Every March, Delhi NCR HR teams face a wave of resignations and an even bigger wave of FNF disputes. Salary held back. Leave balance miscalculated. Gratuity skipped. Form 16 delayed. Most companies still process full and final settlement in Excel and email, which is exactly why exits drag on for 60 to 90 days. This guide covers the components, calculation, tax, timelines, and the exact FNF format Delhi NCR employers should follow in 2026.
- What it is: Full and final settlement is the closure pay an employer issues when an employee resigns, retires, or is terminated, covering all dues and deductions.
- Components: Pending salary, leave encashment, gratuity, bonus, notice pay, reimbursements, minus TDS, recoveries, and advances.
- Tax treatment: Salary at slab rate. Leave encashment exempt up to Rs 25 lakh under Section 10(10AA). Gratuity exempt up to Rs 20 lakh under Section 10(10) for non-government employees.
- Standard timeline: 30 to 45 days from last working day under Code on Wages 2019. Most Delhi NCR companies target 30 days.
- Documents: Settlement statement, relieving letter, experience certificate, Form 16, and PF/ESI exit forms must be issued together.
- Common mistake: Treating FNF as a separate process from payroll. The right HRMS pulls leave balance, gratuity, and pending salary automatically into one statement.
What Is Full and Final Settlement?
Full and final settlement, often shortened to FNF or F&F, is the legal and accounting closure of an employee’s relationship with the employer. It happens at three trigger points: voluntary resignation, retirement or superannuation, and termination by the employer.
Once triggered, the employer must compute every payable amount the employee has earned but not yet received, deduct any recoverable amount the employer is owed, and pay the net balance. The settlement is documented in a single FNF statement, signed by both parties, and stored as part of the personnel file.
FNF is governed primarily by the Code on Wages 2019, the Payment of Gratuity Act 1972, and the Industrial Employment Standing Orders Act 1946. Under the Code on Wages, the settlement must be paid within two working days of the last working day in cases of termination, and within the timeframe specified in the appointment letter for resignations, typically 30 to 45 days.
Components of Full and Final Settlement
A clean FNF statement separates earnings from deductions. Most Delhi NCR companies use the following standard structure.
Earnings (Payable to Employee)
Pending salary: Salary for the days worked in the final month up to the last working day. If the employee worked 18 days of a 30-day month, they receive 18 divided by 30 multiplied by their gross monthly salary. Only Basic + DA goes into FNF calculations, so understanding the payroll components in India matters before computing dues.
Leave encashment: Cash payment for unused earned leave on the date of exit. Calculated as (Last drawn Basic + DA divided by 26) multiplied by unused leave days. Our full guide on leave encashment rules in Delhi covers the formula, tax, and worked examples.
Gratuity: Payable if the employee completed 5 continuous years of service. Formula: (Last drawn Basic + DA multiplied by 15 multiplied by Years of service) divided by 26. Maximum statutory ceiling is Rs 20 lakh. Use our gratuity calculator to compute the exact figure for any tenure.
Statutory bonus: Pro-rata bonus for the current financial year if the employee was eligible under the Payment of Bonus Act 1965. Mandatory if the employee earned up to Rs 21,000 monthly.
Pending reimbursements: Approved expense claims, travel reimbursements, and any other accrued allowances not yet processed.
Variable pay or incentive: Pro-rata variable pay if the company policy permits payout to exiting employees. Many companies have a clause requiring the employee to be on the rolls on the payout date.
Deductions (Recovered from Employee)
TDS on salary: Tax deducted at source on the FNF amount, including encashment, bonus, and other taxable items.
Notice period recovery: If the employee did not serve the full notice period, the employer recovers salary for the shortfall. For example, if the appointment letter requires 60 days of notice but the employee served 30, the employer recovers 30 days of basic salary.
Salary advance or loan recovery: Outstanding personal loans, salary advances, or laptop loans are recovered from the FNF amount.
Excess leave taken: If the employee took more leave than they had earned, the excess is treated as Loss of Pay (LOP) and deducted.
