NPS Guide — National Pension System Explained🇮🇳 India

Everything you need to know about India's National Pension System — from opening an account to maximising your retirement corpus with smart tax planning.

1. What Is NPS?

The National Pension System (NPS) is a government-backed, market-linked retirement savings scheme regulated by the Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority (PFRDA). It was launched in 2004 for government employees and opened to all Indian citizens in 2009.

Unlike EPF or PPF which offer fixed returns, NPS invests your money across equity, corporate bonds, and government securities — giving you the potential for higher returns while building a retirement corpus.

Key features at a glance

2. Tier I vs Tier II: Key Differences

NPS has two account types. Here's how they compare:

FeatureTier I (Pension)Tier II (Savings)
PurposeRetirement corpusFlexible investment
Lock-inUntil age 60No lock-in
Tax benefitUp to ₹2L (80CCD)Only for govt employees
Min opening₹500₹1,000
Min yearly₹1,000No minimum
WithdrawalRestricted (partial after 3 yrs)Anytime
PrerequisiteNoneMust have Tier I

Recommendation: Most investors should focus on Tier I for the tax benefits and retirement corpus. Use Tier II only if you need flexible access to a portion of your NPS investments.

3. NPS Asset Classes & Fund Choices

NPS offers four asset classes that you can mix based on your risk appetite:

ClassInvests InRiskHistorical Return
E (Equity)Large-cap stocks (index funds)High10–14% p.a.
C (Corporate Bonds)Corporate debt securitiesModerate8–10% p.a.
G (Govt Securities)Government bondsLow7–9% p.a.
A (Alternative)REITs, InvITs, CMBSModerate-High8–11% p.a.

Active Choice vs Auto Choice

For investors under 40: Active Choice with 75% E, 15% C, 10% G typically delivers the best long-term results.

4. Tax Benefits Under 80CCD

NPS offers one of the most generous tax deductions in India — up to ₹2 lakh per year:

SectionDeductionLimitAvailable To
80CCD(1)Employee contribution10% of salary (max ₹1.5L within 80C)All citizens
80CCD(1B)Additional NPS contribution₹50,000 (over and above 80C)All citizens
80CCD(2)Employer contribution14% of basic (govt) / 10% of basic (private)Salaried employees

Tax saving example (30% bracket)

For someone in the 30% bracket, investing ₹50,000 in NPS under 80CCD(1B) gives an immediate 31.2% return just from tax savings — before any market returns.

5. Historical NPS Returns

NPS returns vary by fund manager and asset class. Here are the approximate annualised returns over 10 years (as of early 2026):

Fund ManagerEquity (E)Corporate Bond (C)Govt Bond (G)
SBI Pension Fund12.5%9.1%8.8%
HDFC Pension Fund13.1%9.3%8.9%
ICICI Pru Pension12.8%9.2%8.7%
Kotak Pension Fund12.3%9.0%8.5%
UTI Pension Fund12.1%9.0%8.6%

Key insight: NPS equity funds have delivered 12–13% returns — comparable to large-cap mutual funds but with significantly lower expense ratios (0.01–0.09% vs 1–1.5% for mutual funds).

6. Withdrawal & Exit Rules

At retirement (age 60)

Partial withdrawal (before 60)

Premature exit (before 60)

7. Understanding Annuity

The mandatory 40% annuity portion is where most NPS investors have questions. An annuity gives you a regular monthly pension for life.

Annuity providers (ASPs)

You can choose from licensed Annuity Service Providers like LIC, SBI Life, HDFC Life, ICICI Prudential Life, etc.

Annuity options

Best choice for most: "Annuity for life with return of purchase price to nominee" — you get a regular pension AND your family gets the corpus back.

Current annuity rates are approximately 5.5–6.5% per year on the corpus.

8. NPS vs EPF vs PPF vs Mutual Funds

FeatureNPSEPFPPFELSS (Mutual Fund)
Returns8–13% (market)8.25% (fixed)7.1% (fixed)10–15% (market)
Tax deduction₹2L (80CCD)₹1.5L (80C)₹1.5L (80C)₹1.5L (80C)
Lock-inUntil 60Until 5815 years3 years
Expense ratio0.01–0.09%N/AN/A0.5–1.5%
Maturity tax60% exempt + annuity taxableExempt (EEE)Exempt (EEE)LTCG 12.5% above ₹1.25L
FlexibilityChoose asset allocationFixed allocationFixed rateFull market exposure

Bottom line: NPS is the only instrument offering an extra ₹50,000 deduction (80CCD(1B)) beyond the 80C limit. If you're in the 30% bracket, this alone makes NPS worth considering even before market returns.

9. 10 Tips to Maximise Your NPS

  1. Start early: A 25-year-old investing ₹5,000/month at 10% builds ₹1.9 crore by 60. Starting at 35 builds ₹66 lakh for the same contribution.
  2. Max out 80CCD(1B): Always invest at least ₹50,000 for the additional tax deduction.
  3. Use Active Choice: Pick 75% equity (E), 15% corporate bonds (C), 10% govt securities (G) if you're under 40.
  4. Choose a top performer: Compare fund managers on NPS Trust's website. HDFC and SBI have consistently delivered strong equity returns.
  5. Increase contributions yearly: Step up your investment by 10% every year to match salary growth.
  6. Get employer contribution: Ask your employer to contribute to NPS under 80CCD(2) — it's tax-free up to 14% of basic salary for government employees, 10% for private.
  7. Don't withdraw early: Premature exits reduce your corpus significantly and limit lump sum to 20%.
  8. Review allocation annually: Rebalance your asset mix as you age — shift towards bonds after 50.
  9. Use Auto Choice after 50: The Aggressive Lifecycle Fund (LC75) automatically reduces equity exposure as you approach 60.
  10. Plan annuity selection early: Research annuity providers and rates before retirement to make an informed choice.

Calculate Your NPS Corpus → Plan Retirement → Check Tax Savings →