বিস্তারিত গাইড শীঘ্রই আসছে
Section 80C Deduction Optimizer-এর জন্য একটি বিস্তৃত শিক্ষামূলক গাইড তৈরি করা হচ্ছে। ধাপে ধাপে ব্যাখ্যা, সূত্র, বাস্তব উদাহরণ এবং বিশেষজ্ঞ পরামর্শের জন্য শীঘ্রই আবার দেখুন।
Section 80C of the Income Tax Act, 1961 is the most widely used tax deduction provision in India, allowing individuals and Hindu Undivided Families (HUFs) to claim deductions up to ₹1.5 lakh per financial year on specified investments and expenditures. This deduction reduces taxable income and hence the income tax liability under the old tax regime. The Section 80C umbrella includes a wide variety of instruments: Equity Linked Savings Scheme (ELSS) mutual funds with a 3-year lock-in and market-linked returns; Public Provident Fund (PPF) with sovereign guarantee at 7.1% over 15 years; Employee Provident Fund (EPF) contributions which are automatically deducted; Life Insurance Corporation (LIC) and other insurance premiums; National Savings Certificate (NSC) with 5-year lock-in; 5-year tax-saving bank fixed deposits; tuition fees paid for up to 2 children's full-time education in India; and repayment of housing loan principal. Additionally, related deductions under Sections 80CCC (pension funds) and 80CCD(1) (NPS) are part of the same ₹1.5 lakh combined ceiling under Section 80CCE. The 80C optimizer helps you allocate your ₹1.5 lakh limit intelligently — balancing liquidity needs, return expectations, risk appetite, and time horizon. Note that Section 80C benefits are only available under the old tax regime; the new regime does not allow these deductions.
Total 80C Deduction = Sum of all eligible 80C investments and expenditures (capped at ₹1,50,000); Tax Saved = 80C Deduction × Marginal Tax Rate (20% or 30%); Effective Post-Tax Return on ELSS = [ELSS Return − LTCG Tax on Gains > ₹1L × 10%] + Tax Saved on Investment
- 1Identify your total Section 80C-eligible investments and payments: EPF (automatic via salary), PPF contributions, ELSS SIPs, LIC premiums, children's tuition fees, home loan principal repayment, NSC, tax-saving FDs, ULIP premiums.
- 2Check how much of the ₹1.5 lakh limit is already utilised by mandatory or existing commitments — EPF alone often fills a large portion for salaried employees.
- 3Evaluate remaining capacity: if you have ₹50,000 left to invest under 80C, choose based on investment goals — ELSS for growth + tax saving, PPF for safe long-term savings, NSC/FD for medium-term safety.
- 4Compare ELSS vs PPF: ELSS offers potentially higher returns (12-15% historically) but with market risk and 3-year lock-in; PPF gives guaranteed 7.1% with 15-year lock-in but no market risk.
- 5Note that tuition fees for your children's school or college (full-time education, Indian institution) count toward 80C — no investment needed; also check if home loan principal repayment fills remaining capacity.
- 6File Form 80C declaration with your employer by the deadline (usually January-February) for the current financial year, along with proof of investments (ELSS statements, PPF passbook, LIC receipts, school fee receipts).
- 7Under the new tax regime, none of these 80C deductions apply — if you have opted for new regime, Section 80C planning becomes irrelevant except as a pure investment decision.
Invest remaining ₹78,000 in ELSS SIP (₹6,500/month) for best growth potential
Many salaried employees forget that their EPF contribution is automatically counted under 80C. With ₹72,000 already locked in, only ₹78,000 more is needed to max the ₹1.5 lakh limit.
ELSS wins on returns but PPF wins on certainty; best approach is a mix
ELSS generates significantly higher wealth over 15 years due to equity compounding, but carries market risk and requires LTCG tax on annual gains exceeding ₹1 lakh. PPF is risk-free with tax-free returns. Combining both — say ₹75,000 each — balances growth and safety.
