Section 80C Investments Ranked — PPF vs ELSS vs NPS vs Tax-Saving FD (2026)
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Section 80C Investments Ranked — PPF vs ELSS vs NPS vs Tax-Saving FD (2026)

Last verified: April 2026. Returns and rules cross-checked with PFRDA, EPFO, Department of Posts, and SEBI MF data as of Q1 FY 2025-26.

The ₹1.5 lakh Section 80C deduction is the single biggest tax break still available in the old regime. But “80C-eligible” hides a 14× gap in returns — pick wrong and you’re locked into 6.5% nominal for five years; pick right and you compound 12-14% with three-year liquidity. This guide ranks the eight popular 80C instruments by what actually matters: post-tax return, lock-in, risk, and what kind of investor each one fits.

Before you go further, decide whether 80C even applies to you. Under the new tax regime, Section 80C deductions are not allowed. So this entire ranking is relevant only if you’re filing under the old regime — typically because you have heavy HRA, home-loan interest, or other deductions that swing the breakeven your way.

The ranking, top to bottom

Rank Instrument Expected return (FY 25-26) Lock-in Risk Best for
1 ELSS Mutual Fund 12-14% CAGR (long-term avg.) 3 years High (equity) Investors with 5+ year horizon
2 EPF (auto-deduction) 8.25% (FY 24-25) Job-tenure Sovereign / very low Salaried; usually maxed already
3 NPS Tier 1 (60% equity) 10-11% CAGR Till age 60 Medium Tax-aware retirement savers
4 PPF 7.1% 15 years Sovereign / nil Conservative savers, parents
5 Sukanya Samriddhi (SSY) 8.2% 21 years / age 21 Sovereign Parents of girl child under 10
6 NSC (5-year) 7.7% 5 years Sovereign One-time lump-sum savers
7 Tax-saving FD (5-year) 6.5-7.5% (interest taxable) 5 years Bank credit risk Senior citizens, FD-comfort investors
8 Life insurance premium 3-5% IRR (endowment) Policy term Insurer credit Avoid as 80C strategy — buy term separately

Below — the math, the trade-offs, and the case for each.

1. ELSS Mutual Fund — the highest-return 80C option

Equity-Linked Savings Schemes are diversified equity mutual funds with a hard 3-year lock-in. The Indian equity market has compounded at roughly 12-14% over rolling 10-year periods. ELSS captures this with the shortest lock-in of any 80C instrument and full equity tax treatment after lock-in.

Tax on returns: Same as equity LTCG — 12.5% on gains above ₹1.25 L per year (combined across all listed equity).

How to use it: SIP ₹12,500/month for 12 months hits the ₹1.5 L 80C cap. Don’t lump sum unless markets have just corrected meaningfully. After 3 years, units become free — sell when markets are favourable, redeploy if you don’t need the cash.

Watch out for: Closet trackers and over-diversified ELSS funds. Stick to schemes with consistent 5-10 year track records. Don’t chase last year’s chart-topper.

Best fit: Investors with a 5+ year horizon who can stomach 30% drawdowns. If you panic-sold in March 2020 or October 2022, ELSS isn’t for you — pick PPF instead.

2. EPF — the auto-pilot 80C contribution

Employees’ Provident Fund auto-deducts 12% of basic from your salary, and the employer matches with another 12% (8.33% goes into EPS pension, 3.67% into EPF). Your employee contribution counts under 80C automatically.

Return: 8.25% declared for FY 2024-25 by EPFO. This rate is set annually and has trended down from 8.65% (FY18-19) to current levels.

Tax on interest: Tax-free at maturity (subject to the 5-year continuous service rule and the ₹2.5 L annual employee-contribution cap; interest on excess employee contributions over ₹2.5 L is taxable as per Budget 2021).

Why it’s #2 not #1: Lock-in is essentially till retirement — you can withdraw early under hardship rules but it’s clunky. ELSS gives equivalent or better post-tax CAGR with 3-year liquidity and a clean redemption process.

For a deeper dive on EPF vs the alternatives, see our PPF vs EPF vs VPF guide.

3. NPS Tier 1 — the only tier with 80C benefit

NPS Tier 1 contributions qualify under Section 80CCD(1) within the overall ₹1.5 L 80C limit. There’s a separate ₹50,000 deduction under Section 80CCD(1B) — that’s the famous “extra 50K” — which is over and above the 80C cap. Total old-regime NPS deduction: up to ₹2 L.

Asset-allocation flexibility: Up to 75% equity (Auto Choice LC75 lifecycle fund). Long-term CAGR for equity-heavy NPS Tier 1 has averaged 10-11% over 10+ year periods.

Lock-in: Till age 60. At withdrawal, 60% is tax-free lump sum and 40% must buy an annuity (taxable as pension income).

For a full Tier 1 vs Tier 2 walkthrough, see our NPS comparison guide.

4. PPF — the gold standard for risk-free saving

Public Provident Fund pays 7.1% (Q1 FY 2025-26 — rate is reset quarterly by the Ministry of Finance). 15-year lock-in, ₹1.5 L max annual deposit, EEE tax status (Exempt-Exempt-Exempt — contribution, interest, maturity all tax-free).

The ₹1.5 L max: This is across all PPF accounts including those of minors. So if you open a PPF for your child, contributions there compete with your own ₹1.5 L cap.

Quirk to use: Deposit before the 5th of every month — interest is calculated on the lowest balance between the 5th and the end of the month. A ₹1.5 L deposit on 4 April vs 6 April has a meaningful interest differential over 15 years.

Loan and partial withdrawal: Loans available from year 3, partial withdrawal from year 7. Extension in 5-year blocks after the 15-year maturity.

