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  5. Indore
Tax

Income Tax New Regime Calculator — Indore FY 2025-26

For a Indore (Madhya Pradesh) professional earning Rs 5.0L annually, the new regime yields a tax of approximately Rs 0.00L (effective rate 0.0%) after the Rs 75,000 standard deduction and full Section 87A rebate — meaning zero tax liability. Both regimes are approximately equal at this salary level.

Verified Formula|Source: Income Tax Department, Government of India|Last verified: April 2026Methodology

Your Income Details

Max Rs 75,000 for salaried / pensioners under new regime (FY 2025-26).

Additional Rs 50,000 deduction for NPS contributions (employer contribution under new regime).

Related Calculators

Old Regime Tax CalculatorOld vs New Regime ComparisonHRA Exemption Calculator
Taxable Income

₹11,25,000

Total Tax

₹0

Effective Rate

0.00%

Monthly Tax

₹0

Slab-wise Tax Breakdown — New Regime FY 2025-26

Income SlabRateIncome in SlabTax
₹0 – ₹4,00,0000%₹4,00,000₹0
₹4,00,000 – ₹8,00,0005%₹4,00,000₹20,000
₹8,00,000 – ₹12,00,00010%₹3,25,000₹32,500
₹12,00,000 – ₹16,00,00015%₹0₹0
₹16,00,000 – ₹20,00,00020%₹0₹0
₹20,00,000 – ₹24,00,00025%₹0₹0
₹24,00,000 – Above30%₹0₹0

Detailed Tax Computation

Gross Annual Income₹12,00,000
Less: Standard Deduction- ₹75,000

Taxable Income₹11,25,000
Tax on Taxable Income₹52,500
Less: Rebate u/s 87A- ₹52,500
Tax after Rebate₹0
Add: Health & Education Cess (4%)₹0

Total Tax Liability₹0

Section 87A Rebate Applied

Your taxable income is below Rs 12,00,000, so you qualify for a rebate of up to Rs 60,000 under Section 87A. This effectively makes your tax liability zero (or reduced) under the new regime.

New Regime Income Tax for Indore Professionals — FY 2025-26

The new tax regime — redesigned in the Union Budget 2023 and made the default from FY 2023-24 — offers a simplified seven-slab structure with a higher Rs 75,000 standard deduction for salaried employees. For Indore (Madhya Pradesh) professionals, the key question is whether the new regime's lower slab rates outweigh the deductions sacrificed by abandoning the old regime. With an average salary of Rs 5.0L in Indore — driven by employers like TCS, Infosys, Impetus Technologies — the new regime tax is approximately Rs 0.00L, an effective rate of 0.0%. Madhya Pradesh has zero professional tax — Indore professionals pay Rs 0/year, saving Rs 2,500 vs Maharashtra. Indore has won India's cleanest city title 7 consecutive years (2017–2024), driving consistent real estate demand from migrants. The Super Corridor IT zone saw 40%+ property appreciation in 2021–2024, making Indore one of India's top 3 real-estate ROI destinations among Tier-2 cities.

New Regime Tax Slabs (FY 2025-26) Applied to Indore's Average Salary

After the Rs 75,000 standard deduction, the taxable income on Rs 5.0L salary in Indoreis Rs 4,25,000. Applying the seven-slab new regime structure:

  • Rs 0 – Rs 4,00,000: 0% — Rs 0 tax
  • Rs 4,00,001 – Rs 8,00,000: 5% — up to Rs 1,250 tax on this slab
  • Rs 8,00,001 – Rs 12,00,000: 10% — up to Rs 0 tax on this slab
  • Rs 12,00,001 – Rs 16,00,000: 15% — up to Rs 0 tax on this slab
  • Rs 16,00,001 – Rs 20,00,000: 20% — up to Rs 0 tax on this slab
  • Rs 20,00,001 – Rs 24,00,000: 25% — up to Rs 0 tax on this slab
  • Above Rs 24,00,000: 30% — Rs 0 on this slab

Total base tax: Rs 1,250. Section 87A rebate of Rs 1,250 wipes out the entire tax — final liability is Rs 0 (plus Rs 0 cess). Your income of Rs 5.0L is effectively tax-free under the new regime!

