Part 6: NPS — The Extra ₹50,000 Deduction
Understand how the National Pension System provides tax benefits under Sections 80CCD(1B) and 80CCD(2), and why NPS works in both tax regimes.
Part 6: NPS — The Extra ₹50,000 Deduction
The National Pension System (NPS) is a government-backed retirement savings scheme that offers one of the most unique tax advantages in India: deductions that work across both tax regimes.
📊 The Three NPS Tax Sections
1. Section 80CCD(1) — Employee Contribution (Old Regime Only)
- Your own contribution to NPS Tier-I, up to 10% of Basic + DA.
- This falls within the overall ₹1.5 Lakh Section 80C limit.
- If you are already maxing out 80C with EPF + ELSS + PPF, this section adds no extra benefit.
2. Section 80CCD(1B) — The Extra ₹50,000 (Old Regime Only)
- An additional deduction of ₹50,000 over and above the ₹1.5 Lakh 80C limit.
- Available to all individuals who contribute to NPS Tier-I.
- This is the single biggest reason IT professionals invest in NPS.
- Total deduction potential with NPS: ₹1,50,000 (80C) + ₹50,000 (80CCD(1B)) = ₹2,00,000.
3. Section 80CCD(2) — Employer Contribution (BOTH Regimes!)
- If your employer contributes to your NPS account, you get a deduction of up to 14% of your Basic + DA.
- This is the only major deduction available under the New Tax Regime.
- There is an overall cap of ₹7.5 Lakh on combined employer contributions to EPF + NPS + Superannuation.
- Strategy: Ask your HR to route part of your CTC as employer NPS contribution. This reduces your taxable income even under the New Regime.
📈 NPS Investment Options
NPS allows you to choose your asset allocation:
- Equity (Class E): Up to 75% allocation for individuals below 50.
- Corporate Bonds (Class C): Medium risk, steady returns.
- Government Securities (Class G): Low risk, sovereign guarantee.
- Alternative Assets (Class A): REITs, InvITs.
Historical Returns (10-year average):
| Allocation | Returns |
|---|---|
| Aggressive (75% Equity) | 11-13% CAGR |
| Moderate (50% Equity) | 9-11% CAGR |
| Conservative (25% Equity) | 8-9% CAGR |
⚠️ The Lock-in Catch
NPS is extremely illiquid:
- Withdrawal at 60: 60% of the corpus can be withdrawn tax-free. 40% must be used to purchase an annuity (which generates taxable pension income).
- Partial Withdrawal: Allowed after 3 years for specific reasons (education, marriage, medical, home purchase). Maximum 3 partial withdrawals, each up to 25% of own contributions.
- Premature Exit (before 60): Only 20% can be withdrawn; 80% must go to annuity.
🎯 The IT Professional Strategy
| Action | Tax Benefit |
|---|---|
| Invest ₹50,000 yourself in NPS Tier-I | ₹50,000 deduction under 80CCD(1B) — Old Regime |
| Ask employer to contribute 10% of Basic to NPS | Deduction under 80CCD(2) — BOTH Regimes |
| Total extra deduction | ₹50,000 + Employer portion |
At the 30% slab, the ₹50,000 80CCD(1B) investment alone saves you ₹15,600 in tax (including cess) every year. Over a 30-year career, this adds up significantly.
Next: Part 7 — Capital Gains Tax →
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