Leave salary, or leave encashment, refers to the payment an employee receives for unused leave days. Its taxability depends on when it is received (during service or at retirement/resignation) and the employee’s sector (government or private). Below is a detailed breakdown:
1. Tax Rules for Leave Salary
A. Leave Encashment Received During Employment
- Fully taxableas part of “Income from Salaries” for all employees (government and private).
- No exemptionsapply unless relief is claimed under Section 89 (for arrears) by filing Form 10E.
B. Leave Encashment at Retirement/Resignation
| EMPLOYEE TYPE | TAXABILITY | EXEMPTION LIMIT |
| Government Employees | Fully exempt (Central/State) . | No limit |
| Private Employees | Partially exempt under Section 10(10AA) 8. | Least of :
1. ₹25 lakh (lifetime cap) 2. Actual leave encashment received 3. 10 months’ average salary 4. Cash equivalent of 30 days/year for completed service (minus utilized leaves) |
| Legal Heirs | Fully exempt if received after the employee’s death | No limit |
2. Calculation of Exemption for Private Employees
Formula:
Taxable Leave Salary = Total Leave Encashment – Exemption (least of 4 limits above)
Example:
- An employee retires after 20 years, with 400 unused leave days(max 30 days/year = 600 days eligible).
- Average salary (last 10 months):₹40,000/month
- Leave encashment received:₹5,00,000
Exemption Calculation:
- ₹25 lakh(lifetime cap)
- Actual encashment:₹5,00,000
- 10 months’ salary:₹4,00,000
- 30 days/year:(30 × 20) = 600 days – 400 utilized = 200 days × (₹40,000/30) = ₹2,66,667
Exempt Amount: ₹2,66,667 (least of above)
Taxable Amount: ₹5,00,000 – ₹2,66,667 = ₹2,33,333
3. Key Points
- Lifetime Cap:The ₹25 lakh exemption is cumulative across all employers .
- Salary Definition:Includes basic + DA + turnover-based commission .
- New Tax Regime:Exemption under Section 10(10AA) applies in both old and new regimes .
- Medical/Maternity Leaves:Not eligible for encashment in most cases .
4. Comparison of Tax Treatment
| SCENARIO | GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEE | PRIVATE EMPLOYEE |
| During Service | Taxable | Taxable |
| At Retirement | Fully exempt | Exempt up to ₹25 lakh (lifetime) |
| Legal Heirs | Fully exempt | Fully exempt |
5. Reporting in ITR
- Taxable leave salarymust be reported under “Income from Salaries” in ITR-1/ITR-2.
- Form 10Emust be filed to claim relief under Section 89 (if applicable)

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