If you earn an annual salary of ₹40,00,000 (₹40 Lakh) in the Financial Year 2025-26, here is your complete income tax computation under the New Tax Regime. This analysis covers your exact deductions, slab-wise tax calculation, surcharge applicability, health and education cess, and your final monthly take-home pay.
| Component | Amount |
|---|---|
| Gross Annual Salary (CTC) | ₹40,00,000 |
| Less: Standard Deduction (Sec 16) | - ₹75,000 |
| Less: Professional Tax (Maharashtra) | - ₹2,500 |
| Net Taxable Income | ₹39,22,500 |
| Income Tax (Base) | ₹7,56,750 |
| Surcharge | ₹0 |
| Health & Education Cess (4%) | ₹30,270 |
| Total Tax Payable | ₹7,87,020 |
| Annual Take-Home Pay | ₹32,12,980 |
| Monthly Take-Home Pay | ₹2,67,748 |
Slab-by-Slab Analysis
Your taxable income of ₹39,22,500 reaches the highest slab of 30%, applicable to income exceeding ₹24 Lakh.
Surcharge & Cess Details
No surcharge is applicable at this income level. A Health and Education Cess of 4% amounting to ₹30,270 is applied on the total of base tax and surcharge. This brings your final effective tax rate to 19.7% .
New vs Old Regime Comparison
For a salary of ₹40 Lakh, the New Tax Regime results in a total tax of ₹7,87,020 , while the Old Tax Regime (assuming standard deductions of ₹2 Lakh under 80C/80D) results in a total tax of ₹10,28,820 . You save approximately ₹2,41,800 annually by choosing the New Regime.
Key Takeaway
On an annual salary of ₹40 Lakh in FY 2025-26, your monthly in-hand salary after all tax deductions would be approximately ₹2,67,748 . The government automatically deducts TDS from your monthly paycheck, so your actual credit will be close to this figure (minor variations may apply based on employer-specific allowances and perquisites).