Asset recovery: Cost of unreturned assets such as laptops, ID cards, mobile phones, and access cards. Many companies hold the full FNF amount until all assets are returned.
| Component | Type | Eligibility | Tax Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pending salary | Earning | All exits | Slab rate |
| Leave encashment | Earning | Earned leave balance > 0 | Section 10(10AA), Rs 25 lakh cap at retirement |
| Gratuity | Earning | 5+ years of service | Section 10(10), Rs 20 lakh cap (non-govt) |
| Statutory bonus | Earning | Bonus Act eligible | Slab rate |
| Reimbursements | Earning | Approved claims pending | Exempt if supported by bills |
| Notice pay recovery | Deduction | Notice period not served | Reduces taxable income |
| TDS | Deduction | If income exceeds basic exemption | As per Section 192 |
| Loan or advance | Deduction | Outstanding balance | No tax impact |
Full and Final Settlement Calculation Example
Consider Rohit, a Senior Engineer at a Noida tech company, resigning after 4 years 8 months. He had a notice period of 60 days but served only 45. His financials at exit:
- Last drawn Basic + DA: Rs 50,000
- Last drawn gross monthly salary: Rs 1,00,000
- Last working day: 15 April 2026 (worked 15 days in April)
- Unused earned leave: 22 days
- Notice shortfall: 15 days
- Outstanding salary advance: Rs 25,000
- Pending laptop reimbursement claim: Rs 8,000
Step 1: Pending salary
Rs 1,00,000 multiplied by 15 divided by 30 = Rs 50,000
Step 2: Leave encashment
(Rs 50,000 divided by 26) multiplied by 22 = Rs 42,308
Step 3: Gratuity
Rohit has 4 years 8 months. The Payment of Gratuity Act considers 4 years 8 months as 5 years (because the last incomplete year exceeded 6 months). Eligible.
(Rs 50,000 multiplied by 15 multiplied by 5) divided by 26 = Rs 1,44,231
Step 4: Reimbursements
Rs 8,000
Step 5: Notice pay recovery
(Rs 50,000 divided by 30) multiplied by 15 = Rs 25,000
Step 6: Salary advance recovery
Rs 25,000
| Component | Amount (Rs) |
|---|---|
| Pending salary (15 days) | + 50,000 |
| Leave encashment (22 days) | + 42,308 |
| Gratuity (5 years) | + 1,44,231 |
| Reimbursement | + 8,000 |
| Gross FNF | + 2,44,539 |
| Notice pay recovery | – 25,000 |
| Salary advance recovery | – 25,000 |
| TDS (estimated at 10%) | – 9,231 |
| Net FNF Payable to Rohit | Rs 1,85,308 |
The exact TDS calculation depends on Rohit’s annual income and applicable slab. Gratuity is fully exempt because it is well below the Rs 20 lakh cap. Leave encashment is fully taxable because Rohit resigned (Section 10(10AA) exemption applies only at retirement, not resignation).
Tax Treatment of FNF Components
The tax position of each component decides what the employee actually takes home. Get this wrong and either the employee overpays or the employer attracts a notice.
Pending Salary and Bonus
Both are added to gross salary income for the year and taxed at the applicable slab. The employer must apply TDS on salary under Section 192 and reflect the amount in Form 24Q for that quarter.
Leave Encashment
For private sector employees:
- At retirement: Exempt up to Rs 25 lakh under Section 10(10AA), effective 1 April 2023
- At resignation: Fully taxable as salary income
- On death: Fully exempt for legal heirs
Gratuity Under Section 10(10)
For private sector and PSU employees, the exempt amount is the lowest of three figures:
- Actual gratuity received
- Rs 20 lakh (statutory ceiling)
- 15 days of last drawn Basic + DA per completed year of service
Government employees enjoy full exemption with no upper limit. Death gratuity is fully exempt for the recipient’s legal heirs.
