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  5. Gurgaon
Tax

Income Tax Old Regime Calculator — Gurgaon FY 2025-26

For a Gurgaon (Haryana) professional earning Rs 15.0L annually, the old regime with full deductions — HRA exemption at 40% (non-metro), Rs 1.5L in 80C, Rs 25K in 80D, Rs 50K NPS 80CCD(1B), and Rs 0 in professional tax — brings total deductions to approximately Rs 5.15L, resulting in an estimated tax of Rs 1.14L (7.6% effective rate).

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

Income & Deductions

PPF, ELSS, LIC, EPF, NSC, tuition fees, etc. Max Rs 1,50,000.

Self + family: up to Rs 25,000 (Rs 50,000 if senior citizen). Parents: additional Rs 25,000-50,000.

Use our HRA Calculator to find your exact exempt amount.

80E (education loan interest), 80G (donations), 80TTA (savings interest up to Rs 10,000), Section 24(b) (home loan interest up to Rs 2,00,000), NPS 80CCD(1B) up to Rs 50,000.

Related Calculators

New Regime Tax CalculatorOld vs New Regime ComparisonHRA Exemption Calculator
Total Deductions

₹2,25,000

Taxable Income

₹9,75,000

Total Tax

₹1,11,800

Effective Rate

9.32%

Deductions Breakdown

Gross Annual Income₹12,00,000

Standard Deduction- ₹50,000
Section 80C- ₹1,50,000
Section 80D (Health Insurance)- ₹25,000

Total Deductions- ₹2,25,000
Taxable Income₹9,75,000

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

Income SlabRateIncome in SlabTax
₹0 – ₹2,50,0000%₹2,50,000₹0
₹2,50,000 – ₹5,00,0005%₹2,50,000₹12,500
₹5,00,000 – ₹10,00,00020%₹4,75,000₹95,000
₹10,00,000 – Above30%₹0₹0

Tax Computation

Taxable Income₹9,75,000
Tax on Total Income₹1,07,500
Tax after Rebate₹1,07,500
Add: Health & Education Cess (4%)₹4,300

Total Tax Liability₹1,11,800
Monthly Tax₹9,317

Old Regime Income Tax Planning for Gurgaon — FY 2025-26

The old income tax regime continues to offer significant savings for Gurgaon (Haryana) professionals who can stack multiple deductions. With a city average salary of Rs 15.0L and 2BHK rents running at Rs 32,000/month in areas like Golf Course Road and Sohna Road, the combination of HRA exemption, Section 80C investments, 80D health premiums, NPS top-up, and professional tax deduction can reduce your taxable income by Rs 5.15L or more — making a compelling case to stay in the old regime if your deduction profile is strong. Haryana has zero professional tax — Gurgaon professionals save Rs 2,500/year vs Mumbai counterparts. With India's highest average salary (Rs 15 lakh/year), Gurgaon's per-capita income tax contribution is the highest of any single city in India. Yet Gurgaon is non-metro for HRA — despite being part of NCR, it doesn't qualify for the 50% HRA exemption that Delhi residents get.

HRA Exemption in Gurgaon: How the Three-Condition Rule Works

Gurgaon is classified as a non-metro city under Section 10(13A) of the Income Tax Act. This distinction determines Condition 3 of the HRA exemption — the cap on how much of your basic salary can be exempted. Despite Gurgaon's size and status, it is NOT one of the four Income Tax Act metro cities (Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, Kolkata), so the HRA cap is 40% of basic salary — not 50%. This is a commonly misunderstood rule that affects lakhs of professionals here.

For a Gurgaon professional earning Rs 15.0L with a basic salary of Rs 50,000/month (40% of CTC):

  • Condition A — Actual HRA received: Rs 20,000/month (Rs 2,40,000/year)
  • Condition B — Rent paid minus 10% of basic: Rs 32,000/month − Rs 5,000 = Rs 27,000/month (Rs 3,24,000/year)
  • Condition C — 40% (non-metro) of annual basic: Rs 2,40,000/year

The exempt HRA is the minimum of these three conditions: Rs 2,40,000/year. The remaining HRA (Rs 0) is taxable. Submitting Form 12BB with rent receipts and the landlord's PAN (for rent > Rs 8,333/month) to your employer ensures this exemption is factored into monthly TDS.

