Personal Finance · 4 min read
NPS vs PPF vs ELSS: Which Tax-Saving Investment Is Best For You?
All three save tax under section 80C and 80CCD, but they behave very differently. A side-by-side comparison of returns, lock-in, liquidity, and risk to help you allocate sensibly.
By Jarviix Editorial · Apr 19, 2026
Section 80C lets every Indian taxpayer deduct up to ₹1.5 lakh from taxable income each year through approved investments. NPS adds another ₹50,000 deduction under 80CCD(1B). The three most popular options under these sections are NPS, PPF, and ELSS — and they couldn't be more different from each other.
This guide compares them across the dimensions that actually matter: returns, risk, liquidity, lock-in, and tax treatment.
Quick comparison
| Feature | PPF | ELSS | NPS |
|---|---|---|---|
| Section | 80C | 80C | 80CCD(1B) + 80CCD(1) |
| Annual limit | ₹1.5 lakh (within 80C ceiling) | ₹1.5 lakh (within 80C ceiling) | ₹50,000 extra + 80C portion |
| Lock-in | 15 years | 3 years | Till age 60 |
| Returns | ~7.1% (sovereign) | ~12-15% historical | ~8-12% based on allocation |
| Risk | Zero | Market-linked, high | Market-linked, moderate |
| Maturity | Tax-free | LTCG taxable above ₹1L | 60% tax-free + 40% annuity |
| Liquidity | Limited (year 7+) | High (after lock-in) | Very limited |
| Inflation hedge | Marginal | Strong | Moderate |
PPF: the safe foundation
Public Provident Fund is a government-backed savings scheme with a sovereign guarantee.
Pros:
- Zero risk — backed by Government of India
- Currently ~7.1% interest, fully tax-free (EEE: investment, interest, withdrawal all tax-exempt)
- Forces 15-year discipline
Cons:
- Lower returns than equity over long periods
- 15-year lock-in is long
- Only ₹1.5 lakh per year per person (combined across all your accounts)
Best for:
- Risk-averse savers
- Building safe core for retirement
- Those who want guaranteed returns
- Children's PPF (open in minor's name)
Not great for:
- Wealth creation in inflationary periods (real return ~2-3% after inflation)
- Anyone needing liquidity
- Young investors who can take equity risk
ELSS: the equity engine
Equity-Linked Savings Schemes are mutual funds investing primarily in equities, with a 3-year lock-in for tax benefit.
Pros:
- Highest expected returns (12-15% historical CAGR)
- Shortest lock-in among 80C options
- Equity exposure beats inflation over long horizons
- Can SIP throughout the year (rupee cost averaging)
Cons:
- Market risk — value can drop 30%+ in bad years
- Long-term capital gains above ₹1 lakh/year taxed at 10%
- Requires equity tolerance and discipline not to redeem in panic
Best for:
- Long-term wealth building (10+ year horizon)
- Investors comfortable with volatility
- Those who can SIP monthly (₹10,000-12,500/month for full ₹1.5 lakh)
- Younger investors
Top funds historically: Mirae Asset Tax Saver, Axis Long Term Equity, Quant Tax Plan, Parag Parikh Tax Saver. Choose based on consistency, expense ratio (under 1.5%), and AUM (₹1,000+ crore).
NPS: the retirement-specific vehicle
National Pension System is a market-linked retirement scheme regulated by PFRDA.
Pros:
- Extra ₹50,000 deduction under 80CCD(1B) — over and above 80C
- Choose your own asset allocation (Auto: age-based; Active: you decide)
- Lower fund management costs (0.05-0.25%) than mutual funds
- Disciplined retirement-only product
Cons:
- Locked till age 60 with very limited exits
- 40% of corpus at maturity must buy an annuity (which then pays taxable pension)
- Annuity rates in India are mediocre (~6-7%)
- Tier-1 (with tax benefit) is restrictive; Tier-2 doesn't get tax benefit
Tier-1 vs Tier-2:
- Tier-1: tax benefits, retirement-locked
- Tier-2: voluntary, no lock-in, but ALSO no tax benefit. Mostly skip Tier-2.
Best for:
- Maximizing tax deduction (extra ₹50,000)
- Retirement-only commitment
- Lower-cost equity exposure (vs mutual funds)
- Those expecting to stay in higher tax bracket post-retirement
Recommended allocation by life stage
20s, just started earning (limited cash flow):
- Max ELSS for 80C (₹1.5 lakh) — equity for long-term wealth
- Skip PPF until later
- NPS only if employer matches contributions
30s, settled job (₹15-30 lakh CTC):
- ₹1.5 lakh in ELSS via SIP (₹12,500/month)
- ₹50,000 in NPS (Tier-1, equity-heavy allocation) for extra 80CCD(1B)
- Open a PPF account for kids/long-term safety, contribute small amounts
40s, family established:
- Mix: 50% ELSS, 50% PPF for 80C — balance growth and safety
- Continue NPS for extra deduction
50s, retirement approaching:
- Shift heavily to PPF for safety
- Reduce ELSS gradually
- Keep NPS contributions
What to read next
- How to save tax legally in India — full picture of tax-saving strategies.
- Tax saving investments 80C guide — every 80C option compared.
- Best ELSS funds 2026 — picking the right ELSS fund.
- Old vs new tax regime basics — these tax savings only apply if you're in the old regime.
There's no single "best" tax-saving instrument. The right answer depends on your age, risk tolerance, liquidity needs, and tax bracket. Most working professionals benefit from holding all three in different proportions: ELSS for growth, PPF for safety, NPS for the extra deduction. Treat tax saving as a side benefit, not the primary goal — the goal is building wealth that beats inflation over decades.
Frequently asked questions
Can I invest in all three for tax savings?
Yes. PPF and ELSS share the ₹1.5 lakh 80C limit (along with EPF, life insurance, etc.). NPS gives additional ₹50,000 deduction under 80CCD(1B), plus an optional 14% employer NPS contribution (no upper limit) under 80CCD(2). For maximum tax savings, contribute to NPS for the extra ₹50,000 deduction, and split your remaining 80C between PPF (safety) and ELSS (growth).
Which gives the best returns historically?
ELSS has the highest historical returns (12-15% CAGR over long periods, with significant volatility). NPS depends on your asset allocation — equity-heavy NPS gives ~10-12%, balanced ~8-10%. PPF is government-backed, currently ~7.1%, completely safe. Higher return requires accepting higher risk; PPF and NPS-government schemes don't lose principal, ELSS can in short term.
What's the lock-in for each?
ELSS: 3 years (shortest among 80C options). PPF: 15 years (with partial withdrawal allowed from year 7). NPS: until age 60 (with limited partial withdrawals after 3 years for specific reasons). ELSS is by far the most liquid; NPS is the longest commitment.
What happens at maturity?
PPF: full ₹15-year corpus available tax-free at maturity. ELSS: redeem any time after 3-year lock-in; long-term capital gains above ₹1 lakh taxed at 10%. NPS at age 60: 60% of corpus is tax-free lump sum, 40% must be used to buy an annuity (which then provides taxable monthly pension).
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