What Is CTC?
Cost to Company (CTC) is the total annual amount a company spends on an employee. It is not just the monthly salary. It includes basic salary, allowances, bonus, employer contributions, and certain benefits that form part of the full compensation package.
This is where most people get confused.
When an offer letter shows a CTC figure, that number usually looks much bigger than what actually reaches the bank account. That happens because CTC is a wider figure. It includes items the employee may not receive as direct monthly cash, such as employer PF contribution, gratuity, or insurance.
What Is Usually Included in CTC?
The exact structure varies from company to company. However, these components appear most commonly.
| Component | What it means |
| Basic salary | Fixed core part of salary |
| Allowances | HRA, special allowance, conveyance, and similar items |
| Bonus or variable pay | Performance-linked or annual payout |
| Employer PF contribution | Employer share towards provident fund |
| Gratuity | A long-term employee benefit, where applicable |
| Other benefits | Insurance, meal cards, or similar company-paid benefits |
EPFO’s official documents confirm the standard employer and employee PF contribution structure used in Indian salary packages, though exceptions may apply in some cases.
Example of CTC Calculation
Suppose an employee receives the following annual package:
| Component | Annual amount |
| Basic salary | ₹2,40,000 |
| HRA | ₹1,20,000 |
| Special allowance | ₹96,000 |
| Bonus | ₹24,000 |
| Employer PF contribution | ₹28,800 |
| Insurance benefit | ₹10,000 |
CTC = Basic Salary + HRA + Special Allowance + Bonus + Employer PF + Benefits
CTC = 2,40,000 + 1,20,000 + 96,000 + 24,000 + 28,800 + 10,000 = ₹5,18,800
That total is the employee’s CTC. However, the employee does not receive all ₹5,18,800 as direct cash. Some of it sits inside employer-side contributions or benefits that never appear in the monthly payslip.
CTC vs Gross Salary vs In-Hand Salary
These three terms are often mixed up. They are not the same.
| Term | Meaning |
| CTC | Total annual cost borne by the employer |
| Gross salary | Salary before employee-side deductions |
| In-hand salary | Amount received after all deductions |
A simple way to understand the relationship:
Gross Salary = CTC − Employer Contributions − Some Benefits
In-Hand Salary = Gross Salary − Employee Deductions − Tax
That is why a person’s CTC and monthly in-hand salary can look very different, even when both come from the same job offer.
Why CTC Matters
For employees, CTC helps in understanding what the offer actually includes. A higher CTC may look attractive. But the breakup matters more than the headline number. Two offers with the same CTC can still lead to very different in-hand salaries depending on how the package is structured.
For employers and payroll teams, moreover, CTC gives a full view of compensation costs, budgeting, and salary structure planning. It is not just a number on the offer letter, it is the complete picture of what the employee costs the business annually.
Key Takeaways
CTC stands for Cost to Company. It is the total annual amount a company spends on an employee — wider than take-home pay because it includes salary, bonus, employer PF, gratuity, and benefits.
The breakup always matters more than the headline figure. Once the components are separated, it becomes much easier to understand what goes to gross salary, what sits in employer contributions, and what finally arrives as in-hand pay.
Frequently Asked Questions
CTC stands for Cost to Company. It is the total annual amount a company spends on an employee.
No. CTC is the full compensation cost, while take-home salary is what remains after deductions such as employee PF and tax.
CTC can include basic salary, allowances, bonus, employer PF contribution, gratuity, and benefits such as insurance.
CTC is calculated by adding all annual salary components, employer contributions, and benefits included in the employee package.
Because CTC includes components like employer PF, gratuity, and benefits that are never paid out as direct cash. Add employee-side deductions like tax and PF, and the in-hand amount ends up significantly lower than the CTC figure.