Section 80C Stack for Gurgaon Employees

The Rs 1,50,000 Section 80C ceiling is best utilised with a mix of instruments. Employees at top Gurgaon employers — Google, Deloitte, American Express — already have EPF (Employee Provident Fund) contributions partially filling this limit. EPF is deducted at 12% of basic salary; at a monthly basic of Rs 50,000, that is Rs 6,000/month or Rs 72,000/year automatically.

Top up the remaining 80C headroom with:

  • PPF (Public Provident Fund): Lock-in 15 years, EEE status — tax-free at all three stages.
  • ELSS (Equity Linked Savings Scheme): Shortest lock-in at 3 years; historically 12-14% annual returns.
  • NSC (National Savings Certificate): 7.7% p.a., 5-year lock-in, accrued interest also counts toward 80C.
  • Life insurance premium: Premiums on policies where sum assured ≥ 10× annual premium count.
  • Home loan principal repayment: If you own property in Gurgaon, principal repayment counts toward 80C.

Section 80D Health Insurance Deduction in Gurgaon

Health insurance premiums in Gurgaon carry a cost multiplier of 1.2× the national base rate. A family floater plan for a 35-year-old couple with one child at a top Gurgaon hospital network —Medanta – The Medicity (Sector 38), Fortis Memorial Research Institute (Sector 44) — typically costs Rs 18,000–28,000 annually for Rs 10 lakh coverage. Section 80D allows:

  • Up to Rs 25,000 for self, spouse, and dependent children under 60 years.
  • Up to Rs 50,000 for parents aged 60 or older (senior citizen category).
  • Preventive health check-up expenses up to Rs 5,000 (within the above limits).

NPS Section 80CCD(1B): Additional Rs 50,000 Deduction

Section 80CCD(1B) allows an additional deduction of up to Rs 50,000 per year for voluntary NPS contributions — this is over and above the Rs 1,50,000 Section 80C limit. For a Gurgaon professional in the 20% or 30% slab, this saves Rs 10,000–Rs 18,720 (including cess) in annual tax. Many Gurgaon employers in the IT/ITES sector offer NPS through the payroll. Employer NPS contributions under Section 80CCD(2) — up to 10% of salary for private sector — are deductible even under the new regime, but the 80CCD(1B) self-contribution deduction is an old regime exclusive.

Professional Tax and Section 16(iii) Deduction

Gurgaon (Haryana) has zero professional tax — residents pay Rs 0 in PT, saving Rs 2,500/year compared to Mumbai or Bengaluru professionals. Haryana has zero professional tax — Gurgaon professionals save Rs 2,500/year vs Mumbai counterparts. This means your Section 16(iii) deduction is Rs 0, but you benefit from a higher net take-home.

Old Regime Tax Slab Computation for Gurgaon's Average Salary

For a Gurgaon professional earning Rs 15.0L with the full deduction stack (standard deduction Rs 50,000 + HRA exempt Rs 2,40,000 + 80C Rs 1,50,000 + 80D Rs 25,000 + NPS Rs 50,000 + PT Rs 0), the taxable income works out to approximately Rs 9,85,000. Applying old regime slabs:

  • Rs 0 – Rs 2,50,000: Nil
  • Rs 2,50,001 – Rs 5,00,000: 5% — up to Rs 12,500
  • Rs 5,00,001 – Rs 10,00,000: 20% — up to Rs 1,00,000
  • Above Rs 10,00,000: 30%

Base tax on Rs 9,85,000: Rs 1,09,500. No 87A rebate (taxable income exceeds Rs 5L in old regime).Add 4% Health and Education Cess: Rs 4,380. Total old regime tax: Rs 1,13,880/year (Rs 9,490/month TDS). Effective rate: 7.6% on gross salary.

