Hi Friends, If both the husband and wife are working, so can both take an exemption for HRA in filing ITR or can only one person take the benefit?
From India, Jammu
From India, Jammu
Hi,
No one alone can avail an exemption for HRA. When submitting investment proofs at the office, your HR will ask for a self-declaration that as an employee, you are the sole beneficiary of the benefit and if your spouse is working, they are not availing the exemption. Employers take such declarations to safeguard their side. For salaried cases, the same information will reflect in Form 16, and therefore, you cannot manipulate anything during individual IT filing.
From India, Madras
No one alone can avail an exemption for HRA. When submitting investment proofs at the office, your HR will ask for a self-declaration that as an employee, you are the sole beneficiary of the benefit and if your spouse is working, they are not availing the exemption. Employers take such declarations to safeguard their side. For salaried cases, the same information will reflect in Form 16, and therefore, you cannot manipulate anything during individual IT filing.
From India, Madras
Hi Rakesh,
In the case where both the husband and wife are working and are living in a rented accommodation, the question often arises as to whether both individuals can claim an exemption for House Rent Allowance (HRA) in their respective Income Tax Return (ITR) filings, or if only one person is eligible to take the benefit. This is a common query among taxpayers, and it is important to understand the rules and regulations governing this matter.
According to the Income Tax Act, 1961, if both the husband and wife are working and are living together in a rented accommodation, they can both claim the HRA exemption in their individual ITR filings. However, there are certain conditions that need to be met in order to avail of this benefit.
Firstly, both individuals must be paying rent for the accommodation in which they reside. The rent paid should be in accordance with the terms and conditions of the rental agreement and should be supported by proper documentation such as rent receipts or a rental agreement.
Thanks
From India, Bangalore
In the case where both the husband and wife are working and are living in a rented accommodation, the question often arises as to whether both individuals can claim an exemption for House Rent Allowance (HRA) in their respective Income Tax Return (ITR) filings, or if only one person is eligible to take the benefit. This is a common query among taxpayers, and it is important to understand the rules and regulations governing this matter.
According to the Income Tax Act, 1961, if both the husband and wife are working and are living together in a rented accommodation, they can both claim the HRA exemption in their individual ITR filings. However, there are certain conditions that need to be met in order to avail of this benefit.
Firstly, both individuals must be paying rent for the accommodation in which they reside. The rent paid should be in accordance with the terms and conditions of the rental agreement and should be supported by proper documentation such as rent receipts or a rental agreement.
Thanks
From India, Bangalore
The current Income Tax rules are explicit, so companies do not want to take a risk. They ask for copies of the agreement for rent, PAN card, and proof of payment of rent (rent receipt). Few HR departments today ask for a declaration of the other partner not taking HRA exemption. Ultimately, the liability for tax is of the employee, not the company, as long as the latter took adequate care to decide the total deduction of TDS.
Some people have split the rental agreement, having both husband and wife separately have agreements for the same flat and paying the rent separately. In such cases, they may be able to get away with getting exemptions twice.
But remember that HRA exemption is restricted to the lower of:
- HRA
- Actual Rent
- 50% of salary
So splitting the rent may not resolve the problem in all cases.
From India, Mumbai
Some people have split the rental agreement, having both husband and wife separately have agreements for the same flat and paying the rent separately. In such cases, they may be able to get away with getting exemptions twice.
But remember that HRA exemption is restricted to the lower of:
- HRA
- Actual Rent
- 50% of salary
So splitting the rent may not resolve the problem in all cases.
From India, Mumbai
Yes, both can claim exemption subject to conditions as follows:
01. The Leave and License/Rent agreement must be in both the names.
02. The rent/license fees should have been paid from an individual bank account.
03. Only the payment made from the individual bank account would be eligible for HRA exemption.
04. If payment is made only from one bank account and claimed 50-50 by individuals, it will not be allowed.
Under the new tax regime, HRA exemption is not allowed.
From India, Pune
01. The Leave and License/Rent agreement must be in both the names.
02. The rent/license fees should have been paid from an individual bank account.
03. Only the payment made from the individual bank account would be eligible for HRA exemption.
04. If payment is made only from one bank account and claimed 50-50 by individuals, it will not be allowed.
Under the new tax regime, HRA exemption is not allowed.
From India, Pune
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