The Rs 12.75 Lakh Tax-Free Threshold in Indore

One of the most powerful features of the new regime for FY 2025-26 is the effective zero-tax threshold of Rs 12.75 lakh gross income. This works as follows: Rs 12,75,000 income − Rs 75,000 standard deduction = Rs 12,00,000 taxable income. Tax on Rs 12L (new slabs): Rs 0 + Rs 20,000 + Rs 40,000 = Rs 60,000. Section 87A rebate: Rs 60,000. Net tax: Rs 0. Cess: Rs 0. Any Indore employee with gross salary at or below Rs 12,75,000/year pays zero income tax under the new regime. For entry and mid-level professionals at Cognizant and MP Government in Indore, this is a meaningful benefit.

What the New Regime Ignores: Deductions Indore Professionals Lose

The new regime disallows many deductions that significantly reduce old regime taxable income for Indore professionals:

  • HRA exemption: With Indore 2BHK rents at Rs 10,000/month in areas like Vijay Nagar and AB Road, the annual HRA exempt under the old regime is Rs 80,000 — lost entirely in the new regime.
  • Section 80C deductions: Rs 1,50,000 of EPF, PPF, ELSS, insurance — not available.
  • Section 80D health insurance: Rs 25,000–Rs 75,000 for premiums at Bombay Hospital (MG Road) network — not available.
  • Home loan interest 24(b): Up to Rs 2,00,000 on self-occupied property — not available.
  • Professional tax deduction 16(iii): Rs 0/year — not available.
  • NPS 80CCD(1B): Rs 50,000 self-contribution — not available.

What remains in the new regime: Standard deduction Rs 75,000, employer NPS contribution under Section 80CCD(2) (up to 10% of salary — available even in new regime), and Section 10(14) exemptions for specific allowances. If your Indore employer offers NPS contribution, this alone can reduce taxable income by Rs 1-2L even in the new regime.

New Regime vs Old Regime: The Indore Verdict

At the Indore average salary of Rs 5.0L, the new regime tax is Rs 0.00L and the old regime tax (with full deductions) is approximately Rs 0.00L. The old regime saves Rs 0.00L per year at this salary with full deductions. Indore renters who pay Rs 10,000/month, max out 80C and 80D, and contribute to NPS will generally benefit more from the old regime. Use the Old vs New Regime comparison tool to model your specific deduction profile.

Employer NPS: The Only Significant New Regime Deduction in Indore

Section 80CCD(2) — employer NPS contribution — is the one major deduction that survives in the new regime. For private sector employees in Indore, employers can contribute up to 10% of (basic + DA) to NPS, and this entire contribution is deductible from taxable income in the new regime. At a Indore basic salary of Rs 16,667/month, a 10% employer NPS contribution is Rs 1,667/month or Rs 20,000/year — a meaningful deduction for Indore employees at firms like TCS or Infosys that offer NPS.

Salary Growth and Future Tax Planning in Indore

Indore's dominant IT/ITES sector sees average salary increments of 10% annually. At this growth rate, a professional currently earning Rs 5.0L will earn approximately Rs 5.5L next year. This income jump may push taxable income into a higher new regime slab (e.g., from the 15% to the 20% bracket). Proactively modeling future-year tax with both regimes — especially if you plan to take a home loan in Indore — can save significant amounts over a 3-5 year horizon. Indore is India's cleanest city and fastest-growing Tier-2 tech hub — the Super Corridor has driven 40%+ real estate appreciation in 3 years, attracting first-time homebuyers.

Disclaimer

Tax computations are estimates for Indian resident individual taxpayers for FY 2025-26 (AY 2026-27). Surcharge applies for income above Rs 50 lakh. City salary data is indicative. New regime is the default from FY 2023-24; opt-out must be declared to your employer via Form 12BB or equivalent. Consult a Chartered Accountant in Indore before finalising your regime choice.

