Hi, The answer is NO.
Gratuity and Salary
Gratuity is paid over and above the normal salary. It is paid in recognition of long and meritorious services rendered by the employee for a continuous period of 5 years and above.
Group Gratuity Insurance Plan
Many employers opt for a Group Gratuity Insurance Plan to manage the sudden gratuity liability of the organization. According to the terms of the Group Gratuity Policy, the employer makes annual contributions to protect the gratuity benefit. To project the total cost incurred for an employee, the employer adds a value in the CTC of the employee (calculated on a per-employee basis), which is shown as gratuity. This doesn't mean that the employer is deducting gratuity from the employee's salary; it is only for CTC projection.
Eligibility for Gratuity
If the employee completes 5 years of continuous service at the time of separation, the employer pays the gratuity through the insurance company. In case of resignation before the completion of 5 years, the employee will not be eligible for gratuity.
From India, Madras
Gratuity and Salary
Gratuity is paid over and above the normal salary. It is paid in recognition of long and meritorious services rendered by the employee for a continuous period of 5 years and above.
Group Gratuity Insurance Plan
Many employers opt for a Group Gratuity Insurance Plan to manage the sudden gratuity liability of the organization. According to the terms of the Group Gratuity Policy, the employer makes annual contributions to protect the gratuity benefit. To project the total cost incurred for an employee, the employer adds a value in the CTC of the employee (calculated on a per-employee basis), which is shown as gratuity. This doesn't mean that the employer is deducting gratuity from the employee's salary; it is only for CTC projection.
Eligibility for Gratuity
If the employee completes 5 years of continuous service at the time of separation, the employer pays the gratuity through the insurance company. In case of resignation before the completion of 5 years, the employee will not be eligible for gratuity.
From India, Madras
Understanding CTC and Gratuity
There is no legal definition of CTC. Therefore, it varies randomly from organization to organization. In some organizations, gratuity is part of the CTC, and in others, it is not.
Components of CTC
CTC, as per the concept and in my opinion, should encompass all costs spent by the organization for any employee. All payments and facilities are conditional. Conditions include gratuity in a normal case after 5 years of continuous service, salary/wages at the end of the month if the employee is absent throughout the month and has no leave in their credit; it will be without pay, statutory bonus at the end of the year with eligibility requiring a minimum of 30 days present in the year, etc.
Regards, S K Bandyopadhyay
From India, New Delhi
There is no legal definition of CTC. Therefore, it varies randomly from organization to organization. In some organizations, gratuity is part of the CTC, and in others, it is not.
Components of CTC
CTC, as per the concept and in my opinion, should encompass all costs spent by the organization for any employee. All payments and facilities are conditional. Conditions include gratuity in a normal case after 5 years of continuous service, salary/wages at the end of the month if the employee is absent throughout the month and has no leave in their credit; it will be without pay, statutory bonus at the end of the year with eligibility requiring a minimum of 30 days present in the year, etc.
Regards, S K Bandyopadhyay
From India, New Delhi
Dear Citehr Colleague,
There is no "Yes" or "No" answer. In the corporate sector, to make offers more lucrative or otherwise, there is a practice to write all direct elements of salary components as a part of CTC. Assuming that the employee will continue with the organization for 5 years or more, it is considered a part of CTC. However, a star-marked remark is generally mentioned in the CTC sheet that *Gratuity is payable as per the provisions of the Payment of Gratuity Act, 1972. Hence, if you are going to stay for more than 5 years, you can take it as a part of your total CTC; otherwise not.
Regards,
Dr. Kamlesh Agrawal
Mumbai
From India, Delhi
There is no "Yes" or "No" answer. In the corporate sector, to make offers more lucrative or otherwise, there is a practice to write all direct elements of salary components as a part of CTC. Assuming that the employee will continue with the organization for 5 years or more, it is considered a part of CTC. However, a star-marked remark is generally mentioned in the CTC sheet that *Gratuity is payable as per the provisions of the Payment of Gratuity Act, 1972. Hence, if you are going to stay for more than 5 years, you can take it as a part of your total CTC; otherwise not.
Regards,
Dr. Kamlesh Agrawal
Mumbai
From India, Delhi
CiteHR is an AI-augmented HR knowledge and collaboration platform, enabling HR professionals to solve real-world challenges, validate decisions, and stay ahead through collective intelligence and machine-enhanced guidance. Join Our Platform.