Hi Dev,
My company pays 4% of the basic salary as Medical Allowances. Now, if an employee spends more than this amount on actual medical expenses, can that amount be deducted from his taxable income? He will be able to produce medical bills, and I also understand the limit is Rs. 15,000.
Dev
From India, Ahmadabad
My company pays 4% of the basic salary as Medical Allowances. Now, if an employee spends more than this amount on actual medical expenses, can that amount be deducted from his taxable income? He will be able to produce medical bills, and I also understand the limit is Rs. 15,000.
Dev
From India, Ahmadabad
Hi,
An amount of Rs. 1250 per month or Rs. 15,000 per annum is exempt from income tax, which can be paid as a medical allowance to the employee. The employee needs to submit medical bills once in a quarter, half-yearly, or yearly and claim the reimbursement. Any amount paid or claimed beyond Rs. 15,000 in a financial year would become taxable.
Thanks,
Shrini
An amount of Rs. 1250 per month or Rs. 15,000 per annum is exempt from income tax, which can be paid as a medical allowance to the employee. The employee needs to submit medical bills once in a quarter, half-yearly, or yearly and claim the reimbursement. Any amount paid or claimed beyond Rs. 15,000 in a financial year would become taxable.
Thanks,
Shrini
Thanks, Vipin and Shrini.
I am still not clear on one thing. I'll try to give you figures. Say, for example, the company pays only 5000 as a medical allowance, whereas the employee spends about 15000 on medical bills from his pocket. So, will he get the rebate on Rs. 5000 only, or can he get it for Rs. 15000 by producing bills?
Dev
From India, Ahmadabad
I am still not clear on one thing. I'll try to give you figures. Say, for example, the company pays only 5000 as a medical allowance, whereas the employee spends about 15000 on medical bills from his pocket. So, will he get the rebate on Rs. 5000 only, or can he get it for Rs. 15000 by producing bills?
Dev
From India, Ahmadabad
If, as per the policy of the company, for a particular Band/Grade, the medical allowance is fixed at Rs. 5000, then the company would provide tax benefits up to Rs. 5000, even if the employee has spent more than this.
Hope this is clear.
Regards,
Shrini
Hope this is clear.
Regards,
Shrini
Hi Dev,
As per the IT Act, if you term it as medical 'allowance' (which is paid to the employee irrespective of the actual expense), it is taxable even if the employee produces the bills.
But, if you term it as medical 'reimbursement' (which is paid to the employee depending upon the actual expense), then up to Rs. 15,000 per annum is exempt from tax, on producing the bills.
Hope this helps!
Regards,
Deepthi
From India, Hyderabad
As per the IT Act, if you term it as medical 'allowance' (which is paid to the employee irrespective of the actual expense), it is taxable even if the employee produces the bills.
But, if you term it as medical 'reimbursement' (which is paid to the employee depending upon the actual expense), then up to Rs. 15,000 per annum is exempt from tax, on producing the bills.
Hope this helps!
Regards,
Deepthi
From India, Hyderabad
Hi Guys, Can an employee who paid Rs.15,000/- toward medical expenses in a year claim tax benefit when his salary break up shows 72,000/- as medical allowance. If so, how? Thank You ansari
From India, Visakhapatnam
From India, Visakhapatnam
Looking for something specific? - Join & Be Part Of Our Community and get connected with the right people who can help. Our AI-powered platform provides real-time fact-checking, peer-reviewed insights, and a vast historical knowledge base to support your search.