Frequently Asked Questions — New Regime Tax in Indore

Is income up to Rs 12 lakh really tax-free under the new regime in Indore?

Yes — effectively, but only for salaried employees. Gross salary up to Rs 12,75,000 is tax-free because: standard deduction (Rs 75,000) reduces taxable income to Rs 12,00,000; tax on Rs 12L under new slabs is Rs 60,000; Section 87A rebate of Rs 60,000 nullifies this completely. So the actual zero-tax limit for Indore salaried professionals is Rs 12,75,000 — not just Rs 12L. Non-salaried taxpayers in Indore (without the Rs 75K standard deduction) face zero-tax only up to Rs 12L gross income.

Can I claim HRA if I choose the new regime in Indore?

No. HRA exemption under Section 10(13A) is not available in the new tax regime. This is a significant cost for Indore renters paying Rs 10,000/month. Under the old regime, HRA exempt would be approximately Rs 80,000/year — this entire amount becomes taxable in the new regime. If your annual rent is Rs 1,20,000 and your HRA exempt is Rs 80,000, you lose a tax saving of approximately Rs 4,160 by switching to the new regime.

How does the new regime treat professional tax in Indore?

Indore (Madhya Pradesh) has zero professional tax — this is not relevant for your new regime calculation. There is no PT deduction lost because there is no PT to begin with. This is an advantage for Indore professionals: the new regime does not deprive you of any PT deduction (unlike Mumbai or Bengaluru employees, who lose the Rs 2,500 PT deduction when they switch to the new regime).

What is the break-even deduction amount for choosing old vs new regime in Indore?

The break-even depends on your specific tax slab. At the Indore average salary of Rs 5.0L, the new regime tax is Rs 0.00L. For the old regime to match this, you need deductions (beyond the Rs 75K standard deduction) of approximately Rs 0.0L to equalise the two regimes. If your actual deductions — HRA Rs 80,000 + 80C Rs 1.5L + 80D Rs 25K + NPS Rs 50K = Rs 3,05,000 — exceed this break-even, the old regime saves more. Use the Old vs New Regime calculator for your exact numbers.

Indore's income tax new regime calculation involves Madhya Pradesh's professional tax of Rs 2,496/year — one of the highest among all states — alongside the city's twin identity as both a major IT hub (Infosys TechnoHub, EPAM, Persistent) and India's most prominent commodity and wholesale trading centre. Indore is classified as a non-metro city for HRA purposes (40% of basic). The new regime (FY2024-25): 0-3L nil, 3-7L 5%, 7-10L 10%, 10-12L 15%, 12-15L 20%, above 15L 30%, Rs 75,000 standard deduction. The PT interaction: old regime deducts Rs 2,496 under Section 16(iii) AND standard deduction Rs 50,000 = Rs 52,496 salary deductions. New regime: standard deduction Rs 75,000 only — no PT deduction. Net base advantage of new regime before 80C/80D/HRA: Rs 75,000 - Rs 52,496 = Rs 22,504 more in new regime. The PT therefore slightly tilts the comparison toward new regime, but is swamped by HRA and investment deductions. Indore's Vijay Nagar, Scheme 78, and LIG Colony residential belt has rents of Rs 8,000-18,000/month for a 2BHK — moderate enough that at Rs 10-14L CTC, total deductions often fall short of the Rs 3.75L old regime breakeven, making new regime the better choice for IT employees without home loans. The self-employed Sarafa market traders (bullion, spices, textile commission agents) face the same self-employed no-standard-deduction regime calculation seen in Ahmedabad and Jaipur.