Tuition fees for up to 2 children's full-time education qualify; no investment needed
School tuition fees (excluding development fees, transport, hostel charges) for up to 2 children count toward 80C. This is a zero-cost 80C benefit — you pay fees anyway, but now they reduce your tax too.
No additional 80C investment needed; interest deduction is separate under Section 24(b)
The principal repayment component of home loan EMI qualifies for 80C deduction. For many home loan borrowers, especially in the early years, the principal repayment alone exceeds ₹1.5 lakh, meaning no separate 80C investment is required.
Annual investment planning for salaried employees to allocate the ₹1.5 lakh 80C limit across ELSS, PPF, EPF, and insurance optimally., where accurate section 80c optimizer analysis through the Section 80c Optimizer supports evidence-based decision-making and quantitative rigor in professional workflows
Salary CTC negotiation — restructuring salary to increase EPF component (which auto-fills 80C) and reduce taxable allowances., where accurate section 80c optimizer analysis through the Section 80c Optimizer supports evidence-based decision-making and quantitative rigor in professional workflows
Tax-filing preparation — computing total 80C deductions across all instruments to declare in ITR., where accurate section 80c optimizer analysis through the Section 80c Optimizer supports evidence-based decision-making and quantitative rigor in professional workflows
Financial advice — helping clients choose between ELSS and PPF based on risk tolerance, time horizon, and liquidity requirements., where accurate section 80c optimizer analysis through the Section 80c Optimizer supports evidence-based decision-making and quantitative rigor in professional workflows
Comparing the effective post-tax return on 80C instruments against non-80C investments like mutual funds and FDs.
VPF — Voluntary Provident Fund
Employees can contribute more than the mandatory 12% to their PF through Voluntary Provident Fund (VPF). VPF earns the same interest rate as EPF (8.25%) and the contribution qualifies for Section 80C deduction. However, contributions above ₹2.5 lakh per year (employee's own EPF + VPF combined) attract tax on the interest earned from FY 2021-22 onwards.
80C for Senior Citizens
Senior citizens (age 60+) often have retired savings in FDs and senior citizen savings schemes (SCSS). SCSS (Senior Citizens' Savings Scheme) contributions of up to ₹30 lakh qualify for Section 80C deduction up to ₹1.5 lakh. SCSS currently offers 8.2% per annum (Q1 FY25), making it one of the best 80C options for retired individuals needing regular income.
80C for HUFs
A Hindu Undivided Family (HUF) can also claim Section 80C deduction up to ₹1.5 lakh. HUF can invest in ELSS, PPF (a separate HUF PPF account, as allowed until 2005 — new HUF PPF accounts are no longer allowed), and LIC premiums on HUF members' lives. This allows families to effectively claim an additional ₹1.5 lakh deduction beyond individual members' limits.
ULIP — Treated as Insurance for 80C
Unit Linked Insurance Plans (ULIPs) qualify for 80C deduction. From FY 2021-22, ULIP maturity proceeds are taxable if annual premium exceeds ₹2.5 lakh — similar to how equity MF LTCG rules apply. ULIPs with premiums below ₹2.5 lakh retain their tax-exempt maturity status under Section 10(10D).
| Instrument | Lock-in | Returns | Risk | Liquidity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ELSS Mutual Funds | 3 years | 12-15% (market-linked) | High | After 3 years |
| PPF | 15 years | 7.1% (guaranteed) | Nil (sovereign) | Partial after 7 yrs |
| EPF (employee contribution) | Till retirement | 8.25% (declared) | Very low | On leaving job |
| NSC | 5 years | 7.7% (FY24) | Nil | No premature exit |
| 5-Year Tax-Saving FD | 5 years | 6.5-7.5% | Nil | No premature exit |
| LIC/Insurance Premium | Policy tenure | 4-6% (traditional) | Low | Surrender value |
| Home Loan Principal | NA (already spent) | Indirect return | Property risk | