What is Leave Travel Allowance?
Leave Travel Allowance, commonly called LTA or LTC, is a salary component that may be provided by an employer to support an employee’s travel expenses while proceeding on leave. Under Indian income tax rules, eligible LTA can be exempt from tax, but the exemption is not automatic. It depends on whether the journey qualifies, whether valid travel proof exists, whether the employee is using the old tax regime, and whether the amount claimed is within the prescribed limit.
This is where many salaried taxpayers make mistakes. They assume that because LTA appears in the salary structure, the full amount is tax-free. In reality, the exemption is limited. The actual exemption is usually the lowest of the LTA received, actual eligible travel cost, and prescribed fare cap. Any excess amount becomes taxable as salary.
Key LTA exemption rules Indian taxpayers should know
- LTA exemption is generally available only when the employee opts for the old tax regime.
- The travel must be to a place in India. Foreign travel is not eligible for LTA exemption.
- Only travel fare is considered. Hotel bills, food expenses, sightseeing costs and local personal expenses are not eligible.
- The exemption cannot exceed the amount actually spent on eligible travel.
- The exemption is restricted by prescribed fare limits depending on travel mode and route connectivity.
- Normally, two journeys can be claimed in a block of four calendar years.
- Family may include spouse, children, and dependent parents, brothers and sisters, subject to rules.
- Valid tickets, invoices, boarding passes or proof of travel should be maintained.
How the LTA exemption is calculated
The core formula is practical:
1. LTA received from employer
2. Actual eligible travel fare incurred
3. Prescribed fare limit for the shortest eligible route
For example, if your employer paid ₹50,000 as LTA, your actual eligible travel fare was ₹42,000, and the applicable fare cap is ₹38,000, your estimated exemption would be ₹38,000. The balance ₹12,000 would generally become taxable as salary.
Travel mode and eligible fare limit
| Travel Situation | Indicative Eligible Limit | Important Compliance Point |
|---|---|---|
| Journey by air | Economy fare of the national carrier by the shortest route | Only fare is considered. Luxury class upgrades may not be fully eligible. |
| Places connected by rail but travel by other mode | AC first-class rail fare by the shortest route | The limit applies even if actual travel was by another mode. |
| Places not connected by rail but recognised public transport exists | First-class or deluxe-class fare of recognised public transport by shortest route | Proof and route basis should be maintained. |
| No recognised public transport exists | Equivalent AC first-class rail fare for the distance, as if rail travel were possible | Employer documentation and reasonable evidence become important. |
Old tax regime vs new tax regime for LTA
Regime selection is one of the biggest real-world challenges for salaried taxpayers. The old regime allows many exemptions and deductions, including eligible LTA. The new regime offers lower slab rates and simplified filing, but it removes several exemptions and deductions. Therefore, if your salary has LTA, HRA and other tax-saving components, you should compare both regimes before filing.
| Particulars | Old Tax Regime | New Tax Regime |
|---|---|---|
| LTA exemption | Available if conditions are satisfied | Generally not available |
| Documentation need | Travel proof should be maintained | LTA exemption not normally relevant |
| Best suited for | Taxpayers with eligible exemptions and deductions | Taxpayers preferring simplified slabs with limited deductions |
| Planning approach | Requires proof-based tax planning | Requires slab-based comparison |
Common LTA mistakes to avoid
- Claiming LTA under the new tax regime without checking eligibility.
- Claiming hotel, food, local taxi, sightseeing or package expenses as travel fare.
- Claiming exemption for international travel or foreign travel legs.
- Ignoring the prescribed fare cap and assuming actual cost is fully exempt.
- Claiming more than the allowed number of journeys in a four-year block.
- Not preserving tickets, boarding passes, invoices or employer submission acknowledgements.
- Assuming that LTA in CTC is automatically tax-free even without travel.
Why first-time filers should be careful
India’s tax filing base has expanded significantly, and many new taxpayers are entering the digital filing ecosystem. This is positive for compliance, but it also means many first-time filers are making decisions without fully understanding Form 16, AIS, TIS, salary exemptions, deductions, old vs new tax regime comparison, and employer-reported income. If LTA is incorrectly claimed, the taxpayer may face a mismatch between salary records and the ITR.
WealthSure’s approach is to make tax planning more transparent. Instead of encouraging blind claims, we help taxpayers understand the rule, estimate the exemption, preserve the right documents and file with confidence.