- 1. The Section 80C universe in 2026
- 2. ELSS — highest return potential, with caveats
- 3. PPF — the dependable government-backed option
- 4. NPS — retirement-focused with tax bonuses
- 5. The age-based decision matrix
- 6. The risk-tolerance overlay
- 7. The liquidity overlay
- 8. What we recommend most clients (and why it varies)
1. The Section 80C universe in 2026
Section 80C of the Indian Income Tax Act allows you to deduct up to ₹1.5 lakh of qualifying investments from your taxable income annually. For someone in the 30% tax bracket, this saves up to ₹46,800 in tax every year — a meaningful return before the investment even earns anything.
The eligible options under 80C are extensive:
- Equity-Linked Savings Scheme (ELSS) — equity mutual funds with 3-year lock-in
- Public Provident Fund (PPF) — 15-year government-backed scheme
- National Pension System (NPS) Tier-I — retirement-focused
- Employees' Provident Fund (EPF) — automatic for salaried employees
- 5-year tax-saver fixed deposits
- Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana — for daughters
- Life insurance premiums
- Home loan principal repayment
- Children's tuition fees (up to 2 children)
The ₹1.5 lakh limit is shared across all of these. Most professionals choose between the top three pure-investment options: ELSS, PPF, and NPS. The right answer depends on your age, risk appetite, liquidity needs, and tax bracket.
Note: under the new tax regime (default since FY2023-24), 80C deductions don't apply. If you're on the new regime, this article is mostly informational. If you're on the old regime, this is where you optimise.
2. ELSS — highest return potential, with caveats
ELSS funds are equity mutual funds with a 3-year lock-in. They invest predominantly in stocks and have historically delivered 11-14% annualised returns over 10+ year periods. The fastest-growing 80C option.
Pros:
- Highest historical returns among 80C options
- Shortest lock-in (3 years)
- Can be SIP-invested (no need for lumpsum)
- Liquid after lock-in (sell anytime)
- Capital gains over ₹1.25L taxed at 12.5% — favourable
Cons:
- Equity market volatility — could be down 20-30% during your lock-in window
- Returns are not guaranteed
- 3-year minimum hold required even if you'd want to exit early
Best for: Investors with 10+ year horizons, comfortable with equity volatility, and currently under-allocated to equity.
3. PPF — the dependable government-backed option
PPF is India's classic safe-haven 80C investment. 15-year lock-in (with partial withdrawal allowed from year 7), interest rate set quarterly by the government (currently 7.1%), and EEE status — no tax on contributions, growth, or withdrawal.
Pros:
- Government-backed (sovereign guarantee)
- Tax-free interest and maturity (EEE: Exempt-Exempt-Exempt)
- Compounding works powerfully over 15 years
- Loan facility from years 3-6
- Partial withdrawal from year 7
Cons:
- Long 15-year lock-in (full liquidity only at maturity)
- Interest rate is government-set and revised quarterly — has been falling for years (was 8.7% in 2014, 7.1% now)
- Annual contribution capped at ₹1.5L
- One PPF per person (not per family member)
Best for: Conservative investors, those who already have substantial equity exposure elsewhere, and parents building a long-term children's corpus (open PPF in your name and your child's).
4. NPS — retirement-focused with tax bonuses
NPS Tier-I is the National Pension System — a market-linked retirement scheme with a unique tax twist. Contributions up to ₹1.5L count under regular 80C, but an additional ₹50,000 deduction is available under Section 80CCD(1B) exclusively for NPS. Most professionals miss this extra deduction.
Pros:
- Extra ₹50,000 deduction beyond 80C — tax saving of ₹15,600 in 30% bracket
- Low-cost (~0.10% expense ratio versus 1-2% for mutual funds)
- Equity exposure up to 75% (your choice)
- Long-term compounding for retirement
- Auto-rebalancing options (LC25, LC50, LC75 lifecycle funds)
Cons:
- Locked until age 60 (with limited partial withdrawal options)
- At maturity, only 60% can be withdrawn lump-sum (tax-free); 40% must be used to buy an annuity (taxed at slab rate over time)
- Annuity rates in India are mediocre (5-7%)
- Less liquid than ELSS or PPF
Best for: Salaried professionals 35+ who want extra tax savings beyond 80C, who don't need this money before retirement, and who value low-cost equity exposure.
5. The age-based decision matrix
Your age is the strongest predictor of which option(s) make sense:
| Age Group | Primary Choice | Secondary | Why |
|---|---|---|---|
| 22-30 | ELSS (₹1L-1.5L) | NPS for the extra ₹50K | Long horizon, equity wins, build NPS habit |
| 30-40 | ELSS + PPF mix | NPS for ₹50K extra | Balance growth with stability |
| 40-50 | PPF + ELSS | NPS still useful | Reducing risk while still compounding |
| 50-58 | PPF heavy + small ELSS | NPS less useful (closer to 60) | Capital preservation matters more |
| 58+ | 5-year FD or PPF if you have one | Minimal new equity | Pre-retirement, low risk tolerance |
6. The risk-tolerance overlay
Age is one input; risk tolerance is another. If you have high equity exposure already (RSUs from employer, large equity portfolio), you may want PPF-heavy 80C even at age 30. If you have zero equity exposure, ELSS-heavy makes sense even at 50.
Quick test: if your overall portfolio drops 30% next year, would you panic-sell? If yes, lean conservative on 80C. If you'd see it as a buying opportunity, lean aggressive.
7. The liquidity overlay
If you might need this money before the lock-in expires, ELSS is the only option (3 years vs 15 for PPF, until 60 for NPS). For example: if you're saving for a house in 5-7 years, ELSS is the right vehicle for some of that money.
If this money is genuinely "set and forget" until retirement, NPS or PPF win on tax efficiency and discipline.
8. What we recommend most clients (and why it varies)
For a 35-year-old salaried professional in the 30% bracket on the old tax regime, our typical 80C structure:
- ELSS SIP: ₹8,000-10,000/month (₹96K-1.2L annual) — primary equity allocation
- PPF: ₹30K-50K/year — debt allocation, EEE benefit
- NPS Tier-I: ₹50,000/year — for the additional 80CCD(1B) deduction
This combination uses the full ₹1.5L 80C limit + ₹50K NPS extra = ₹2L of deductions, equity-heavy growth, with PPF stability and NPS retirement focus.
For HNI clients (₹1Cr+ annual income), 80C is essentially noise — they'll often default to PPF for simplicity, accept the deduction is small relative to total tax, and focus optimisation efforts on capital gains, business expenses, and LRS structures.
Section 80C done right
- Under 35 + high risk tolerance: ELSS-heavy for compound growth.
- 35-50 + moderate risk: Split between ELSS and PPF.
- Above 50 or low risk: PPF + NPS make more sense than ELSS.
- NPS Tier-I gives an additional ₹50,000 deduction beyond 80C — most miss this.
- The 30% tax bracket benefits the most from these deductions.