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Professional Tax is a state-level direct tax levied by certain state governments in India on individuals engaged in any profession, trade, calling, or employment. It is one of the oldest taxes in India, authorised by Article 276 of the Constitution of India, which empowers state governments to levy a tax on professions, trades, callings, and employment, subject to a maximum of ₹2,500 per person per year. Professional tax is applicable to salaried employees, self-employed professionals (doctors, lawyers, chartered accountants, architects, etc.), and business owners in states that have enacted professional tax legislation. Not all states in India levy professional tax — major states that do include Maharashtra, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal, Gujarat, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Madhya Pradesh, Assam, Odisha, Jharkhand, Bihar, and Kerala. States like Delhi, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Haryana, and Himachal Pradesh do NOT levy professional tax. The rates vary significantly: in Maharashtra, professional tax is ₹200/month (₹2,400/year) for those earning above ₹10,000/month; in Karnataka, it is ₹200/month (₹2,400/year); in Tamil Nadu, various slabs apply with a maximum of ₹2,500/year; West Bengal has a higher slab structure. Employers are responsible for deducting professional tax from employee salaries and remitting it to the state government. The professional tax paid by employees is deductible from their salary income under Section 16(iii) of the Income Tax Act when computing taxable income — applicable in both old and new tax regimes.
Annual Professional Tax = Monthly rate × 12 months (or as per state slab table); Deduction under Section 16(iii) = Actual professional tax paid during the year; Tax Saving = Professional Tax × Marginal Income Tax Rate
- 1Determine if your state of employment levies professional tax — major states that do include Maharashtra, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal, Gujarat, Andhra Pradesh, and Telangana; Delhi, UP, Rajasthan, Haryana do not.
- 2Check the applicable professional tax slab for your monthly salary in the respective state's professional tax schedule — most states have income-based slabs; the maximum constitutional cap is ₹2,500 per year.
- 3The employer deducts the applicable professional tax from the employee's salary each month (or per state-specific schedule) and remits it to the state government's professional tax authority.
- 4Self-employed individuals and business owners must register for professional tax in their state, compute their own liability, and pay it directly — usually annually or as per state schedule.
- 5Employers in applicable states must obtain a Professional Tax Registration Certificate (PTRC) for themselves (as employers) and ensure employees are registered under the Professional Tax Enrolment Certificate (PTEC).
- 6Professional tax paid appears as a deduction in the employee's salary slip under 'Professional Tax' or 'PT'; this amount is declared to the employer for Section 16(iii) deduction in TDS computation.
- 7When filing ITR, include professional tax paid as a deduction under Section 16(iii) in the salary income schedule — this reduces taxable salary income and is one of the few deductions available in both old and new tax regimes.
PT is deducted from salary slip and is a direct deduction from taxable salary under Section 16
Maharashtra charges ₹200/month for employees earning above ₹10,000/month. Annual PT = ₹2,400 deducted from salary and remitted by employer to the state. Section 16(iii) deduction of ₹2,400 reduces taxable income, saving ₹748 in tax (30% slab + 4% cess).
Karnataka PT: ₹200/month for 11 months + ₹300 for February = ₹2,500/year
Karnataka levies professional tax at ₹200/month for salaries above ₹15,000/month, with ₹300 in February, totalling ₹2,500/year — right at the constitutional maximum. The IT deduction under Section 16(iii) saves ₹780 at 30% bracket.
West Bengal has multiple salary slabs with varying monthly PT amounts
West Bengal has a detailed salary slab system: ₹10,001-₹15,000 → ₹110/month; ₹15,001-₹25,000 → ₹130/month; ₹25,001-₹40,000 → ₹150/month. At ₹20,000/month, PT = ₹130/month × 12 = ₹1,560/year (approximate — check current WB rates).
Self-employed professionals register under PTEC and pay ₹2,500/year directly in Maharashtra
Maharashtra self-employed professionals with income above a threshold pay ₹2,500/year under PTEC. Unlike salaried employees where employers deduct PT, self-employed individuals must self-register and pay. Section 16(iii) still allows deduction in their ITR.
Salary slip verification — employees checking if professional tax is correctly deducted as per their state and salary slab., where accurate professional tax india analysis through the Professional Tax India supports evidence-based decision-making and quantitative rigor in professional workflows
Self-employed professionals registering for PTEC in Maharashtra, Karnataka, or Tamil Nadu and computing their annual professional tax liability., where accurate professional tax india analysis through the Professional Tax India supports evidence-based decision-making and quantitative rigor in professional workflows
ITR filing — ensuring professional tax is claimed under Section 16(iii) as part of salary income deductions, in both old and new tax regimes., where accurate professional tax india analysis through the Professional Tax India supports evidence-based decision-making and quantitative rigor in professional workflows
Employers setting up payroll for new branches in different states — understanding state-specific PT slabs and compliance requirements (PTRC registration, monthly/quarterly remittance)., where accurate professional tax india analysis through the Professional Tax India supports evidence-based decision-making and quantitative rigor in professional workflows
HR departments computing net take-home salary for employees across multiple states with different professional tax rates and exemptions.
Professional Tax in Maharashtra — Exemptions
Maharashtra exempts several categories from professional tax: women earning up to ₹25,000/month; individuals with physical disabilities; parents/guardians of differently-abled children; members of the Central/State Armed Forces; badli workers (temporary factory workers); individuals over 65 years of age. These exemptions must be claimed by filing an exemption declaration with the employer or the professional tax authority.
New Employee Joining Mid-Year
When an employee joins a new employer mid-year in a professional tax state, the new employer starts deducting PT from the first month of employment. There is no concept of annual proration — PT is a monthly deduction from the month of joining. If the employee was working in a non-PT state earlier, there is no credit for the previous employer's (zero) PT deduction; the new state's PT applies from month 1.