Home Loan Interest: Section 24(b) Deduction in Gurgaon

If you own a self-occupied property in Gurgaon with an active home loan, Section 24(b) allows a deduction of up to Rs 2,00,000 per year on home loan interest. Property in Gurgaonaverages Rs 11,000/sqft (Golf Course Extension Road and Southern Peripheral Road (SPR) saw 25–30% appreciation in FY2025 — the highest in NCR. Dwarka Expressway sectors (102–113) rose 20%+. Luxury segment (DLF 5, Aralias) crossed Rs 25,000/sqft. New Gurgaon (Sectors 82–95) provides affordable entry at Rs 7,000–9,000/sqft.). A home loan at 8.5% p.a. on a Rs 88L loan (for an 800 sqft flat) generates approximately Rs 6.5–7.5L annual interest in the first few years — of which you can claim up to Rs 2L under Section 24(b). This deduction alone saves Rs 41,600 in annual tax at your slab rate. The home loan principal repayment also counts toward Section 80C.

Old Regime vs New Regime: Gurgaon Break-even Analysis

The new regime offers a higher standard deduction (Rs 75,000 vs Rs 50,000) and lower slab rates, but disallows HRA, 80C, 80D, home loan interest, and PT deductions. For Gurgaon, the old regime wins if your combined deductions (excluding standard deduction) exceed approximately Rs 4,65,000 — which, as shown above, is achievable with HRA + 80C + 80D + NPS alone. Use the Old vs New Regime comparison calculator to model your exact scenario with home loan interest and other deductions.

Disclaimer

Figures are estimates for Indian resident individual taxpayers for FY 2025-26 (AY 2026-27). City-specific salary, rent, and property data are indicative averages. Actual HRA exemption depends on your specific HRA component, actual rent paid, and basic salary. Surcharge applies for incomes above Rs 50L. Consult a qualified Chartered Accountant in Gurgaon for personalized tax advice and ITR filing.

Frequently Asked Questions — Old Regime Tax in Gurgaon

Is the old regime actually worth it for a Rs 15.0L salary in Gurgaon?

Yes, if you maximize deductions. With HRA exempt at Rs 2,40,000/year (based on Rs 32,000/month rent in Gurgaon), plus Rs 1.5L in 80C, Rs 25K in 80D, and Rs 50K NPS, total deductions reach Rs 5.15L. Old regime tax: Rs 1.14L. Compare this with the new regime using our Old vs New calculator to confirm your best choice. If you rent in Gurgaon and invest actively, old regime typically saves Rs 30,000–80,000 per year versus the new regime.

Why does Gurgaon get only 40% HRA exemption and not 50%?

The Income Tax Act names only four metro cities for HRA: Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, and Kolkata. Gurgaon, despite its size and economic importance, is not on this list. So HRA Condition 3 caps your exemption at 40% of basic salary — Rs 20,000/month or Rs 2,40,000/year at the Gurgaon average basic. This is a key planning constraint: even if you pay Rs 32,000/month rent, your HRA exemption cannot exceed Rs 2,40,000/year under Condition 3.

How much does professional tax reduce my old regime tax in Gurgaon?

Gurgaon (Haryana) has zero professional tax. Residents pay Rs 0 in PT, which means no PT deduction under Section 16(iii) — but you also don't lose Rs 2,500/year from your take-home. This is an advantage over Mumbai, Bengaluru, and Hyderabad professionals who pay Rs 2,400–2,500/year. Your old regime taxable income is thus higher by Rs 0 (no PT), but your net benefit from this is Rs 2,500/year extra in-hand compared to a Mumbai employee on the same CTC.

Can I switch from new regime back to old regime for FY 2025-26?

Yes. Salaried employees in Gurgaon can switch between old and new regimes every financial year. The new regime is now the default — to opt for the old regime, you must inform your employer at the start of the financial year (typically April) using Form 12BB or an employer-provided declaration. If you miss the employer declaration window, you can still choose the old regime when filing your ITR for FY 2025-26 (due 31 July 2026 without audit). Business owners and self-employed individuals face stricter switching rules (only one switch back is allowed).

