As the new
Income‑tax Act, 2025 and associated rules come into force from
April 1, 2026, significant updates are being introduced in how
House Rent Allowance (HRA) deductions are claimed by salaried employees. One of the biggest changes is the requirement to
disclose your relationship with your landlord when seeking HRA tax benefit — particularly when rent is paid to a relative.
📌 Why the Change Is Being IntroducedThe government’s draft tax rules aim to curb
misuse of HRA claims — especially cases where employees claim HRA by showing rent paid to family members, without actual economic substance. By requiring disclosure of the
tenant–landlord relationship, authorities want to ensure that HRA exemptions are claimed for
genuine rent payments and reduce tax avoidance.
📝 What You Must Now DiscloseUnder the proposed rules (expected to become effective from 1 April 2026), employees who claim HRA must provide the following details to their employer for verification and TDS computation:
Mandatory Details to Furnish- Landlord Details: Name, address and PAN (especially if annual rent exceeds ₹1 lakh).
- Relationship with Landlord: Whether the landlord is a relative (such as parent, spouse, sibling, etc.) or unrelated.
- Rent Paid Proof: Rent receipts and bank payment evidence remain essential — as before.
This information is generally submitted using a
standard form (e.g., Form 124) or as part of your annual declaration to HR for tax deduction at source (TDS) purposes.
📇 Threshold and ApplicabilityThe new disclosure rule
applies primarily when annual rent exceeds ₹1 lakh, a common threshold for submitting landlord PAN details even under existing HRA claim procedures.If your annual rent is below ₹1 lakh, basic rent receipts and payment evidence are typically sufficient — but employers may still require relationship details for record‑keeping.
📌 Metro Categorisation and Wider HRA ReliefIn addition to the disclosure requirement, the draft rules also
update other aspects of HRA benefits — such as expanding the number of cities eligible for
50 % salary benefit (instead of 40 %) when calculating HRA exemption. Cities like
Bengaluru, Hyderabad, pune and Ahmedabad are now included in the “metro” list for HRA computation.However, this benefit technically remains separate from the landlord relationship disclosure — both are part of broader HRA rule changes under the new tax framework.
📌 How These Changes Affect EmployeesFor Genuine RentersIf you pay actual rent to an unrelated landlord and provide:
- Rent receipts
- Bank transaction evidence for rent payments
- Landlord’s PAN (if applicable)
- Relationship status (generally “unrelated”)
then you can continue claiming HRA exemption as before — subject to normal HRA limits under tax law.
For Rent Paid to RelativesIf you pay rent to a
family member, the new rules require you to disclose that relationship explicitly. Tax authorities will then have
stronger grounds to verify the genuineness of the rent claim — reducing the potential for abusive or fictitious arrangements.Failure to disclose accurately
could lead to denial of HRA exemption and possible notices from the Income Tax Department on scrutiny.
📅 Timeline and ImplementationThe requirement is part of the
draft Income‑tax Rules, 2026, and is expected to be implemented along with the
Income‑tax Act, 2025 from
April 1, 2026. Salaried taxpayers must be prepared to submit updated HRA declarations in the new financial year, along with complete documentation, soon after April.Employers will likely ask employees for
fresh declarations every year for HRA claims — including landlord details and relationship status — to correctly compute TDS.
🔍 Final TakeawayFrom
April 2026, claiming tax exemption on your
House Rent Allowance (HRA) in india will come with
stricter compliance requirements, especially when:
- You pay rent to a relative rather than an unrelated landlord.
- You must disclose your relationship with the landlord on official tax forms.
- You continue to provide rent receipts, landlord PAN and rent payment evidence.
This change is aimed at improving transparency in rent‑based tax exemptions and discouraging fictitious rent arrangements used primarily for HRA tax benefits.
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