Key Insight — Indore

Indore's defining new regime insight is that Madhya Pradesh's Rs 2,496 professional tax — one of India's highest PT rates — paradoxically does NOT make old regime significantly more attractive. In fact, the new regime's higher standard deduction (Rs 75,000 vs old regime's Rs 50,000 + PT Rs 2,496 = Rs 52,496) means new regime starts with Rs 22,504 more in salary deductions before any 80C, HRA, or 80D investments are considered. This inverts the intuition that high-PT states benefit more from old regime. The PT analysis for Indore: at Rs 2,496 PT deduction in old regime, the tax saving at 20% slab (most Indore IT employees at Rs 8-15L CTC) = Rs 499/year — less than Rs 50/month. At 30% slab: Rs 748/year. The new regime's extra Rs 25,000 SD (Rs 75K vs Rs 50K) saves: Rs 5,000 at 20% slab, Rs 7,500 at 30% slab. Net: new regime's SD advantage far exceeds old regime's PT deduction benefit. The real old regime determinant in Indore is what it is everywhere: HRA + 80C + 80D + NPS + home loan. Indore's moderate rents produce HRA exemptions of Rs 70,000-1.5L at typical CTCs — on the lower end, often insufficient alone to push old regime past the breakeven. The practical Indore IT professional at Rs 12L CTC with Rs 12K rent: total deductions Rs 2.69L → new regime wins by Rs 15,000. The same professional at Rs 15L CTC with Rs 18K rent AND home loan: deductions Rs 5.5L+ → old regime wins by Rs 60,000+. The Indore self-employed Sarafa/textile trader: breakeven at Rs 4.6L deductions — unreachable without home loan and NPS, so new regime wins for most self-employed at moderate deduction levels.

Indore's Financial Context and New Regime Tax Calculator

MP PT: Rs 2,496/year. Indore NON-METRO HRA: 40% of basic. Rent 2BHK: Vijay Nagar Rs 10-18K, LIG Colony Rs 8-14K, Scheme 78 Rs 10-16K, Palasia Rs 12-20K. New regime: 0-3L nil, 3-7L 5%, 7-10L 10%, 10-12L 15%, 12-15L 20%, 15L+ 30%. SD Rs 75K (salaried only). 87A: ≤ Rs 7L = zero tax. PT old regime deductible under Section 16(iii): Rs 2,496. Old SD Rs 50K + PT Rs 2,496 = Rs 52,496. New regime SD Rs 75K (no PT): Rs 75,000. New regime starts Rs 22,504 ahead before 80C/HRA/80D. Infosys TechnoHub Rs 12L CTC, rent Rs 12K (Vijay Nagar): HRA = min(Rs 2L at 40%, Rs 1.44L - Rs 50K = Rs 94K, Rs 2L) = Rs 94,000. Old regime deductions: Rs 94K + Rs 1.5L 80C + Rs 25K 80D = Rs 2.69L. Old regime taxable: Rs 12L - Rs 52,496 - Rs 2.69L = Rs 8.56L (note: using Rs 52,496 for PT+SD combo). Tax: Rs 12,500 + Rs 71,200 = Rs 83,700 + cess = Rs 87,048. New regime: Rs 12L - Rs 75K = Rs 11.25L → tax Rs 71,500. New regime saves Rs 15,548. Self-employed Sarafa trader Rs 25L: NO SD either regime. 80C + 80D + NPS = Rs 2.5L → new regime likely wins (similar to Jaipur gem trader analysis).