Gurgaon's income tax old regime provides the highest absolute annual tax savings of any Indian city for senior professionals — where Rs 30-80L CTC MNC employees at DLF Cyber City, Udyog Vihar, and Golf Course Road achieve deduction packages of Rs 6-10L through the combination of non-metro HRA (40% of basic), 80C, 80D, Section 24b home loan interest, and NPS, saving Rs 1-2.5L annually versus new regime at the 30% marginal slab. Haryana levies zero professional tax. Gurgaon is non-metro for HRA (40% of basic — NOT 50%, despite rents that rival Mumbai). The old regime (FY2024-25): standard deduction Rs 50,000, no PT, non-metro HRA 40% of basic, Chapter VIA deductions — 80C Rs 1.5L, 80D Rs 25-75K, 80CCD(1B) Rs 50K, Section 24b Rs 2L. Slabs: 0-2.5L nil, 2.5-5L 5%, 5-10L 20%, 10L+ 30%. The non-metro HRA anomaly: Gurgaon's average rents (Rs 30,000-70,000/month for a 2BHK in DLF Phase 3-5, Sector 48-54, Nirvana Country) routinely exceed those in metro-classified Kolkata, Hyderabad, and Chennai — yet the HRA cap is 40% not 50%. This non-metro penalty costs Gurgaon professionals Rs 30,000-60,000/year versus if the city were metro-classified. Despite this structural disadvantage, Gurgaon's old regime wins decisively because the absolute deduction values (HRA Rs 3-5L + Section 24b Rs 2L + 80C + 80D + NPS = Rs 7-10L) at high-income professional levels translate to Rs 2-3L in annual tax savings versus new regime's Rs 75K standard deduction.

Key Insight — Gurgaon

Gurgaon's defining old regime insight is the Section 24b + HRA dual housing deduction — where MNC professionals who own apartments in Dwarka/Gurugram residential sectors while renting near their DLF Cyber City office can simultaneously claim HRA (on actual rent) and Section 24b (on home loan), creating combined housing deductions of Rs 5-7L that single-handedly justify old regime for any professional above Rs 20L CTC. The non-metro HRA cost: at Rs 30L CTC (basic Rs 12.5L), renting Rs 50,000/month in Sector 49: Metro (50%) HRA would be: min(Rs 6.25L, Rs 6L - Rs 1.25L = Rs 4.75L, Rs 6.25L) = Rs 4.75L. Non-metro (40%) HRA: min(Rs 5L, Rs 4.75L, Rs 5L) = Rs 4.75L (rent - 10% basic binds). At Rs 50K rent: no difference (formula binds, not cap). The cap only bites at rents above Rs 62,500/month (where 40% basic = Rs 5L < rent - 10% basic Rs 6.25L+ monthly). For Gurgaon professionals paying Rs 60,000+/month rent: non-metro cap costs Rs 30,000-60,000/year. Despite this: at Rs 30L CTC with Rs 50K rent, HRA Rs 4.75L + Section 24b Rs 2L + 80C Rs 1.5L + 80D Rs 75K + NPS Rs 50K = Rs 9.5L deductions → old regime saves Rs 1.8L versus new regime. The non-metro penalty is a footnote compared to the overall old regime advantage for Gurgaon's high-income cohort. Strategic implication: at Rs 60K+ Gurgaon rent, consider restructuring salary to increase basic (maximizing the 40% cap), or requesting 80CCD(2) employer NPS benefit if employer offers it — regime-neutral tax savings that supplement old regime's already substantial advantage.

Gurgaon's Financial Context and Old Regime Tax Calculator

Haryana PT: Rs 0/year. Gurgaon NON-METRO HRA: 40% of basic. Rent 2BHK: DLF Phase 3-5 Rs 35-60K, Sector 48-49 Rs 28-45K, Sushant Lok Rs 30-50K, Nirvana Country Rs 40-65K. Old regime slabs: 0-2.5L nil, 2.5-5L 5%, 5-10L 20%, 10L+ 30%. SD Rs 50K (no PT). 87A ≤ Rs 5L. Non-metro HRA 40% — LOSES Rs 30-60K vs metro classification at same rent. Accenture Manager Rs 35L CTC (basic Rs 14.58L): HRA rent Rs 40K: min(Rs 5.83L at 40%, Rs 4.8L - Rs 1.458L = Rs 3.342L, Rs 5.83L) = Rs 3.342L. Section 24b Rs 2L. 80C Rs 1.5L. 80D Rs 75K. NPS Rs 50K. Total: Rs 50K + Rs 3.342L + Rs 2L + Rs 1.5L + Rs 75K + Rs 50K = Rs 8.592L. Old regime taxable: Rs 26.408L. Tax: Rs 12,500 + Rs 1,00,000 + Rs 4,92,240 = Rs 6,04,740 + cess = Rs 6,28,930. New regime: Rs 34.25L → Rs 20K + Rs 30K + Rs 30K + Rs 60K + Rs 5,77,500 = Rs 7,17,500 + cess = Rs 7,46,200. Old regime saves Rs 1,17,270. Add home loan under construction (Section 24b not yet claimable): deductions drop Rs 2L → still saves Rs 54,870. 80CCD(2) employer NPS (EY, Deloitte, KPMG offer this): tax-free both regimes, excluded from comparison but reduces takehome tax further.