Notice Pay Recovery
The recovery reduces the employer’s salary expense, but tax authorities sometimes treat the gross amount as taxable in the employee’s hands and the recovery as a separate transaction. Best practice is to net it off in the salary slip itself, supported by clear documentation. The amount must reflect in Form 16 with proper bifurcation.
| FNF Component | Govt Employee | Private/PSU Employee |
|---|---|---|
| Pending salary | Slab rate | Slab rate |
| Leave encashment at retirement | Fully exempt | Exempt up to Rs 25 lakh |
| Leave encashment at resignation | Fully taxable | Fully taxable |
| Gratuity | Fully exempt | Exempt up to Rs 20 lakh |
| Statutory bonus | Slab rate | Slab rate |
| Reimbursements | Exempt with bills | Exempt with bills |
How Long Should Full and Final Settlement Take?
The Code on Wages 2019, effective from 21 November 2025, sets clear timelines for FNF payouts. The intent is to end the practice of dragging settlements for months.
- Termination by employer: Within 2 working days of the last working day
- Resignation by employee: Within the period mentioned in the appointment letter, typically 30 to 45 days
- Retirement or superannuation: Same as the employee’s normal payout cycle in the month after exit
- Death in service: Within 30 days, with priority for legal heir claims
Most well-run Delhi NCR companies target 30 days from the last working day for resignations. Slower than that signals a broken process. Faster than 30 days is rare because gratuity calculation, asset recovery, and final tax computation all need time. The full payroll cycle for the exit month must close before the FNF amount can be released.
Documents Issued During Full and Final Settlement
FNF is not just a money transfer. It is a documentation event. The employee leaves with proof for future employers, the tax department, and statutory bodies.
| Document | Purpose | Issued By |
|---|---|---|
| FNF Settlement Statement | Itemised calculation of dues and deductions | HR or Payroll |
| Relieving Letter | Confirmation of resignation acceptance and last working day | HR |
| Experience Certificate | Service tenure, role, performance summary | HR |
| Form 16 | Annual TDS certificate for income tax filing | Finance or Payroll |
| PF Settlement / Transfer Form (Form 19, 10C, 13) | EPF withdrawal or transfer to next employer | Employer triggers via EPFO portal |
| Gratuity Form L | Notice of payable gratuity amount | Employer |
| Last Payslip | Final month earnings and deductions | Payroll |
| NOC for Asset Return | Confirms all assets returned | IT or Admin |
The complete Form 16 issuance process at exit is critical because the employee will need it for the entire financial year’s tax filing, not just for the period worked at your company.
Standard FNF Settlement Format
A clean FNF statement uses a standard 3-section structure that works for any Delhi NCR business. Use this format as a template.
Section 1: Employee and Exit Details
- Full name, employee ID, designation, department
- Date of joining, date of resignation, last working day
- Reporting manager and HR business partner
- Reason for exit (resignation, termination, retirement, death)
Section 2: Earnings Computation
- Pending salary (with calculation)
- Leave encashment (with EL balance and formula)
- Gratuity (with years of service and formula)
- Statutory bonus (pro-rata)
- Reimbursements (claim references)
- Variable pay (if applicable, with policy reference)
- Gross FNF payable
Section 3: Deductions and Net Settlement
- TDS on salary
- Notice period recovery (with day count)
- Loan or advance balance
- Excess leave deduction
- Asset shortfall recovery
- Net FNF payable
- Bank account, IFSC, payment date
- Signature blocks for employee, HR, and Finance
Common Mistakes Delhi NCR Employers Make
We audit FNF processes across roughly 25 Delhi NCR companies a year. The same pattern of mistakes shows up regardless of company size.
| Common Mistake | Correct Approach |
|---|---|
| Calculating leave encashment on gross salary instead of Basic + DA | Use only Basic + DA. HRA and special allowances are excluded by law. |
| Skipping gratuity for employees with 4 years 7 months tenure | Per Madras HC ruling, 4 years 240 days qualifies as 5 years. Pay gratuity if last incomplete year exceeds 6 months. |
| Holding FNF for more than 60 days for asset recovery | Issue NOC immediately on asset return. Holding settlements long term invites Labour Commissioner complaints. |
| Issuing Form 16 only at year end, not at FNF | Issue interim Form 16 covering the period worked. The employee needs it before the next employer onboards them. |
| Forgetting to file PF Form 19 or transfer instruction | Trigger PF withdrawal or transfer at exit. UAN-linked PF should follow the employee, not stay stuck in the old account. |
| Recovering notice pay without explicit clause in appointment letter | Notice pay recovery is enforceable only if the appointment letter specifies it. Verify before deducting. |
| Using Excel for the settlement statement | Excel breaks at scale. Use HRMS that pulls leave balance, gratuity, and pending salary automatically. |
For multi-state NCR groups, the FNF process must apply the right state rules per employee. Delhi has zero Professional Tax. Gurugram employees need Haryana PT computed in the final payslip. Noida employees need UP PT. Our walkthrough on payroll processing in Delhi covers the multi-state setup.