Infosys TechnoHub and EPAM — New Regime for Indore IT Renters at Rs 10-15L CTC

Indore's IT corridor — Infosys Vijay Nagar (TechnoHub campus), EPAM Systems (AB Road, Indore), Persistent Systems, and Mphasis at Crystal IT Park — employs a growing mid-income IT workforce. At Indore's residential rents (Rs 8,000-18,000/month in Vijay Nagar, LIG Colony, and Scheme 78), the HRA exemption under old regime at 40% non-metro rate is limited. EPAM Indore developer at Rs 12L CTC, basic Rs 5L, rent Rs 12,000/month (Vijay Nagar 2BHK): HRA = min(Rs 2L at 40%, Rs 1.44L - Rs 50K = Rs 94,000, actual HRA ~Rs 2L) = Rs 94,000. Old regime deductions: Rs 94K HRA + Rs 1.5L 80C + Rs 25K 80D = Rs 2.69L. PT also deductible: Rs 2,496. Total salary deductions: Rs 50K SD + Rs 2,496 PT + Rs 2.69L investment deductions = Rs 3.29L. Old regime taxable: Rs 12L - Rs 3.29L = Rs 8.71L. Tax: Rs 12,500 + Rs 74,200 (5-8.71L at 20%) = Rs 86,700 + cess = Rs 90,168. New regime: Rs 12L - Rs 75K = Rs 11.25L. Tax: Rs 20K + Rs 30K + Rs 18,750 = Rs 68,750 + cess = Rs 71,500. New regime saves Rs 18,668. With NPS Rs 50K under old regime: old regime taxable Rs 8.21L → tax Rs 78,200 + cess = Rs 81,328 vs new regime Rs 71,500 → new regime wins by Rs 9,828. The crossover at Rs 12L CTC: need approximately Rs 4L total investment deductions (excluding PT and standard deductions) for old regime to win. With Rs 12K rent: HRA Rs 94K + 80C Rs 1.5L + 80D Rs 25K + NPS Rs 50K = Rs 3.19L below threshold. Need: rent above Rs 18K/month OR senior parents' insurance + home loan to reach old regime breakeven. Persistent Systems employee at Rs 18L CTC with home loan (Section 24b Rs 2L): total deductions Rs 5.5L+ → old regime wins by Rs 50,000+.

Indore Sarafa Market and Commodity Traders — Self-Employed PT Deduction Lost, New Regime Default

Indore's Sarafa market (bullion, jewellery, and precious metals), Rajwada textile wholesale corridor, and APMC mandis (agricultural commodity trading) concentrate India's largest non-agricultural commodity trading volumes. Self-employed traders in these markets file ITR-3 or ITR-4 and have unique PT treatment: self-employed professionals pay PT on their own professional income — and this PT (Rs 2,496 for MP) is deductible under old regime as a professional expense or under Section 16(iii) if treated as quasi-employment. Under new regime: no PT deduction. However, unlike for salaried employees, the standard deduction of Rs 75,000 also does NOT apply to self-employed professionals under either regime. So self-employed Sarafa traders face: Old regime: business income minus business expenses (separately computed) minus PT Rs 2,496 minus 80C Rs 1.5L minus 80D Rs 25-75K minus NPS Rs 50K = taxable. New regime: business income minus zero (no SD, no 80C, no 80D, no NPS deductions) = taxable. Sarafa trader at Rs 20L net business income: Old regime: Rs 20L - Rs 2,496 PT - Rs 1.5L 80C - Rs 50K 80D - Rs 50K NPS = Rs 17.47L taxable. Tax: Rs 12,500 + Rs 1,00,000 + Rs 2,24,100 (10-17.47L at 30%) = Rs 3,36,600 + cess = Rs 3,50,064. New regime: Rs 20L - Rs 0 = Rs 20L. Tax: nil + Rs 20K + Rs 30K + Rs 30K + Rs 60K + Rs 1,50,000 (15-20L at 30%) = Rs 2,90,000 + cess = Rs 3,01,600. New regime wins by Rs 48,464. The self-employed Indore trader, like counterparts in Ahmedabad and Jaipur, should default to new regime unless deductions exceed Rs 4.6L — requiring home loan interest in addition to 80C + 80D + NPS.

More Questions — New Regime Tax Calculator in Indore

I'm at Infosys Indore (Rs 16L CTC, rent Rs 16,000/month Vijay Nagar, contributing 80C Rs 1.5L, 80D Rs 25K, NPS Rs 50K). The MP PT is Rs 2,496. Which regime saves more?

