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Earning Over Rs 50 Lakh? How Marginal Relief Brings Down Your Tax Burden

Budget 2017 proposes a surcharge of 10% on taxable income between Rs 50 lakh and Rs 1 crore
Budget 2017 proposes a surcharge of 10% on taxable income between Rs 50 lakh and Rs 1 crore

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley in Budget 2017 cut the income tax rate on the lowest slab (Rs 2.5 lakh to Rs 5 lakh) to 5 per cent from 10 per cent. To offset the revenue loss, he imposed a surcharge of 10 per cent on those with taxable income between Rs 50 lakh and Rs 1 crore, thus bringing more taxpayers into the purview of surcharge.  And the 15 per cent surcharge on income above Rs 1 crore will continue as before. The total amount of tax foregone on account of these changes in tax rates is estimated at Rs 15,500 crore. The new income tax rates will be applicable from April 1, 2017 or assessment year 2018-19 (AY2018-19).

(Read: 10 Income Tax Changes That Will Impact You)

What is Surcharge?
Surcharge is applicable on income tax if the income exceeds a specified limit.  It is applicable on the basic tax (without inclusion of cess). Let us consider a person below 60 with taxable income of Rs 75 lakh. What will he pay after the surcharge proposed in the Budget? His basic tax would come to Rs 20.62 lakh. The 10 per cent surcharge comes to Rs 2.06 lakh. Thus his total tax liability would be Rs 22.68 lakh and after education cess it comes to about Rs 23.37 lakh.

The concept of marginal relief is designed to provide some relief in levy of surcharge to a taxpayer where the total taxable income marginally exceeds Rs 50 lakh or Rs 1 crore.

(Also Read: New Income Tax Rules On Home Loan Benefits, See Details Here)

How marginal relief helps lower tax burden?
Let us consider two scenarios: 1) where the surcharge is 10 per cent (income between Rs 50 lakh and Rs 1 crore) and 2) where surcharge is 15 per cent (income above Rs 1 crore). According to tax rules, the surcharge of 10 per cent is not applicable where marginal relief comes into play even if taxable income is above Rs 50 lakh.

According to the concept of marginal relief, if the amount payable as surcharge exceeds the income above Rs 50 lakh or Rs 1 crore, the surcharge will be applicable at a marginal rate, which is 70 per cent of the incremental income above Rs 50 lakh or Rs 1 crore. (Incremental income above Rs 50 lakh or Rs 1 crore - 30 per cent of incremental income).

Scenario - 1 (where income exceeds Rs 50 lakh marginally)
Suppose an individual's taxable income amounts to Rs 51 lakh. Technically, the person has to pay a 10 per cent surcharge as income exceeds Rs 50 lakh. But in this case, marginal relief comes into play and the surcharge he has to pay is not 10 per cent.  How?

The person's income above Rs 50 lakh is Rs 1 lakh (Rs 51 lakh - Rs 50 lakh). On Rs 51 lakh, the person is supposed to pay tax of Rs 13.42 lakh and surcharge of (@10%) Rs 1.34 lakh for (AY 2018-19).  Since the surcharge (Rs 1.34 lakh) is more than the income differential between (Rs 51 lakh and Rs 50 lakh), the surcharge of 10 per cent will not be applicable. Thus, the person with taxable income of Rs 51 lakh will pay tax of Rs 13.42 lakh and surcharge of Rs 70,000 which comes to Rs 14.12 lakh. Including cess (3%), it will come to Rs 14.54 lakh.

If the marginal relief had not been applicable, the total tax liability would have been Rs 15.20 lakh.

(Also Read: NPS Withdrawal, Contribution: Income Tax Changes That Will Impact You)

Scenario - 2 (where income exceeds Rs 1 crore marginally)

Suppose an individual's taxable income amounts to Rs 1.02 crore. Technically, the person has to pay a 15 per cent surcharge as income exceeds Rs 1 crore. But in this case, marginal relief comes into play and the surcharge of 15 per cent is not applicable.  How?

The person's income above Rs 1 crore is Rs 2 lakh (Rs 1.02 crore  - Rs 1 crore). On Rs 1.02 crore, the person is supposed to pay tax of Rs 28.72 lakh and surcharge of (@15%) of Rs 4.31 lakh for (AY 2018-19).  Since the surcharge (Rs 4.31 lakh) is more than the incremental income of Rs 2 lakh (Rs 1.02 crore - Rs 1 crore), then the 15 per cent surcharge will not be applicable. Instead, a lower surcharge of Rs 1.4 lakh (70 per cent of incremental income of Rs 2 lakh) will be applicable as marginal relief comes into play.

Thus the tax liability of the person with taxable income of Rs 1.02 crore comes to Rs 30.12 lakh (Rs 28.72 lakh  Rs 1.4 lakh). Including cess, it would come to Rs 31.02 lakh crore.

Had marginal tax not come into play the total tax liability would have been Rs 33.03 lakh and with cess Rs 34.02 lakh. 

(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)