Lesson 23 of 33 · Free
Contents
- 1 Payroll Accounting
- 1.1 Why payroll is its own discipline
- 1.2 The three layers of payroll cost
- 1.3 India-specific statutory items
- 1.4 The monthly journal entries
- 1.5 The month-end cutoff problem
- 1.6 Payroll frauds — and how to prevent them
- 1.7 Lesson recap
- 1.8 Practical Indian Application
- 1.9 Worked Example — Quantum Software Payroll Entry
- 1.10 Common Payroll Mistakes
- 1.11 Frequently Asked Questions
- 1.12 Payroll Compliance Calendar
Payroll Accounting
Gross to net, employer-side statutory costs, three monthly entries, India-specific items (PF, ESI, TDS, gratuity) and how to prevent payroll fraud.
Why payroll is its own discipline
Paying employees is conceptually simple — Dr. Salary Expense, Cr. Bank. But in practice payroll is the most error-prone, regulation-heavy, and politically sensitive area of accounting. India has PF, ESI, professional tax, TDS, gratuity. The US has federal income tax, FICA, state taxes, 401(k). Get any one wrong and the consequences range from employee complaints to multi-lakh penalties.
The three layers of payroll cost
- Gross salary — what the employee earns before any deductions. Includes basic, HRA, special allowances, performance bonuses.
- Employee deductions — taken from gross to arrive at net pay. PF (12% of basic), TDS, professional tax, voluntary contributions (NPS, insurance, ESPP).
- Employer contributions — paid by the company over and above gross. PF employer share (12% of basic), ESI (3.25% if applicable), gratuity provision (4.81% of basic), insurance premiums.
Total cost to company (CTC) = Gross salary + Employer contributions. The “CTC” number you see in offer letters always includes the employer-side statutory costs.
India-specific statutory items
- Provident Fund (PF) — 12% from employee + 12% from employer of basic salary. Mandatory for organisations with ≥20 employees.
- Employee State Insurance (ESI) — 0.75% from employee + 3.25% from employer, applicable when employee’s gross is ≤ ₹21,000/month.
- Professional Tax (PT) — state levy, typically ₹200/month, capped at ₹2,500/year.
- TDS — Tax Deducted at Source. Employer estimates annual tax liability and deducts proportionately each month. Deposited to government by 7th of next month.
- Gratuity — lump-sum payment after 5 years of service. Provision of 4.81% of basic monthly.
- Leave encashment — provision for unused leave that can be cashed out later.
The monthly journal entries
Three entries cover most payroll situations:
1. Record the gross expense and accrue deductions
Dr. Salary Expense 10,00,000
Cr. Salaries Payable (net) 6,73,000
Cr. PF Payable 1,20,000
Cr. TDS Payable 1,80,000
Cr. PT Payable 2,000
Cr. Insurance Deduction 25,000
2. Record employer’s statutory contributions
Dr. Employer PF Contribution Expense 1,20,000
Dr. Gratuity Provision Expense 48,100
Cr. PF Payable 1,20,000
Cr. Gratuity Provision 48,100
3. Pay the net salary to employees
Dr. Salaries Payable 6,73,000
Cr. Bank 6,73,000
By the 7th and 15th of next month, PF and TDS are deposited to government:
Dr. PF Payable 2,40,000
Dr. TDS Payable 1,80,000
Cr. Bank 4,20,000
The month-end cutoff problem
Salaries for March are typically paid on April 5. If you record the expense only when the payment hits, March’s P&L is understated. The fix: accrue at month-end. The entry above (#1) is dated March 31 — the period the work was performed. The cash outflow on April 5 just settles the previously-recorded payable.
Payroll frauds — and how to prevent them
- Ghost employees — phantom names that draw salary. Prevent: monthly reconciliation between HR master and payroll, periodic biometric / face-to-face verification.
- Inflated salaries — collusion to bump pay rates. Prevent: dual approval for hikes, regular HR audits.
- Time-sheet fraud — overstating hours, especially in contract labour. Prevent: punch-in systems, manager sign-off.
Lesson recap
- Payroll has three layers: gross, employee deductions, employer contributions.
- India statutory: PF, ESI, PT, TDS, gratuity, leave encashment.
