Retirement

NPS vs PPF: Which Fits Your Retirement Plan?

Last reviewed: 6 July 2026

NPS and PPF both get pitched as retirement tools, but they solve the problem differently enough that "which is better" depends heavily on what you actually value: guaranteed stability, or market-linked growth potential.

The core structural difference

PPF (Public Provident Fund) is a government-backed, fixed-return instrument with a 15-year cycle. NPS (National Pension System) is a market-linked retirement account where your contributions are invested across equity, corporate debt, and government bonds in proportions you can influence, with the account locked until age 60.

Side by side

PPF NPS
Return type Fixed, government-set (currently 7.1%) Market-linked, not guaranteed
Historical returns 7.1% (stable for 8 straight quarters) ~12-15% annualised on equity-heavy allocations over 10 years
Lock-in 15 years (partial withdrawal from year 7) Until age 60, with very limited early exit
Tax treatment EEE, contribution, interest, and maturity all tax-free Contribution deductible; withdrawal partially taxable
80C deduction Yes, within the ₹1.5 lakh limit Yes, within ₹1.5 lakh, plus an additional ₹50,000 under 80CCD(1B)
Risk None (government-backed, fixed) Market risk, depends on chosen asset allocation

Why NPS offers a tax advantage PPF can't match

Beyond the standard ₹1.5 lakh Section 80C limit, NPS offers an additional ₹50,000 deduction under Section 80CCD(1B), specifically for individual contributions to NPS. This makes it one of the few ways to extend old-regime tax savings beyond what 80C alone allows, PPF contributions can't access this extra bucket, only NPS can.

What happens at withdrawal

PPF pays out its full accumulated balance completely tax-free at maturity, true to its EEE (Exempt-Exempt-Exempt) status throughout. NPS works differently: under current rules, a subscriber with a corpus above ₹12 lakh can withdraw up to 80% as a lump sum, with the remaining 20% mandatorily used to purchase an annuity, a regular pension income for the rest of their life. That annuity income is then taxable as regular income when received.

A worked comparison

Someone contributing ₹1 lakh a year to PPF for 15 years, at the current 7.1% rate, ends up with a fully tax-free lump sum with zero market exposure. Someone contributing the same ₹1 lakh a year to NPS's equity-heavy option over a comparable multi-decade horizon has historically ended up with a meaningfully larger corpus given NPS's higher long-run returns, but with real year-to-year volatility along the way, and a portion of the eventual payout locked into an annuity rather than received as a lump sum.

Why combining both is common advice

PPF's guaranteed, tax-free nature makes it a reasonable anchor for the portion of retirement savings you don't want exposed to market swings. NPS's higher long-run return potential and extra tax deduction make it a reasonable complement for a portion you're comfortable leaving exposed to the market over a multi-decade horizon. Using both isn't indecision, it's diversifying between a fixed-return and a market-linked retirement vehicle, similar to how Section 80C instruments themselves span very different risk levels.

The takeaway

Choose PPF if certainty and simplicity matter most to you, and you're comfortable with a lower but guaranteed return. Choose NPS if you want higher long-run growth potential, an extra deduction beyond 80C, and can tolerate market-linked variability along the way, and remember that liquidity is far more restricted, funds are locked until 60. Using both together, for different portions of your retirement savings, is a reasonable answer to "which one" for many people.

This article is educational and not personalised financial advice. Returns for market-linked instruments are not guaranteed; PPF rates are reviewed quarterly by the government and can change.

Frequently asked questions

Which gives better returns, NPS or PPF?

PPF currently offers a fixed 7.1% per year. NPS is market-linked, its equity-heavy allocations have delivered roughly 12-15% annualised over the past decade across PFRDA-approved fund managers, though this isn't guaranteed and fluctuates with markets.

Can I invest in both NPS and PPF at the same time?

Yes, and many people do. Combining both is a common strategy: PPF for guaranteed, tax-free stability, NPS for market-linked growth and an additional deduction beyond the 80C limit.

Which has better liquidity, NPS or PPF?

PPF, by a wide margin. PPF allows partial withdrawals from year 7 and full access at 15-year maturity (extendable). NPS locks funds until age 60 with very limited early-exit provisions.