India’s retirement framework is quietly undergoing a structural shift. And at the centre of it is a new idea: your pension should not just help you live longer, it should help you stay financially resilient
while doing so. That’s the thinking behind NPS Swasthya.
What is NPS Swasthya?
NPS Swasthya is a new pension-linked healthcare initiative introduced by the Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority (PFRDA) under the broader National Pension System (NPS) framework.
It aims to solve a very real problem in India’s retirement story: while people are saving for retirement, a large part of their future expenses, especially healthcare, remains unpredictable, inflation-heavy, and often requires immediate liquidity.
Unlike traditional NPS accounts, which remain largely locked in until retirement, NPS Swasthya allows partial withdrawals specifically for medical needs. In simple terms, it blends long-term retirement investing with limited, need-based access for healthcare expenses.
Why NPS Swasthya matters now
The timing is not accidental. Healthcare inflation in India is running significantly higher than general inflation and is expected to remain elevated. At the same time, a large share of medical expenses in India continues to be funded out-of-pocket.
This creates a structural gap. You may have a sizeable retirement corpus on paper, but if it is illiquid when you need it the most, the planning breaks down.
NPS Swasthya is designed to bridge exactly this gap.
Key features of NPS Swasthya
Under the current Proof-of-Concept (PoC), the product introduces a dual-purpose structure, retirement accumulation plus healthcare access.
Subscribers can withdraw up to 25% of their own contributions for medical purposes. These withdrawals are not one-time; multiple withdrawals are allowed, subject to conditions. The minimum corpus required to trigger a withdrawal is Rs 50,000.
Importantly, the definition of healthcare is broad. It covers outpatient expenses, diagnostics, pharmacy bills, and hospitalisation, making it more practical than narrowly defined medical withdrawal rules seen in some financial products.
In extreme cases, where medical expenses exceed 70% of the total corpus, even a full exit is permitted.
From an investment perspective, the initial scheme, launched by ICICI Prudential Pension Funds Management Company, follows a high-equity strategy, with 70% to 100% allocation to equities. The idea is straightforward: to counter long-term healthcare inflation through growth-oriented returns, while retaining some allocation to debt and money market instruments for stability.
Benefits: What works in its favour
The biggest advantage of NPS Swasthya is flexibility without fully compromising discipline. It acknowledges that healthcare is the single largest uncertain expense in retirement and creates a structured way to deal with it, without forcing investors to break their entire retirement corpus.
It also aligns with behavioural finance. Instead of expecting individuals to maintain separate, perfectly planned buckets for retirement and healthcare, it integrates both within one regulated structure.
Another key benefit is continuity. Since it sits within the NPS framework, investors continue to benefit from long-term compounding, professional fund management, and regulatory oversight.
The trade-offs you should understand
The biggest risk lies in behaviour. If investors begin to treat the 25% withdrawal flexibility as a liquidity feature rather than a healthcare safeguard, it could dilute long-term retirement outcomes.
Second, the high-equity allocation, while logical from an inflation-beating standpoint, may not suit conservative investors, especially those closer to retirement.
Third, this is still in the testing phase. Data on adoption, returns, and withdrawal patterns is not yet available, which means investors are essentially looking at a concept rather than a proven product.
Taxability: What to expect
Since NPS Swasthya operates within the NPS structure, its tax treatment is expected to broadly mirror existing NPS rules, though detailed clarifications may evolve as the product matures.
Currently, contributions to NPS qualify for tax benefits under Sections 80C and 80CCD(1B), while partial withdrawals are generally tax-exempt if they meet specified conditions.
If NPS Swasthya withdrawals are classified under similar “partial withdrawal for specified purposes” rules, healthcare withdrawals could remain tax-efficient. However, investors should watch for official tax guidelines specific to this product before making assumptions.
How to open an NPS Swasthya account
Currently, NPS Swasthya is not fully rolled out for the general public. It is being tested through select pension fund managers under the PoC framework. Once officially launched, it is expected to be accessible through the same channels as NPS, online platforms, Points of Presence (PoPs), and intermediaries offering NPS onboarding.
Existing NPS subscribers may also get the option to allocate a portion of their portfolio to Swasthya-linked schemes, depending on final guidelines.













