹25K) deductions in old regime:
🆕 New Regime
₹0
Taxable: ₹5,25,000 · Std ded: ₹75,000
✓ Better — saves ₹0/year
📋 Old Regime
₹0
With ₹80C ₹1.5L + ₹80D ₹25K deductions
💡 Rule of thumb for ₹6 Lakh salary: New regime wins unless you have HRA exemption above ₹0 or home loan interest deduction. Use our calculator for your exact number.
Approximate monthly figures (new regime, before PF and other deductions):
Component
Monthly
Annual
Gross salary (CTC)
₹50,000
₹6,00,000
Income tax (new regime)
₹0
₹0
In-hand (after tax only)
₹50,000
₹6,00,000
Note: Actual in-hand salary will be lower after PF (12% of basic), professional tax (state-specific, typically ₹200/month), and other deductions. CTC and gross salary may differ. Verify with your payslip.
📋 Before filing your FY 2025-26 ITRVerify Form 16, AIS/TIS, deductions, regime selection, and latest official due-date notifications before filing.
At this income level, the main job of the calculation is not tax optimisation; it is avoiding confusion between gross CTC, taxable salary, and actual in-hand pay. Many employees at this bracket see zero tax under the new regime after standard deduction and rebate, but payroll deductions such as PF, professional tax, insurance, meal cards, or unpaid leave can still reduce monthly take-home.
Best use: check whether your employer is deducting any TDS despite rebate eligibility.
Common mistake: assuming zero income tax means no salary deductions at all.
Before filing: compare Form 16 with AIS/TIS and ensure salary, interest income, and previous-employer salary are captured.
Real-world checks before using this ₹6 Lakh estimate
This page assumes a clean salary-only case. Your actual tax and in-hand salary can change when your employer splits CTC into basic pay, HRA, special allowance, employer PF, gratuity, bonus, variable pay, reimbursements, insurance deductions, professional tax, or one-time joining/retention payouts.
Metro renter: compare old regime only after checking actual rent paid, HRA received, basic salary, city type, and rent proof availability.
Bonus or variable pay: include it in annual income before deciding that a rebate or slab outcome applies.
Payroll reality: monthly take-home is normally lower than “after-tax only” because payroll deductions and benefits are separate from income tax.
Frequently Asked Questions
Under the new tax regime: gross ₹6,00,000 minus standard deduction ₹75,000 = taxable ₹5,25,000. Total income tax = ₹0 including 4% cess. Effective rate = 0.00%. Zero tax due to Section 87A rebate.
Monthly gross: ₹50,000. Monthly income tax (new regime): ₹0. Estimated monthly take-home (after tax only): ₹50,000. Your actual take-home will be lower after PF contributions (12% of basic), professional tax (~₹200/month), and other deductions from your employer.
New regime is better for most people on ₹6 Lakh salary — it saves ₹0 compared to old regime with standard ₹80C + ₹80D deductions. Use our income tax calculator to compare with your exact deductions.
₹75,000 under the new tax regime (applicable automatically — no proof needed). ₹50,000 under the old tax regime. The standard deduction was increased from ₹50,000 to ₹75,000 in Budget 2025 and continues unchanged for FY 2025-26 / AY 2026-27 under the Income Tax Department guidance.
Yes — taxable income after standard deduction is ₹5,25,000 which is ≤ ₹12L, so full Section 87A rebate of ₹6,250 applies. Total tax = ZERO.
Maintained by the RupeeCalc editorial workflow. Last checked: 29 May 2026. This page gives informational estimates only; verify official sources, your own documents, and a qualified professional before filing taxes, taking loans, investing, invoicing, or making compliance decisions.
At this band, the most useful content is not aggressive tax planning. It is understanding whether standard deduction, rebate eligibility and payroll components already make the new-regime estimate simple. Users should still verify Form 16, employer declarations and any exempt components before assuming zero tax. The practical risk is overcomplicating the return with weak old-regime proofs when the simpler route may already work.
Run the calculator once with CTC and once with Form 16 taxable salary if available.
Compare new regime against only those old-regime deductions that are real and document-backed.
Use the estimate for planning, then verify official guidance and filing data before submission.