Gurgaon MNC Senior Professionals — Maximizing the Rs 8-10L Deduction Package

Gurgaon's MNC concentration — Accenture (20,000+ employees), EY (15,000+), Deloitte, KPMG, HSBC Gurgaon, American Express, McKinsey, BCG, and 500+ multinationals — creates India's largest concentration of 30% slab professionals outside Mumbai. At Rs 25-80L CTC, virtually all income falls in the 30% bracket under both regimes — making every deduction rupee worth Rs 0.312 in tax savings (with 4% cess). The Rs 10L deduction package for a Gurgaon MNC senior professional at Rs 40L CTC (basic Rs 16.67L): HRA at Rs 50K/month rent (Sector 49 3BHK): min(40% × Rs 16.67L = Rs 6.67L, Rs 6L - Rs 1.667L = Rs 4.333L, Rs 6.67L) = Rs 4.333L. Section 24b home loan (Rs 80L loan, Gurugram residential sector): capped at Rs 2L. 80C Rs 1.5L (EPF + PPF). 80D Rs 75K (self + senior parents). NPS 80CCD(1B) Rs 50K. 80E education loan interest (if IIM/ISB graduate with outstanding loan): Rs 1-1.5L additional. Total deductions without 80E: SD Rs 50K + HRA Rs 4.333L + Section 24b Rs 2L + 80C Rs 1.5L + 80D Rs 75K + NPS Rs 50K = Rs 9.083L. Each Rs 1L of deduction saves Rs 31,200 in tax. Rs 9.083L saves Rs 2.83L → net old regime advantage vs new regime: Rs 2.83L minus new regime's SD equivalent (Rs 75K × 31.2% = Rs 23,400) = Rs 2.59L. This is the quantified advantage of Gurgaon's old regime at Rs 40L CTC with full deduction package. Add 80E Rs 1.5L: total savings rise to Rs 3.06L — the highest old regime advantage of any city and CTC level in this analysis.

80CCD(2) Employer NPS — Gurgaon's Regime-Neutral Corporate Benefit and Its Real Impact

Several Gurgaon MNCs — Accenture, EY, Deloitte, KPMG, and American Express — offer corporate NPS under Section 80CCD(2): employer contributes 10% of basic to NPS, exempt from tax in BOTH old and new regimes. This makes employer NPS regime-neutral in the direct comparison, but it has important indirect effects on the regime decision. For an Accenture senior manager at Rs 35L CTC (basic Rs 14.58L): employer NPS 80CCD(2) = 10% × Rs 14.58L = Rs 1.458L/year. This Rs 1.458L is tax-free regardless of regime — meaning both old and new regime employees receive this benefit equally. The effective comparison: old regime personal deductions (HRA + 80C + 80D + NPS 80CCD(1B) + Section 24b) vs new regime's Rs 75K SD, AFTER employer NPS is excluded. In this comparison, old regime wins by Rs 1.17L+ at Rs 35L CTC. But the employer NPS has an important planning implication: employees in companies with 80CCD(2) should still maximize personal NPS 80CCD(1B) Rs 50K separately — it stacks on top of 80CCD(2). An EY Partner at Rs 60L CTC (basic Rs 25L): 80CCD(2) employer Rs 2.5L/year (regime-neutral) + 80CCD(1B) personal Rs 50K (old regime only). The Rs 50K personal NPS saves Rs 15,600/year additionally in old regime. Total annual old regime advantage for EY Partner at Rs 60L: HRA Rs 5L + Section 24b Rs 2L + 80C Rs 1.5L + 80D Rs 75K + NPS Rs 50K = Rs 9.75L deductions → saves Rs 3.04L vs new regime. This is why Gurgaon's entire MNC ecosystem is effectively hardwired into old regime for senior professionals.