- Three entries: gross + deductions, employer share, net payment to employees.
- Always accrue at month-end — don’t wait for cash payment date.
- Reconcile HR master and payroll register monthly to catch ghosts.
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Practical Indian Application
Statutory compliance resources: EPFO Universal Compliance Portal; ESIC employer portal; state Professional Tax websites; TRACES portal for TDS compliance; ICAI Guidance Note on Defined Benefit Plans for actuarial valuation methodology.
Worked Example — Quantum Software Payroll Entry
Imagine Quantum Software, Bengaluru, has 100 employees with total gross salary of ₹2,00,00,000 in May 2026. Statutory withholdings: PF (12% employee on ₹15,000 cap × 100) = ₹1,80,000; ESI (0.75% on wages up to ₹21,000) ≈ ₹50,000; Professional Tax (₹200 × 100) = ₹20,000; TDS u/s 192 estimated ₹25,00,000. The composite entry: Dr Salaries ₹2,00,00,000; Cr PF Payable ₹1,80,000; Cr ESI Payable ₹50,000; Cr PT Payable ₹20,000; Cr TDS Payable ₹25,00,000; Cr Bank (Net Salaries) ₹1,72,50,000. Employer’s matching PF contribution (12% + 0.5% admin) is a separate expense entry. Each liability has its own due date — PF by 15th, TDS by 7th, ESI by 15th.
Common Payroll Mistakes
- Missing the 7th-of-the-month deadline for TDS deposit
- Not capping PF deductions at ₹15,000 ceiling unless VPF opted
- Forgetting to file Form 24Q quarterly
- Skipping gratuity actuarial valuation
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the PF wage ceiling?
₹15,000 per month under the EPF & MP Act 1952. Contributions are mandatory on basic + DA up to this ceiling; employers may contribute on actual basic if they wish.
Is gratuity an annual expense?
Yes. AS 15 / Ind AS 19 require actuarial valuation of gratuity liability every year; the change in liability flows through P&L (and OCI for actuarial gains/losses under Ind AS).
How is TDS on salary computed?
Under Section 192, the employer estimates the employee’s total annual income and tax liability, then deducts proportionate TDS each month.
Payroll Compliance Calendar
The monthly Indian payroll calendar: 7th — TDS u/s 192 deposit (for previous month); 15th — PF contribution deposit; 15th — ESI contribution deposit; 21st-25th — Professional Tax (state-specific); 30th — Form 16B/16C issuance where applicable. Quarterly: 31st July, 31st October, 31st January, 31st May — TDS returns (Form 24Q). Annually: 31st May — issuance of Form 16; 15th June — actuarial valuation of gratuity completed for prior FY. Late PF deposit attracts 12% damages (Section 14B of EPF & MP Act) plus 15% interest. Late TDS attracts 1.5% per month interest under Section 201(1A) plus possible 100% penalty under Section 271C. These penalties are NON-deductible under Section 37(1) — pure shareholder value destruction.
Final Discipline
Build a single-page monthly payroll checklist tracking all deposits with due dates. Automate ECR/Form 24Q filings via the EPFO/TRACES portals. Run quarterly reconciliation between TDS deposited, salaries paid, and Form 26AS data of employees. The cost of laxity (12% damages + 15% interest + non-deductibility) far exceeds the cost of compliance.
Payroll Outsourcing Decision
Indian SMEs face a make-vs-buy decision on payroll: handle in-house or outsource to specialists. In-house: 1 dedicated person can handle up to ~200 employees with Tally/Zoho payroll modules; cost ₹40,000-60,000/month total. Outsourcing: ADP, Ascent Payroll, PeopleStrong, GreytHR charge ₹100-300 per employee per month. For <50 employees, in-house is cheaper. For 50-500 employees, outsourcing often makes sense due to compliance complexity (PT varies by 28 states, ESI thresholds shift, TDS rates change with budgets). For 500+, dedicated in-house team with payroll software (SAP SuccessFactors, Oracle HCM) becomes economical. The compliance cost of getting payroll wrong (PF damages, TDS penalties, NCLT proceedings) makes professional execution non-negotiable regardless of choice.