NPS Tax Benefits: Save Up to ₹2 Lakh+ in Taxes (Old & New Regime Guide)

FY 2025-26 Updated
Budget 2025 Included
PFRDA Dec 2025 Amendments

Every NPS deduction explained — 80CCD(1), 80CCD(1B), 80CCD(2). Includes the Budget 2025 change raising employer NPS to 14% for private sector, PFRDA Dec 2025 exit rules, NPS Vatsalya benefit, and ITR filing steps.

₹2L+
Max Deduction
14%
Employer NPS Limit
60%
Tax-Free at Exit
EEE
Tax Status

The National Pension System (NPS) is one of India’s most tax-efficient investments — but only if you know exactly which sections apply to you, and under which tax regime. Most guides online miss the critical Budget 2025 update or confuse old and new regime rules.

This guide covers every angle of NPS tax benefits for FY 2025-26 — in plain, simple English. No jargon, no fluff.

🔔

Budget 2025 — Big Change: Private Sector Employer NPS Limit Now 14%Earlier, the 14% limit under Section 80CCD(2) was only for Central Government employees. Budget 2025 extended it to all private sector employees from FY 2025-26. If your employer contributes 14% of your basic to NPS, you get full deduction. Talk to your HR if they haven’t updated your CTC structure yet.

⚡ Quick Answer

What Are NPS Tax Benefits? (Quick Answer)

NPS gives you tax deductions under three sections of the Income Tax Act. Here’s the full picture at a glance:

  • Section 80CCD(1): Own NPS contribution — 10% of salary (20% for self-employed), within ₹1.5L 80C ceiling. Old regime only.
  • Section 80CCD(1B): Extra ₹50,000 deduction on NPS Tier-I, over and above ₹1.5L 80C. Old regime only. Now covers NPS Vatsalya too.
  • Section 80CCD(2): Employer’s NPS contribution — up to 14% of Basic+DA for all employees (Budget 2025). Works in both old and new tax regime.
  • Withdrawal: 60% of corpus is tax-free as lump sum at maturity. 40% for annuity is tax-exempt at purchase.
  • Tier-I only: All deductions apply only to NPS Tier-I. Tier-II has no tax benefit for most people.

🧮 NPS Calculator
📋 Withdrawal Rules
⚖️ Tier 1 vs Tier 2
📈 NPS Returns
👶 NPS Vatsalya

Old Tax Regime vs New Tax Regime — NPS Deductions Compared

Under the new tax regime (Section 115BAC), Chapter VI-A deductions like 80C, 80D, 80CCD(1), and 80CCD(1B) are not allowed. The only NPS deduction that survives in the new regime is Section 80CCD(2) — your employer’s contribution to NPS.

NPS Deduction Who Can Claim Limit (FY 2025-26) Old Regime New Regime
80CCD(1) — Self Contribution Salaried employees 10% of Basic+DA (within ₹1.5L ceiling) ✔ Yes ✘ No
80CCD(1) — Self Contribution Self-employed 20% of gross income (within ₹1.5L ceiling) ✔ Yes ✘ No
80CCD(1B) — Additional ₹50K All individuals + NPS Vatsalya ₹50,000 — over & above 80C limit ✔ Yes ✘ No
80CCD(2) — Employer Contribution Budget 2025 Salaried employees 14% of Basic+DA (all employees) ✔ Yes ✔ Yes ← Only NPS benefit in new regime!
💡

New Regime Users — Your Only NPS LeverOn the new regime? Your only NPS tax benefit is Section 80CCD(2) — employer’s contribution. After Budget 2025, this is now 14% of basic for everyone. Ask your HR to restructure CTC with employer NPS. Calculate your savings →

Section-wise NPS Tax Deductions: Full Breakdown

Section 80CCD(1)
Self-Contribution — Salaried Employees
Within ₹1.5L 80C
  • Limit: Up to 10% of Basic Salary + Dearness Allowance
  • Clubbed inside the ₹1.5 lakh overall ceiling shared by 80C + 80CCC + 80CCD(1) combined
  • If PPF + ELSS + LIC already = ₹1.5L, this NPS contribution gives no extra deduction — use 80CCD(1B) then
  • Only available in old tax regime
✔ Old Regime
✘ New Regime

