The offer letter says Rs 6 lakh. The actual cost to your business is closer to Rs 8 to 9 lakh in year one. Here is the complete, honest breakdown every Delhi NCR employer should budget for, with worked examples.
CTC (Cost to Company) is the number on the offer letter. It already bundles the employee's gross salary, employer PF and a gratuity provision. But the actual amount your business spends to hire and keep that person is much higher, because CTC ignores one-time hiring costs and recurring overheads.
For Delhi NCR employers, the true cost of an employee sits at roughly 1.3 to 1.5 times the offered CTC in the first year. A Rs 6 lakh hire really costs around Rs 8 to 9 lakh once you add recruitment, onboarding, equipment, workspace and the employer statutory load. Understanding this protects your budget and your margins.
Every employee carries four layers of cost. Most budgets only count the first.
Gross salary: Basic, HRA, Dearness Allowance, conveyance, special allowance, and any variable or performance pay. This is what the employee sees on the payslip.
Employer PF (12% of Basic + DA), gratuity provision (4.81% of Basic), employer ESI (3.25% of gross, for staff up to Rs 21,000), bonus under the Payment of Bonus Act, and LWF. These sit inside CTC but are a real cash outflow.
Recruitment (agency fee up to one month salary, or job-board cost), background verification (Rs 1,000–3,000), recruiter and interviewer time, offer-to-join engagement, and equipment like a laptop (Rs 40,000–60,000 amortised).
Workspace and facilities per seat, group health insurance, software licences, training and L&D, and HR and management time spent on payroll, compliance and admin for that employee.
Indicative figures for a Delhi-based employee. Actual numbers vary by salary structure, office setup and hiring channel.
| Cost Component | Rs 6 LPA hire | Rs 12 LPA hire | Rs 25 LPA hire |
|---|---|---|---|
| Offered CTC (incl. employer PF + gratuity) | 6,00,000 | 12,00,000 | 25,00,000 |
| Recruitment + BGV (one-time) | 40,000 | 90,000 | 2,00,000 |
| Onboarding + equipment (laptop, setup) | 55,000 | 70,000 | 90,000 |
| Workspace + facilities (annual) | 90,000 | 1,20,000 | 1,50,000 |
| Group health insurance | 12,000 | 15,000 | 20,000 |
| Software, training, HR/admin time | 50,000 | 80,000 | 1,20,000 |
| True Year-1 Cost | Rs 8.47 L | Rs 15.75 L | Rs 30.8 L |
| Effective multiplier on CTC | 1.41x | 1.31x | 1.23x |
Lower CTC roles carry a higher multiplier because fixed one-time and overhead costs are a bigger share of a smaller salary.
Where your employee works changes part of the cost. Delhi levies zero Professional Tax, so Delhi employees keep slightly more take-home, while Haryana (Gurugram, Faridabad) deducts Rs 200 a month and Uttar Pradesh (Noida, Ghaziabad) charges by slab. Professional Tax is an employee deduction, so it does not raise your employer cost, but multi-state teams add compliance complexity that does carry an admin cost.
Workspace cost also varies sharply: a seat in Connaught Place or Cyber City Gurugram costs far more than Noida or Faridabad. For distributed NCR teams, factoHR Delhi applies the correct PF, ESI and Professional Tax per employee location automatically, removing the manual, error-prone work that quietly inflates HR cost.
The numbers above assume the employee stays and performs. A bad hire who exits within the first year typically costs the business 1.5 to 2 times their annual salary, once you count wasted recruitment, onboarding, lost productivity, team disruption, and the cost of finding a replacement.
This is why the cheapest lever to cut hiring cost is not a lower salary, it is better retention. Structured onboarding, clear goals and timely pay all reduce early attrition, and that protects everything you spent to bring the person in.
1. Build referrals. Employee referrals cut recruitment cost to near zero and tend to retain longer than agency hires.
2. Automate recruitment and onboarding. Every hour HR spends chasing CVs, documents and joining formalities is cost. A recruitment and onboarding system removes that manual load.
3. Structure salaries efficiently. A clean Basic, HRA and allowance split keeps statutory contributions correct and take-home optimised, avoiding overpayment and compliance penalties.
4. Cut early attrition. A strong first 90 days protects your hiring spend. Structured onboarding is the highest-ROI retention lever.
5. Automate payroll and compliance. When PF, ESI, TDS and multi-state Professional Tax run automatically, HR stops spending time on admin and avoids penalty costs entirely. This is exactly what factoHR Delhi does for 4,000+ Indian businesses.
factoHR Delhi automates payroll, compliance and onboarding so your HR team spends time on hiring quality, not paperwork. See how much you could save.