Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana (SSY): Complete Guide for Indian Parents

Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana is a government-backed savings scheme exclusively for the girl child, introduced as part of the Beti Bachao Beti Padhao initiative. It currently offers ~8.2% tax-free interest — one of the highest sovereign-backed returns available in India — and locks the corpus until the daughter turns 21 (or marriage at 18+).

The basics

EligibleGirl child aged 0–10 years (resident Indian)
Account openingBy parent or legal guardian
Number of accountsMax 2 girls per family (3 if twins)
Minimum deposit₹250/year
Maximum deposit₹1.5L/year
Tenure21 years from opening (or until marriage at 18+)
Deposit period15 years (then earns interest till maturity)
Current interest rate~8.2% p.a. (revised quarterly by govt)
Tax treatmentEEE — deposit + interest + maturity all tax-free

The maths: ₹1.5L/year for 15 years

Maximum deposit each year for 15 years, account matures at year 21 (continues earning till then):

Total deposited (15 yrs × ₹1.5L)₹22.5 lakh
Maturity at year 21 @ 8.2% (assumed steady)~₹69 lakh
Net wealth gained~₹46.5 lakh — fully tax-free

Compare to PPF at 7.1%: ₹1.5L for 15 years matures at ~₹40.7L (after 15 years). SSY’s 8.2% rate plus the 6 extra years of compounding makes it materially better.

Where SSY beats other options

  • Highest tax-free rate in India today (8.2% vs PPF 7.1%, EPF 8.25% but EPF requires employment)
  • EEE tax status (exempt at deposit, growth, withdrawal)
  • 80C deduction on annual contribution (within ₹1.5L cap, shared with EPF/PPF/ELSS)
  • Sovereign guarantee from Government of India
  • No market risk

Where SSY loses

  • Locked till age 21 (or marriage at 18+) — zero liquidity for 15+ years
  • Beneficiary must be girl child only
  • Rate revised quarterly — may not stay at 8.2% indefinitely (10-year average ~7.6%)
  • Limited to ₹1.5L/year (can’t deposit more even if you have surplus)

Partial withdrawal rules

Up to 50% of the previous year’s closing balance can be withdrawn after the daughter turns 18, for higher education or marriage expenses. Beyond that, only at maturity.

How to open an SSY account

  1. Go to any post office or authorised bank (SBI, BoB, PNB, ICICI, HDFC, Axis all eligible)
  2. Submit: Aadhaar of parent + child, birth certificate of girl child, address proof, photographs
  3. Make initial deposit (₹250 minimum, ₹1.5L max for the year)
  4. Annual deposit thereafter — set up auto-debit if possible
  5. Get passbook OR online access via post office or bank app

Practical strategy

  • Start as early as possible. Opening at child’s age 1 vs age 8 means 7 extra years of compounding — the difference between ₹69L and ₹39L at maturity.
  • Max out ₹1.5L every year. Government caps your annual deposit; missing years can’t be recovered.
  • Use it as part of 80C, not in addition. SSY contribution counts toward your ₹1.5L 80C cap. If you’re also doing EPF + PPF + ELSS, allocate carefully.
  • Don’t skip even if you switch jobs / cities. Continue contributions — the 21-year compounding is the magic.
Verdict: If you have a daughter under 10, opening an SSY account in her name should be a top-3 financial priority. The combination of 8.2% tax-free returns + government guarantee + EEE status is unmatched by any other Indian instrument. Start early, max out yearly, and you’ll have ₹69L+ ready for her higher education or wedding by age 21.
Interest rates are revised by the Ministry of Finance quarterly. Verify current rate before opening / contributing.

This is independent commentary, not financial advice.

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