Complete comparison of NPS and PPF for retirement planning. Tax benefits, returns, withdrawal rules, and smart combination strategies.
Planning for retirement? You've probably heard about both NPS (National Pension System) and PPF (Public Provident Fund). But which one should you choose?
After analyzing both for hundreds of clients over the past 5 years, here's the complete breakdown that will help you decide.
| Feature | NPS | PPF |
|---|---|---|
| Lock-in | Until age 60 | 15 years |
| Tax Benefit | 80C + 80CCD(1B) | Only 80C |
| Annual Limit | No limit | ₹1.5 lakh |
| Expected Returns | 9-12% | 7.1% (current) |
| Risk | Market-linked | Government-backed |
| Liquidity | Very low | Partial from 7th year |
| Maturity Tax | 60% tax-free | Completely tax-free |
PPF offers EEE status - no tax on investment, growth, or withdrawal. Your ₹22.5 lakh (15 years of ₹1.5 lakh) can grow to ₹45+ lakh completely tax-free.
Current PPF rate is 7.1%. While it fluctuates, it has historically ranged between 7-8.5%. No market risk means you sleep peacefully.
From the 7th year, you can withdraw up to 50% for specific purposes like education, medical emergencies, or house purchase.
Take a loan against your PPF balance from the 3rd year at just 1% above PPF rate.
After 15 years, extend in 5-year blocks without fresh contributions and continue earning tax-free returns.
PPF is ideal if you:
NPS equity funds have delivered 10-14% returns over long periods. Even conservative funds give 8-9%, beating PPF after considering tax.
Beyond ₹1.5 lakh under 80C, you get extra ₹50,000 deduction under 80CCD(1B). Total tax benefit can be ₹60,000 annually for 30% tax bracket.
Unlike PPF's ₹1.5 lakh cap, NPS has no upper limit. High earners can invest much more for retirement.
Your money is managed by professional fund managers across equity, debt, and government securities.
With higher expected returns, NPS better protects your purchasing power over 25-30 years.
NPS is ideal if you:
Rajesh, age 30, wants to retire at 60
Don't choose one or the other. Here's the optimal approach for most people:
PPF Route:
NPS Route:
Winner: NPS gives better tax efficiency for high earners.
PPF Route:
NPS Route:
Winner: PPF gives better tax efficiency for middle-income earners.
Conservative (low risk): 70% PPF + 30% NPS Balanced (medium risk): 50% PPF + 50% NPS Aggressive (high risk): 30% PPF + 70% NPS
Don't wait for the "perfect" strategy. Starting early beats perfect allocation.
Rebalance based on age, market conditions, and personal circumstances.
Both NPS and PPF are excellent retirement tools. Your choice should depend on:
Best approach for most people: Invest in both. Use PPF as your retirement safety net and NPS as your growth engine.
Want to see exact projections for your situation? Use our [[NPS Calculator](/disclaimer/calculators/nps)](/en/calculators/nps) and [[PPF Calculator](/disclaimer/calculators/ppf)](/en/calculators/ppf) to run your numbers.
About the Author:
Researched and written by BharatFin Retirement Planning Team
Reviewed by: SEBI Registered Investment Advisor
Last Updated: April 2026
Sources: PFRDA, EPFO, Ministry of Finance data
This article is for educational purposes only. Retirement planning needs vary by individual. Consult a certified financial planner for personalized advice.
NPS has higher return potential (9-12%) due to market exposure, while PPF gives guaranteed returns (7.1% currently). For long-term wealth building, NPS typically wins, but PPF offers certainty.
Yes, you can invest in both. Many advisors recommend a combination - PPF for safety and liquidity, NPS for higher growth. You can use PPF for 80C and NPS additional ₹50,000 for 80CCD(1B).
For 30% tax bracket, NPS is better as you get ₹2 lakh deduction (80C + 80CCD1B). For 20% bracket, PPF may be better due to complete tax-free withdrawal vs NPS partial taxation.
PPF: Complete amount is tax-free after 15 years. NPS: At 60, you can withdraw 60% tax-free and must put 40% in annuity. However, NPS amounts are typically much larger due to higher returns.