The National Pension System (NPS), which is a voluntary and government-backed retirement savings plan, allows individuals to build a steady corpus for their post-retirement years. It is regulated by the Pension Fund
Regulatory and Development Authority (PFRDA). NPS gives investors the flexibility to decide where their money is invested — in equity, corporate debt, or government securities — depending on their comfort with risk and return expectations.
How NPS Works
NPS functions as a long-term retirement account. You contribute regularly during your working years, and the amount grows through market-linked returns. On reaching the age of 60, you can withdraw up to 60% of your accumulated corpus tax-free, while the remaining 40% must be used to purchase an annuity that provides a monthly pension.
There are two types of NPS accounts:
Tier I: The main retirement account that comes with tax benefits but limited withdrawal flexibility.
Tier II: A voluntary savings account offering liquidity but without additional tax incentives.
You can also switch fund managers or modify your asset allocation, making NPS more flexible than traditional pension products.
Tax Benefits Under NPS
One of the biggest advantages of NPS is its tax efficiency.
Contributions are eligible for deduction up to Rs 1.5 lakh under Section 80CCD(1) as part of Section 80C.
An additional deduction of Rs 50,000 is available under Section 80CCD(1B), taking the total possible deduction to Rs 2 lakh per year.
Contributions made by employers (up to 10% of salary) are also deductible under Section 80CCD(2).
How Much Corpus Can Rs 5,000 Per Month Create?
Suppose you start investing Rs 5,000 per month in NPS at the age of 30 and continue till 60. Assuming an average annual return of 10%, which is reasonable given NPS’s equity-debt mix, here’s how your investment could grow:
Monthly investment: Rs 5,000
Investment period: 30 years
Total contribution: Rs 18 lakh
Expected corpus at 10% return: Around Rs 1.13 crore
At retirement, you can withdraw 60% of this amount, which comes to about Rs 68 lakh, entirely tax-free. The remaining 40%, roughly Rs 45 lakh, must be used to buy an annuity. If the annuity yields about 6% annually, you could earn a monthly pension of around Rs 22,000-23,000 for life.
Why NPS Makes Sense
NPS scores high on several counts. It’s low-cost, transparent, and tax-efficient. The fund management charges are among the lowest globally, ensuring more of your money stays invested. It also offers better long-term growth potential than traditional instruments like PPF or bank deposits, thanks to its market-linked structure.




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