More Questions — Old Regime Tax Calculator in Gurgaon

I'm at HSBC Gurgaon (Rs 45L CTC, rent Rs 55,000/month Sector 56, home loan Rs 1 crore on a flat under construction). Can I claim both HRA and home loan?

Yes for HRA — you can claim HRA while under-construction property is being built. But Section 24b during construction: Pre-possession interest cannot be claimed in the year it accrues. It accumulates and is deductible in five equal instalments starting from the year of possession. Your deduction calculation NOW (during construction): HRA = min(40% × basic, rent - 10% basic, actual HRA). Basic Rs 18.9L (42% of Rs 45L). 40% cap: Rs 7.56L. Rent - 10% basic: Rs 6.6L - Rs 1.89L = Rs 4.71L. HRA exemption: Rs 4.71L. No Section 24b yet (under construction). 80C Rs 1.5L + 80D Rs 75K + NPS Rs 50K. Old regime: SD Rs 50K + HRA Rs 4.71L + 80C Rs 1.5L + 80D Rs 75K + NPS Rs 50K = Rs 8.21L. Old regime taxable: Rs 45L - Rs 8.21L = Rs 36.79L. Tax: Rs 12,500 + Rs 1,00,000 + Rs 8,03,700 = Rs 9,16,200 + cess = Rs 9,52,848. New regime: Rs 44.25L → Rs 20K + Rs 30K + Rs 30K + Rs 60K + Rs 8,77,500 = Rs 10,17,500 + cess = Rs 10,58,200. Old regime saves Rs 1,05,352 NOW before possession. After possession (say 3 years), pre-possession interest on Rs 1 crore loan at 8.75% ≈ Rs 8.75L/year × 3 years = Rs 26.25L. Divided into 5 instalments: Rs 5.25L/year. Section 24b cap Rs 2L applies to post-possession interest + pre-possession instalment COMBINED. Post-possession: claim full Rs 2L Section 24b. Add to old regime: saves additional Rs 62,400/year. Old regime advantage grows to Rs 1.7L/year post-possession. Gurgaon under-construction investment: maximum old regime benefit comes after possession — plan accordingly.

My company offers 80CCD(2) employer NPS. I'm at EY (Rs 30L CTC, basic Rs 12.5L, rent Rs 40K in DLF Phase 4). Should I also contribute personal NPS 80CCD(1B) under old regime?

Absolutely yes — personal NPS 80CCD(1B) Rs 50K saves Rs 15,600/year ADDITIONALLY in old regime, on top of the employer NPS benefit. Your employer NPS 80CCD(2): 10% × Rs 12.5L = Rs 1.25L/year. This Rs 1.25L is tax-free in both regimes — ignore it for regime comparison. Personal deductions for regime comparison: HRA = min(40% × Rs 12.5L = Rs 5L, Rs 4.8L - Rs 1.25L = Rs 3.55L, Rs 5L) = Rs 3.55L. 80C Rs 1.5L. 80D Rs 75K. Personal NPS 80CCD(1B) Rs 50K. Old regime: SD Rs 50K + HRA Rs 3.55L + 80C Rs 1.5L + 80D Rs 75K + NPS Rs 50K = Rs 6.8L. Old regime taxable: Rs 30L - Rs 6.8L = Rs 23.2L. Tax: Rs 12,500 + Rs 1,00,000 + Rs 3,96,000 (10-23.2L at 30%) = Rs 5,08,500 + cess = Rs 5,28,840. New regime: Rs 29.25L → Rs 20K + Rs 30K + Rs 30K + Rs 60K + Rs 4,27,500 = Rs 5,67,500 + cess = Rs 5,90,200. Old regime saves Rs 61,360/year. Without personal NPS (Rs 50K): deductions drop to Rs 6.3L → taxable Rs 23.7L → additional tax Rs 15,600 → old regime saves Rs 45,760. Yes: adding personal NPS Rs 50K saves Rs 15,600 more (Rs 50K × 30% × 1.04 = Rs 15,600 with cess). Every year you contribute personal NPS under old regime: Rs 15,600 in tax savings + NPS market-linked returns (typically 10-12% equity allocation historical). The combined benefit of tax saving + NPS corpus growth makes personal NPS alongside employer NPS a no-brainer for Gurgaon MNC senior professionals.

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