GST vs Professional Tax
Professional tax and GST are entirely different. GST is a central + state indirect tax on goods and services supply. Professional tax is a direct state tax on income from employment or profession. Both may apply to the same individual (e.g., a GST-registered consultant who also pays professional tax). There is no credit or offset between the two — they are completely independent tax streams.
Professional Tax for Consultants with Multiple Clients
A freelance consultant working with multiple clients in Maharashtra must obtain a single PTEC registration and pay ₹2,500/year — this covers all their consulting income regardless of the number of clients. The professional tax is not per client or per engagement; it is a flat levy on the person's existence as a professional. This is significantly simpler than other taxes that are computed on income.
| State | Monthly Salary Range | Monthly PT | Annual PT |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maharashtra | ≤ ₹7,500 | ₹0 | ₹0 |
| Maharashtra | ₹7,501 – ₹10,000 (women) | ₹0 | ₹0 |
| Maharashtra | > ₹10,000 (men) or > ₹25,000 (women) | ₹200 | ₹2,400 |
| Karnataka | ₹10,000 – ₹14,999 | ₹150 | ₹1,800 |
| Karnataka | ≥ ₹15,000 | ₹200 + ₹300 in Feb | ₹2,500 |
| Tamil Nadu | ₹21,001 – ₹30,000 | ₹100 | ₹1,200 |
| Tamil Nadu | > ₹30,000 | ₹208.33 | ₹2,500 |
| West Bengal | ₹10,001 – ₹15,000 | ₹110 | ₹1,320 |
| West Bengal | > ₹40,000 | ₹200 | ₹2,400 |
| Andhra Pradesh/Telangana | > ₹20,000 | ₹200 | ₹2,400 |
In which states is professional tax applicable?
Professional tax is levied in: Maharashtra, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal, Gujarat, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Madhya Pradesh, Assam, Odisha, Jharkhand, Bihar, Kerala, Goa, Manipur, Mizoram, Meghalaya, Nagaland, Tripura, and Sikkim. States that do NOT levy professional tax include Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu & Kashmir, and the Union Territories of Chandigarh, Dadra & Nagar Haveli, and Daman & Diu.
Is professional tax deductible from income tax?
Yes. Under Section 16(iii) of the Income Tax Act, professional tax paid during the financial year is fully deductible from the gross salary while computing taxable income. This deduction is available under both the old tax regime and the new tax regime — making it one of the very few deductions available under the new regime (along with standard deduction). The deduction equals the actual professional tax paid (not capped separately — the constitutional max of ₹2,500 acts as the effective cap).
Who pays professional tax — employer or employee?
Both employers and employees may have separate professional tax obligations. Employees pay professional tax on their salary income (deducted by the employer and remitted). Employers also separately pay a professional tax (under PTRC — Professional Tax Registration Certificate) on their own existence as a business or employer — this is a flat annual amount. The employee's professional tax is deducted from their salary; the employer's own PT is a business expense.
What is PTEC and PTRC?
PTEC (Professional Tax Enrolment Certificate) is the registration certificate obtained by individuals (self-employed professionals, business owners, directors) for paying their own professional tax liability. PTRC (Professional Tax Registration Certificate) is obtained by employers to comply with their obligation to deduct and remit their employees' professional tax. Both must be obtained from the state's professional tax authority (usually the Commercial Tax Department or Labour Department).
What happens if professional tax is not paid or deducted?
Non-compliance with professional tax has state-specific penalties. In Maharashtra: penalty of 10% of tax due per month for late filing, plus interest at 1.25% per month; late registration attracts a fine. In Karnataka: penalty of 10% of arrears. Employers who fail to deduct and remit employees' PT are liable for the tax plus penalties. Regular audits by state commercial tax departments check PT compliance.
Are women exempt from professional tax in any states?
Yes. Several states provide exemptions or reductions for women: Tamil Nadu exempts women from professional tax if their monthly salary is below ₹10,000 (rates differ for women vs men in some income slabs); Maharashtra exempts women from PT if monthly income does not exceed ₹25,000; Andhra Pradesh and Telangana provide specific concessions for women. These concessions aim to promote women's workforce participation.
Is professional tax applicable to retired individuals?
No. Professional tax is levied on income from active employment, profession, or trade. Retirement pensions and pension income from former employment are generally not subject to professional tax — because the person is no longer actively engaged in a profession or employment. However, if a retired person takes up consultancy, freelance work, or starts a business, professional tax may apply on the new activity.
Can professional tax be claimed as a business expense?
For self-employed individuals and business owners, professional tax paid on their business/professional income can alternatively be claimed as a business expense under Section 37(1) of the Income Tax Act (general business expenditure), instead of Section 16(iii). However, since 16(iii) provides a simpler and cleaner deduction from salary income, most professionals use that route. The net effect on taxable income is the same either way.
Pro Tip
When you move between states for work, always inform your new employer about your professional tax status from the previous state. While professional tax is a small amount, the compliance obligation (PTEC/PTRC registration) must be transferred. In some states, you can register and pay professional tax online — Karnataka's PTEC can be done on the DVAT/state commercial tax portal; Maharashtra's on the Mahavat portal.
Did you know?
Professional tax in India has an interesting constitutional history: the Constitution originally did not allow states to levy professional tax above ₹250 per year (Article 276 prior to 1988). The 60th Constitutional Amendment in 1988 raised the limit to ₹2,500 per year — and it has not been revised since despite 35+ years of inflation. If the ₹2,500 limit were inflation-indexed from 1988 to 2024 (at 6% annual inflation), the limit would be approximately ₹25,000 per year today — 10x the current cap.