National Pension System (NPS) is a government-sponsored pension scheme regulated by the Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority (PFRDA). It allows employees (public, private) and self-employed individuals to contribute regularly towards a retirement corpus, which they can withdraw partly aRead more
National Pension System (NPS) is a government-sponsored pension scheme regulated by the Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority (PFRDA).
It allows employees (public, private) and self-employed individuals to contribute regularly towards a retirement corpus, which they can withdraw partly at retirement, while the rest is used to buy a pension (annuity).
Tax Benefits under the Income Tax Act (Post-Budget 2025):
1. Employee’s Contribution:
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Section 80CCD(1):
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Deduction up to 10% of salary (Basic + DA) for salaried individuals.
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For self-employed individuals, deduction up to 20% of gross total income.
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This deduction is part of the overall limit of ₹1.5 lakh under Section 80CCE.
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Section 80CCD(1B):
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Additional deduction of ₹50,000, over and above the ₹1.5 lakh limit under Section 80C.
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Available to both salaried and self-employed individuals.
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2. Employer’s Contribution:
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Section 80CCD(2):
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Employer’s contribution up to 10% of salary (Basic + DA) is deductible for the employee.
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For Central Government employees, this limit is enhanced to 14%.
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This deduction is over and above the limits under Sections 80C and 80CCD(1B).
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ax Treatment on Withdrawal:
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Lump Sum Withdrawal:
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Upon retirement, up to 60% of the accumulated corpus can be withdrawn as a lump sum.
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This amount is exempt from tax under Section 10(12A).
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Annuity Purchase:
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The remaining 40% must be used to purchase an annuity, which provides regular pension income.
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Annuity income is taxable in the year of receipt under the head “Income from Other Sources.”
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Section 16(ii) of the Income Tax Act, 1961, deals with the deduction of Entertainment Allowance. For Government Employees: Entertainment Allowance is first included in salary and then deduction is allowed under Section 16(ii) up to the least of the following: ₹5,000 20% of Basic Salary (excluding alRead more
Section 16(ii) of the Income Tax Act, 1961, deals with the deduction of Entertainment Allowance.
For Government Employees:
Entertainment Allowance is first included in salary and then deduction is allowed under Section 16(ii) up to the least of the following:
₹5,000
20% of Basic Salary (excluding allowances, benefits, and perquisites)
Actual entertainment allowance received
✅ Only Central or State Government employees are eligible for this deduction.
👨💻 For Non-Government (Private Sector) Employees:
❌ No deduction is allowed.
See less👉 The entire amount received as Entertainment Allowance is fully taxable under Salary Income.