Gratuity Formula — Actual Computation for Coimbatore
The Payment of Gratuity Act, 1972 prescribes the following formula for employees covered under the Act (establishments with 10+ employees):
Gratuity = (Last Drawn Basic Salary ÷ 26) × 15 × Years of Service
The “26” represents working days in a month. For a Coimbatore professional with a monthly basic of Rs 20,000:
- Daily rate (÷26): Rs 769
- Per 15 days: Rs 11,538
- After 5 years of service: Rs 57,690
- After 10 years: Rs 1,15,380
- After 20 years: Rs 2,30,760
- After 30 years: Rs 3,46,140
Gratuity is calculated on the last drawn basic salary, not on CTC.Coimbatore employers in Manufacturing and Textiles typically set basic at 40% of CTC. Employees negotiating CTC structure should note that a higher basic salary results in higher gratuity entitlement at exit.
Eligibility: 5-Year Vesting Rule and the 240-Day Provision
The most critical gratuity rule: an employee must complete 5 continuous years of service to be eligible for gratuity. In Coimbatore's competitive job market — particularly in Manufacturing where average tenure is often 2–3 years — many employees forfeit gratuity by switching before the 5-year mark.
One important exception: the Supreme Court has held that 4 years and 240 days (approximately 4 years and 8 months) counts as 5 completed years for daily wage workers in continuous service. For monthly-salaried employees, the strict 5-year rule typically applies — but check your employment contract and local labour office guidance.
For Coimbatore professionals evaluating a job change in years 4–5 of employment: the gratuity foregone by leaving at 4.5 years vs staying for 5 years is approximately Rs 57,690 — the entire 5-year entitlement. This is a meaningful financial consideration, especially at Coimbatore salary levels.
Tax Treatment: The Rs 20 Lakh Exemption
For private employees covered under the Payment of Gratuity Act, gratuity received is tax-free up to Rs 20,00,000 (Rs 20 lakh) — the notified limit as of FY 2024-25.
- Gratuity at 30 years (current basic Rs 20,000): Rs 3,46,140 — fully tax-free (below the Rs 20 lakh limit)
- Gratuity at retirement (accounting for 9% annual salary growth over 30 years, last monthly basic: Rs 2,65,354): Rs 46 lakh — taxable portion: Rs 26 lakh above the Rs 20 lakh exempt limit
The taxable portion of gratuity is added to “Income from Salary” in the year of receipt and taxed at the applicable slab rate. For high-earning Coimbatoreprofessionals, this could mean a 30% tax bill on the excess — so plan gratuity receipt timing carefully if retiring mid-financial-year.
Private Sector vs Government: The Unlimited Exemption Advantage
Government employees in Tamil Nadu (central and state government) receive gratuity under separate rules — the Central Civil Services (Pension) Rules or state equivalents. For government employees:
- Gratuity is fully tax-free with no Rs 20 lakh cap
- Higher gratuity amounts are payable (different formula, higher cap in many cases)
- Death and disability gratuity provisions are also more generous
This is a substantial financial advantage for Coimbatore's government workforce — particularly for senior IAS, IPS, or PSU employees who can receive gratuity in the Rs 20–50 lakh range entirely tax-free.
Salary Growth's Dramatic Impact on Gratuity at Retirement
Gratuity is calculated on last drawn basic — not the average salary during service. This means salary growth during your career dramatically amplifies your gratuity. In Coimbatore's Manufacturing sector, salary growth averages 9% annually. Starting with a monthly basic of Rs 20,000 today and growing at 9% annually:
- Monthly basic at year 10: Rs 47,347
- Monthly basic at year 20: Rs 1,12,088
- Monthly basic at retirement (year 30): Rs 2,65,354
- Gratuity at retirement (30yr service, last basic Rs 2,65,354): Rs 46 lakh
The Rs 46 lakh gratuity at retirement is Rs 42 lakh more than the flat Rs 3lakh calculated at today's basic — illustrating why salary growth is the most powerful gratuity amplifier.
Gratuity in Your CTC: The 4.81% Rule and What It Means
Many Coimbatore employers, especially in IT and consulting, include gratuity as 4.81% of basic salary in the CTC breakdown (this is derived from 15/26 × 1/12 × 100 ≈ 4.81%). For the average Coimbatore professional:
- Annual basic: Rs 2,40,000
- Gratuity provision in CTC (4.81%): Rs 11,544
This is NOT a deduction from your salary — it is an employer liability accrual. You do not receive this amount unless you complete 5 years. Job-hoppers who leave before 5 years in Coimbatore's competitive market forfeit this employer-accrued amount entirely — it remains with the company. This is the hidden cost of frequent job changes that mostCoimbatore professionals underestimate.
Forfeiture: When Gratuity Is Lost
Gratuity is forfeitable (partially or fully) in two circumstances under the Act:
- Termination for misconduct causing loss to employer: Gratuity may be forfeited to the extent of the loss caused
- Termination for violence or offences against the employer or co-workers:Full gratuity may be forfeited
Routine terminations, redundancy, or performance-based exits do NOT forfeit gratuity for eligible employees. Coimbatore employees who complete 5+ years and are made redundant in sector downturns — common in cyclical sectors like manufacturing or financial services — are entitled to their full statutory gratuity.
Unique Financial Context: Coimbatore
Coimbatore is often called the 'Manchester of South India' for its textile and pump manufacturing industry — a heritage that gives it India's 2nd highest number of registered MSME companies after Mumbai. Tamil Nadu's professional tax of Rs 1,095/year is among India's lowest for states that have PT (compared to Rs 2,500 in Maharashtra). Coimbatore's manufacturing-wealth households hold among the highest FD balances per capita in Tamil Nadu.
Disclaimer: Gratuity calculations are based on the Payment of Gratuity Act, 1972. The Rs 20 lakh tax exemption limit is the currently notified figure and subject to future revision. Actual gratuity depends on employer type (covered vs uncovered), specific employment contract, and applicable state amendments. This is not legal or financial advice. Consult your HR department or a labour law expert for exact entitlements.