## What Is Gratuity and Who Is Eligible?
Gratuity is a lump-sum payment by an employer as a reward for long service. Under the Payment of Gratuity Act 1972, it is mandatory for companies with 10+ employees.
Eligibility: Minimum 5 years of continuous service. Exception: Death or disability - gratuity paid regardless of tenure.
## The Two Gratuity Formulas
### Formula 1: Companies Covered Under Gratuity Act
Gratuity = (Last drawn salary × 15/26) × Number of years of service
Where:
- Last drawn salary = Basic + Dearness Allowance
- 15 = Statutory days per year (not calendar days)
- 26 = Working days in a month
Example: 10 years service, ₹50,000/month (basic + DA):
Gratuity = (50,000 × 15/26) × 10 = ₹2,88,462
### Formula 2: Companies NOT Covered Under Act
Gratuity = (Last drawn salary × 15/30) × Number of years of service
Note: 30 calendar days used instead of 26 working days - gives slightly lower amount.
Example: Same scenario:
Gratuity = (50,000 × 15/30) × 10 = ₹2,50,000
## The ₹20 Lakh Tax Exemption
Gratuity received is completely tax-free up to ₹20 lakh (for government employees: unlimited exemption). The minimum of:
1. Actual gratuity received
2. ₹20 lakh (maximum exemption limit)
3. Calculated gratuity as per formula
For most employees, gratuity is fully tax-free given the ₹20 lakh cap.
## Years of Service: The Rounding Rule
For partial years: 6 months or more rounds UP to next full year.
Service of 7 years 7 months = treated as 8 years for gratuity calculation.
Service of 7 years 4 months = treated as 7 years.
## Practical Tips to Maximize Gratuity
1. Do not leave before 5 years - you forfeit all gratuity entirely
2. After 5 years: Each additional year adds proportional gratuity
3. Negotiate basic salary - gratuity is calculated on basic+DA, not gross CTC
4. Ensure continuity - gap in service can reset the clock
## Deep Dive: Everything You Need to Know
Understanding this topic thoroughly is key to making well-informed financial decisions. Let's explore the mechanics, implications, and practical application in detail.
### The Mathematics Behind the Numbers
Financial calculations follow precise mathematical formulas that compound in ways that are often counterintuitive. The power of compounding - earning returns on previous returns - is the fundamental force that separates wealthy investors from those who merely save.
The compound interest formula: A = P × (1 + r/n)^(n×t)
Where A = final amount, P = principal, r = annual rate, n = compounding periods per year, t = years.
The critical insight: small differences in rate and time create enormous differences in outcomes. At 12-14% CAGR, money doubles every 6-7 years. At 6%, it doubles every 12 years. Over a 30-year investment career, this difference is the gap between a comfortable retirement and a wealthy one.
### Behavioural Finance: Why Smart People Make Bad Financial Decisions
Academic research in behavioural finance has identified systematic cognitive biases that cause intelligent people to make predictable financial mistakes:
Loss aversion: Losses feel roughly twice as painful as equivalent gains feel good. This causes investors to hold losing investments too long and sell winning investments too early - the exact opposite of rational behaviour.
Present bias: We dramatically over-value immediate rewards relative to future ones. This explains why we struggle to save for retirement 30 years away while easily justifying current consumption.
Overconfidence: 90% of investors believe they are above-average at picking investments. This is mathematically impossible. Overconfidence leads to excessive trading (which increases costs and taxes) and under-diversification.
Herding: Following the crowd feels safe but often means buying at peaks and selling at troughs. The best investment decisions often feel uncomfortable precisely because they are contrarian.
### Building Long-Term Wealth: The Core Principles
Decades of research on successful long-term investors reveal consistent patterns:
1. High savings rate: The amount you save matters more than investment returns, especially in the accumulation phase. Moving from 10% to 20% savings rate has a far greater impact on final wealth than improving investment returns by 2%.
2. Long time in the market: "Time in the market beats timing the market" is not just a cliché - it is backed by decades of data. Investors who missed the 10 best days in the S&P 500 over 20 years earned less than half the returns of those who stayed fully invested.
3. Minimise costs: Every 0.5% in fees, taxes, or unnecessary transactions reduces final wealth by 10% over 20 years. Use low-cost index funds, tax-efficient accounts, and infrequent rebalancing.
4. Diversification: Not just across assets but across geographies, sectors, and time. Single-asset-class portfolios have much higher chance of catastrophic outcomes than diversified ones.
5. Automatic systems: Automate contributions, rebalancing, and investing. Removing human decision-making from routine investment processes eliminates emotion-driven mistakes.
### Country-Specific Context for India Investors
India investors operate within a specific tax, regulatory, and economic framework that shapes optimal financial decisions:
Tax-advantaged accounts should typically be maxed before taxable investing. The compound benefit of tax deferral or tax-free growth is enormous over multi-decade periods.
Understand your marginal tax rate on different types of investment income (ordinary income, capital gains, dividends) as this significantly affects which investments belong in which account types.
Inflation in India has historically required real investment returns of 4-6% annually just to maintain purchasing power. This sets a high bar that many "safe" investments fail to clear.
### Using This Calculator Effectively
The calculator above is designed to help you model your specific situation with your own numbers. To get the most value:
- Use conservative assumptions: Model at 75% of historical average returns to stress-test your plans
- Run multiple scenarios: Compare best case, base case, and worst case
- Factor in taxes: Post-tax returns are what matter for goal planning
- Include inflation: Your future goal amount should account for inflation
- Recalculate annually: Update your assumptions as your situation and market conditions change
The most important thing is to start. The second most important thing is to be consistent. Small, regular contributions compounding over decades create extraordinary wealth outcomes that simply cannot be replicated by trying to save large lump sums later.