New regime saves approximately Rs 10,000-14,000/year despite your NPS contribution — file new regime. Calculation: basic Rs 6.67L (42% of CTC). HRA = min(Rs 2.67L at 40%, Rs 1.92L - Rs 66,700 = Rs 1.253L, actual HRA) = Rs 1.253L. Old regime: SD Rs 50K + PT Rs 2,496 + HRA Rs 1.253L + 80C Rs 1.5L + 80D Rs 25K + NPS Rs 50K = Rs 3.78L total from salary. Old regime taxable: Rs 16L - Rs 3.78L = Rs 12.22L. Tax: Rs 12,500 + Rs 1,00,000 + Rs 66,600 (10-12.22L at 30%) = Rs 1,79,100 + cess = Rs 1,86,264. New regime: Rs 16L - Rs 75K = Rs 15.25L. Tax: Rs 20K + Rs 30K + Rs 30K + Rs 60K + Rs 7,500 = Rs 1,47,500 + cess = Rs 1,53,400. New regime saves Rs 32,864/year — quite decisive. Wait — that seems large. Let me re-verify. New regime taxable Rs 15.25L: 0-3L nil, 3-7L 5% = Rs 20K, 7-10L 10% = Rs 30K, 10-12L 15% = Rs 30K, 12-15L 20% = Rs 60K, 15-15.25L 30% = Rs 7,500. Total Rs 1,47,500 + cess Rs 5,900 = Rs 1,53,400. Old regime taxable Rs 12.22L: nil + Rs 12,500 + Rs 1,00,000 + Rs 66,600 = Rs 1,79,100 + cess Rs 7,164 = Rs 1,86,264. New regime wins by Rs 32,864. Your Rs 3.03L investment deductions (excluding PT and standard deductions) at Rs 16L CTC: not enough. At Rs 16L CTC, old regime needs approximately Rs 4.4L investment deductions to win. You need: Section 24b home loan interest Rs 2L to push total to Rs 5.03L → old regime would then save Rs 25,000+. Without home loan: new regime is decisively better at your salary level regardless of NPS.

I'm a cloth merchant in Rajwada area (Rs 30L business profit, filing ITR-4, investing Rs 1.5L PPF, Rs 50K health insurance, Rs 50K NPS). Which regime?

New regime wins for your profile — saves approximately Rs 52,000/year. Self-employed regime calculation for you: NO standard deduction in EITHER regime (Rs 75K SD is salaried-only). Old regime: Rs 30L - Rs 2,496 PT (deductible as self-employed professional tax) - Rs 1.5L 80C - Rs 50K 80D - Rs 50K NPS = Rs 27.47L taxable. Old regime slabs: nil + Rs 12,500 (2.5-5L at 5%) + Rs 1,00,000 (5-10L at 20%) + Rs 5,24,100 (10-27.47L at 30%) = Rs 6,36,600 + cess 4% = Rs 6,62,064. New regime: Rs 30L - Rs 0 SD (self-employed, not available) = Rs 30L taxable. New regime slabs: nil + Rs 20,000 (3-7L at 5%) + Rs 30,000 (7-10L at 10%) + Rs 30,000 (10-12L at 15%) + Rs 60,000 (12-15L at 20%) + Rs 4,50,000 (15-30L at 30%) = Rs 5,90,000 + cess 4% = Rs 6,13,600. New regime saves Rs 48,464/year — significant. Your Rs 2.5L deductions save Rs 75,000 at 30% slab under old regime, but the new regime's lower rates on Rs 3-15L save approximately Rs 1.37L in tax — new regime advantage: Rs 62,500. After adjusting for cess and PT deduction (Rs 2,496): new regime wins by approximately Rs 48,000. For old regime to win: need deductions > approximately Rs 4.6L. With your Rs 2.5L investment profile: only way to reach Rs 4.6L is adding Section 24b home loan interest Rs 2L (and reducing other deductions slightly). If you have or plan to buy property: recalculate with Section 24b Rs 2L — that would push total deductions to Rs 4.5L, making regimes nearly equal. Continue PPF/NPS/health insurance for their intrinsic financial merit, but file new regime currently.

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