Section 80CCD(1)
Self-Contribution — Freelancers / Self-Employed
20% of Gross
  • Limit: Up to 20% of gross total income
  • Still subject to combined ₹1.5 lakh ceiling under 80C + 80CCC + 80CCD(1)
  • No 80CCD(2) available — you have no employer
  • Best strategy: ₹1.5L via 80C + ₹50,000 via 80CCD(1B) = ₹2 lakh total
✔ Old Regime
✘ New Regime

Section 80CCD(1B)
Additional ₹50,000 — NPS Exclusive Benefit
Extra ₹50,000
  • Additional ₹50,000 deduction for NPS Tier-I — completely separate from 80C
  • Combined potential: ₹1,50,000 (80C) + ₹50,000 (80CCD(1B)) = ₹2 lakh total
  • Available to both salaried and self-employed individuals
  • Budget 2025: NPS Vatsalya contributions also now qualify for this ₹50,000 deduction

Even If Your 80C Is Full — Still Claim ThisAlready maxed PPF + ELSS = ₹1.5L? Still invest ₹50,000 in NPS Tier-I separately and claim 80CCD(1B). At 30% bracket, that’s ≈₹15,600 extra saved every year.
✔ Old Regime
✘ New Regime

Section 80CCD(2)
Employer Contribution — Works in New Regime!
14% of Basic+DA
  • Post-Budget 2025: All employees — private, state, central govt — can claim 14% of Basic + DA as deduction
  • No absolute rupee cap — percentage-based, so higher earners benefit more
  • Available in both old and new tax regime
  • Combined employer EPF + NPS + Superannuation must not exceed ₹7.5 lakh/year — excess becomes taxable perquisite
✔ Both Old & New Regime

NPS Tier-I vs Tier-II: Which One Has Tax Benefits?

Feature NPS Tier-I NPS Tier-II
Tax Deduction (80CCD) ✔ Fully eligible ✘ Not eligible (most people)
Lock-in Till age 60 No lock-in at all
Min Contribution ₹1,000/year ₹250
Withdrawal Rule-based partial & full exit Anytime, any amount
Exception Central Govt employees with 3-yr lock-in Tier-II: 80C benefit available
⚠️

Tier-II Does NOT Save Tax for Most PeopleTier-II is just a flexible investment account — no deduction under 80CCD(1), (1B), or (2). Only Central Govt employees with 3-year lock-in Tier-II get an 80C benefit. Full comparison: NPS Tier 1 vs Tier 2 →

NPS Withdrawal Taxation — What Is Tax-Free?

Exit Scenario What You Can Withdraw Tax Treatment
Normal Exit at 60+ Up to 60% lump sum; min 40% to annuity Lump sum = Tax-FREE. Annuity purchase = Tax-FREE. Pension received = Taxable per slab.
Early Exit before 60 (PFRDA Dec 2025) Up to 80% lump sum (revised from 20%); min 20% to annuity 60% tax-free threshold under Income Tax still applies. Tax on extra 20% lump sum awaits legislative clarity.
Partial Withdrawal Up to 25% of own contributions (after 3 yrs) Tax-FREE (up to 3 times lifetime)
Corpus ≤ ₹5 Lakh 100% lump sum Tax-FREE
Death of Subscriber 100% to nominee Fully Tax-FREE for nominee

Real Examples: How Much Tax Can You Actually Save?