Why this isn’t #1 despite the EEE status: 7.1% nominal isn’t beating ELSS post-tax over 15 years (12% × 0.875 after LTCG = ~10.5% post-tax beats 7.1% tax-free comfortably). PPF wins on risk-free certainty, not return.

5. Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana — only if you have a daughter under 10

SSY pays 8.2% (Q1 FY 2025-26) — the highest sovereign rate available in India. Available only for a girl child under age 10, account must be opened by parents/guardian. Maturity at age 21 or marriage (whichever earlier, after age 18).

For working out the exact corpus see our SSY Calculator guide for a daughter born in 2025.

6. NSC — the unsexy lump-sum option

National Savings Certificate (5-year). 7.7% interest, compounded annually, paid at maturity. Interest accrued each year (except the last) is reinvested and qualifies under 80C — so a single NSC investment gives you 80C deduction in years 1-4 too.

Ideal use case: A one-time ₹1.5 L lump sum that you can lock for 5 years. Simpler than ELSS for someone who can’t tolerate equity volatility.

Tax on interest: Taxable at slab rate when received in year 5. The deemed-reinvestment in years 1-4 makes it slightly better than tax-saving FD on net basis.

7. Tax-saving FD — easy but expensive on returns

Five-year tax-saving FDs from any scheduled bank, currently quoting 6.5-7.5% across major banks. Interest is fully taxable at slab rate.

Effective post-tax return for someone in the 30% slab: 7.0% × 0.70 = 4.9%. Below PPF’s 7.1% tax-free for the same money. Below post-tax inflation in some years.

The exception: Senior citizens get 0.5% rate bonus and the 80TTB ₹50K interest exemption (old regime), which can make the effective rate competitive. For seniors only, tax-saving FD is reasonable. For everyone else, PPF or ELSS dominates.

8. Life insurance premium — the trap

Endowment, money-back, and ULIP premiums all qualify under 80C. Endowment plans typically deliver 3-5% IRR over 20-year tenures. ULIPs can be better but charges in the early years compound against you.

Life insurance premium under 80C is the single most over-sold and under-performing 80C option in India. The honest framing: buy a pure term plan separately for your protection need (₹50 L–₹2 Cr cover for ₹15K-25K/year), and put your 80C money into ELSS or PPF. A ₹50K/year term-plan-only saves the same ₹50K of 80C bucket — and term-plan premiums fully qualify under 80C anyway.

If you’ve already got an endowment policy you regret, run the surrender-vs-paid-up math. Surrendering early often means losing 30-50% of premiums paid; converting to paid-up freezes growth but stops the bleeding.

How to allocate your ₹1.5 lakh — three model splits

Aggressive (10+ year horizon, comfortable with equity)

  • ELSS — ₹1,00,000
  • PPF — ₹50,000 (just to keep the account active and build a 15-year lump sum)

Balanced (most salaried Indians)

  • EPF — ₹X (whatever your salary auto-deducts; usually ₹50K-1.2 L)
  • ELSS — fill the gap to ₹1.5 L (typically ₹30K-1 L)
  • Plus: ₹50K NPS under 80CCD(1B) for the extra deduction

Conservative (low risk tolerance, near retirement)

  • PPF — ₹1,00,000
  • Tax-saving FD — ₹50,000 (or NSC, marginally better)
  • Plus: ₹50K NPS in Auto Choice LC25 (low-equity)

What about the new tax regime — is 80C completely useless there?

For the deduction itself, yes — 80C investments don’t reduce your taxable income under the new regime. But that doesn’t mean these instruments are useless if you’re under the new regime; they just need to stand on their own merits as investments. PPF still pays 7.1% tax-free EEE. ELSS still gives equity exposure (with the ₹1.25 L LTCG exemption). EPF auto-deducts regardless of regime.

What you’d skip in the new regime: tax-saving FDs (a regular FD is just as good and not lock-in encumbered) and NSC (a regular FD or short-debt fund matches 7.7% pre-tax without the 5-year jail). Life insurance — never buy for tax reasons in either regime.

Linked deep-dives

FAQs

Can I claim more than ₹1.5 lakh under 80C?

The 80C limit is hard at ₹1.5 L combined across all eligible investments. But you can stack ₹50K extra under 80CCD(1B) for NPS, plus 80D for health insurance (₹25K self + ₹50K parents), plus 80E for education loan interest. So total Chapter VI-A deductions can comfortably reach ₹2.5-3 L.

What’s the difference between 80C, 80CCC, and 80CCD(1)?

All three share the ₹1.5 lakh limit. 80C covers PPF, ELSS, EPF, life insurance, etc. 80CCC covers pension fund contributions (very rarely used now). 80CCD(1) covers your own NPS Tier 1 contributions. They’re combined — not stackable.

Is home loan principal really 80C-eligible?

Yes — principal repayment on a home loan qualifies under 80C, but it shares the same ₹1.5 L bucket as PPF/ELSS/EPF. Many home-loan borrowers find their EMI principal alone uses up the full ₹1.5 L, leaving no room for other 80C investments.

Can I withdraw PPF early?

Partial withdrawal from year 7. Premature closure allowed only after 5 years and only on grounds of life-threatening illness, higher education, or NRI status — and even then, you lose 1% from the entire-period interest. Treat PPF as 15-year locked unless an emergency.

Does ELSS have an exit load?

No, ELSS has no exit load — but the 3-year lock-in is regulatory, not a fund-level charge. Each SIP installment has its own 3-year clock.

Sources & references

Last verified: April 2026. Small-savings rates are reviewed quarterly; we update this page after every notification.

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