How HRMS Automates Full and Final Settlement
The right HR software treats FNF as a structured workflow, not a one-off Excel exercise. The leave balance is already in the system. Gratuity tenure is already calculated from the joining date. TDS history sits in the payroll engine. Asset returns are tracked in IT.
An automated FNF workflow does five things. First, it freezes the employee record on resignation acceptance and starts the 30-day countdown. Second, it pulls every payable component into a draft settlement statement using the latest leave balance and salary structure. Third, it lists every deduction with audit trail. Fourth, it generates Form 16, the relieving letter, and PF forms in one click. Fifth, it routes the final settlement for approval and disburses the net amount with TDS deposited to the right authorities. For a fuller view of monthly closure, see our walkthrough on how to process payroll.
The result is a 30-day FNF that runs without HR firefighting. Employees leave with documentation in hand. Auditors see clean records. Labour Commissioner complaints drop to zero.
Final Word
Full and final settlement is where your HR brand is tested. A clean FNF in 30 days tells every future employee that this company keeps its word. A dragged out FNF, calculation errors, and missing documents tell the opposite story, and ex-employees rarely keep that story to themselves.
If your Delhi NCR HR team still runs FNF in Excel and email, the right payroll software closes the gap permanently. Leave balances pull automatically. Gratuity calculates from joining date. Form 16 generates on demand. Your team handles exits the way they handle joiners, with structure, speed, and documentation built in.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long should full and final settlement take in India?
Under the Code on Wages 2019, FNF must be paid within 2 working days for terminations and within the period stated in the appointment letter for resignations, typically 30 to 45 days. Most Delhi NCR companies target 30 days from the last working day. Anything beyond 60 days is a clear process failure and can attract Labour Commissioner complaints.
Is leave encashment in FNF taxable for resigning employees?
Yes. Leave encashment received at resignation is fully taxable as salary income. The Section 10(10AA) exemption of up to Rs 25 lakh applies only at retirement, superannuation, or termination, not at voluntary resignation. The employer must deduct TDS on the encashment amount as part of the FNF.
Can an employer hold FNF for asset recovery?
An employer can hold a reasonable portion of the FNF until assets like laptops, ID cards, and access cards are returned. Holding the entire amount indefinitely is not permitted. Issue a No Dues Certificate as soon as assets are returned and release the balance within the 30-day standard window.
Is gratuity payable if I resign before completing 5 years?
Generally no. The Payment of Gratuity Act 1972 requires 5 years of continuous service. However, courts have ruled that 4 years and 240 days (roughly 4 years 8 months) qualifies as 5 years because the last incomplete year exceeds 6 months. If your tenure is at least 4 years 240 days, you are eligible for gratuity. Check with HR or refer to your appointment letter.
Can the employer recover notice pay if I do not serve the notice period?
Yes, but only if your appointment letter has an explicit notice pay recovery clause. The recovery is calculated on basic salary for the unserved days. Many Delhi NCR companies allow employees to “buy out” the notice period this way. The recovered amount appears as a deduction in the FNF statement.
What documents should I receive at FNF?
You should receive the FNF settlement statement, relieving letter, experience certificate, Form 16 for the period worked, last payslip, PF withdrawal or transfer forms, gratuity Form L if applicable, and a No Dues Certificate. All documents should be issued together, not piecemeal over weeks.
Is the FNF amount paid into bank or by cheque?
Always by direct bank transfer (NEFT, RTGS, or IMPS) to the same account where regular salary was credited. Cash or cheque payments are not standard practice for FNF. The payment date and bank reference must appear on the FNF settlement statement for audit purposes.