Example 1 — Old Tax Regime / Salaried

Using 80CCD(1B) on Top of a Full 80C

Assumptions: Annual Basic ₹9L, Total Income ₹16L, Old regime, 30% slab, 80C already full (PPF + ELSS = ₹1.5L)

Gross Taxable Income
₹16,00,000
80C Claimed (PPF + ELSS)
₹1,50,000
NPS via 80CCD(1B)
₹50,000
Net Taxable Income
₹14,00,000
Extra Tax Saved via NPS
≈ ₹15,600/yr
Example 2 — New Tax Regime / Salaried

Employer NPS via 80CCD(2) — Budget 2025 Benefit

Assumptions: Basic ₹12L/year, Employer contributes 14% = ₹1.68L to NPS, New regime, 30% slab

Employer NPS (14% of ₹12L)
₹1,68,000
Deduction under 80CCD(2)
₹1,68,000
Income Reduced By
₹1,68,000
Tax Saved (30% + 4% cess)
≈ ₹52,416/yr
Example 3 — Self-Employed

Freelancer / Consultant Maximising NPS Deductions

Assumptions: Gross Income ₹22L, Old regime, 30% slab, no employer NPS possible

Gross Total Income
₹22,00,000
80CCD(1) (capped at 80C ceiling)
₹1,50,000
Extra via 80CCD(1B)
₹50,000
Total NPS Deduction
₹2,00,000
Tax Saved (30% + cess)
≈ ₹62,400/yr

How to Claim NPS Deductions in Your ITR

Documents You’ll Need

  • PRAN Annual Statement: Download from NSDL CRA — shows exact Tier-I contribution for the year
  • Form 16 Part B: Employer’s tax certificate — shows employer NPS contribution under 80CCD(2)
  • Form 12BB: Investment declaration submitted to employer
  • Bank Statement: Proof of NPS self-contributions from your account

Step-by-Step: Filing NPS Deductions in ITR

  1. 1Log in to incometax.gov.in → e-File → Income Tax Returns
  2. 2Select ITR form — ITR-1 (salaried), ITR-2 (capital gains), ITR-3 (business/freelance)
  3. 3Choose Assessment Year 2026-27 for FY 2025-26 income
  4. 4Select Old Tax Regime if claiming 80CCD(1) or 80CCD(1B). For only 80CCD(2), new regime also works.
  5. 5Go to Deductions → Chapter VI-A → find 80CCD(1) and 80CCD(1B) as separate fields. Enter actual amounts.
  6. 680CCD(1B) is a separate field — do NOT add it inside the 80C box. They have different limits.
  7. 780CCD(2) is usually pre-filled from Form 16/TDS — verify it matches your PRAN statement.
  8. 8Submit and e-verify your return. Save ITR-V with your PRAN statement.

Common Mistakes — Avoid These!

  • Adding 80CCD(1B) inside the 80C box — they are separate fields with separate limits
  • Claiming 80CCD(1) or 80CCD(1B) while on the new tax regime — not allowed
  • Entering Tier-II NPS contributions as a tax deduction — Tier-II gives no benefit
  • Not declaring 80CCD(2) even when employer contributed — must still be reported in ITR
  • Treating employer NPS as part of your personal 80CCD(1B) limit — they are entirely different
  • Not keeping PRAN statement as proof — save it for minimum 6 years

NPS Tax Benefits — Frequently Asked Questions

Can I claim NPS tax benefit under the new tax regime?+
Yes, but only one — Section 80CCD(2), your employer’s NPS contribution. Your own contributions (80CCD(1) and 80CCD(1B)) are not deductible in the new regime. After Budget 2025, employer NPS is now 14% of basic for all employees. Ask your HR to restructure CTC — it’s the biggest NPS tax advantage available in the new regime.
What is Section 80CCD(1B) and how is it different from 80C?+
Section 80CCD(1B) gives you an extra ₹50,000 deduction for NPS Tier-I — completely separate from 80C. The ₹1.5 lakh under 80C is for PPF, ELSS, LIC etc. The ₹50,000 under 80CCD(1B) is an additional, exclusive NPS deduction. Combined total = ₹2 lakh.
What is the employer NPS limit after Budget 2025?+
After Budget 2025, the employer NPS deduction under 80CCD(2) was raised to 14% of Basic + DA for all employees — including private sector. Earlier, private sector was capped at 10%. This applies from FY 2025-26. Talk to your HR immediately if your CTC hasn’t been updated.
Does NPS Tier-II have any tax benefit?+
For most people — no. Tier-II gives no deduction under 80CCD(1), (1B), or (2). Only Central Govt employees with a 3-year lock-in Tier-II arrangement get an 80C benefit. For everyone else, Tier-II is a zero-lock-in, zero-tax-benefit investment account. See: NPS Tier 1 vs Tier 2 →
How much of NPS withdrawal is tax-free at retirement?+
At normal exit (age 60+), up to 60% of your corpus is completely tax-free as lump sum. The remaining 40% goes to annuity — tax-free at purchase. Monthly pension from annuity is taxable per your slab. If total corpus is ₹5 lakh or less, 100% can be withdrawn tax-free.
Is partial withdrawal from NPS taxable?+
No — partial withdrawals are fully tax-free. After 3 years, you can withdraw up to 25% of your own contributions for specific purposes: education, marriage, home purchase, critical illness, disability, or starting a business. Allowed up to 3 times lifetime. Full rules: NPS Withdrawal Rules →
What changed in PFRDA’s December 2025 exit rules?+
Two big changes for non-government subscribers: (1) Exit/deferment age extended to 85 years. (2) For early exit before 60, now up to 80% can be withdrawn as lump sum (was only 20% earlier). Note: Income Tax Act still treats 60% as the tax-free threshold. Full details: NPS Withdrawal Rules →
Can self-employed claim employer NPS deduction (80CCD(2))?+
No. 80CCD(2) is specifically for employer contributions. Self-employed have no employer. Your NPS deductions are limited to 80CCD(1) (up to 20% of gross, within ₹1.5L ceiling) + 80CCD(1B) (₹50,000 extra). Maximum = ₹2 lakh/year.
What is NPS Vatsalya’s tax benefit in FY 2025-26?+
Budget 2025 introduced ₹50,000 deduction under 80CCD(1B) for parents contributing to NPS Vatsalya Tier-I for their minor child. Available from FY 2025-26. Minimum contribution ₹1,000/year. Account converts to regular NPS Tier-I at age 18. Full guide: NPS Vatsalya →
How do I calculate my exact NPS tax savings?+
Use our free NPS Calculator at npscalculator.org.in — it supports all schemes with Budget 2025 rules built in. Quick estimate: multiply your NPS deduction by your tax rate (20% or 30%) + 4% cess = annual tax saved.

More NPS Guides You Should Read

🧮NPS Calculator 2025-26Retirement corpus, monthly pension & lump sum. Budget 2025 rules built in.Open Calculator →
📋NPS Withdrawal Rules 202580% lump sum rule, exit age 85, partial withdrawal — all explained.Read Guide →
⚖️NPS Tier 1 vs Tier 2Lock-in, tax treatment, withdrawal flexibility — full comparison.Compare →
📈NPS Returns & Fund PerformanceAll 11 fund managers ranked. Scheme E, C, G CAGR data.See Returns →
👶NPS Vatsalya GuideBudget 2025 tax benefit, exit rules at 18, asset allocation.Read Guide →
📰Latest NPS NewsPFRDA circulars, Budget updates, NPS AUM — all in one place.View Updates →

Conclusion: Your NPS Tax Benefits Action Plan for FY 2025-26

Old regime + salaried: Max your 80C (₹1.5L) then separately invest ₹50,000 in NPS Tier-I for 80CCD(1B). That’s ≈₹15,600 extra saved every year — no other instrument gives you this.

New regime + salaried: Push your employer to contribute 14% of your basic as NPS under 80CCD(2). A ₹12L basic = ₹1.68L employer NPS = ₹52,000+ tax saved annually — in the new regime itself.

Self-employed: No employer NPS, but you can claim ₹2 lakh total through 80CCD(1) + 80CCD(1B) under old regime. ≈₹62,400 saved yearly at 30% bracket.

Use our free NPS Calculator to model your exact retirement corpus and annual tax savings based on your actual numbers.

⚠️ Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute tax, financial, or legal advice. Tax laws are subject to change — rules here are based on Income Tax Act provisions for FY 2025-26 / AY 2026-27. Always consult a qualified Chartered Accountant (CA) before making investment or tax decisions. For latest rules: Income Tax India · PFRDA · NPS Trust. npscalculator.org.in is an independent resource, not affiliated with PFRDA or any pension fund manager.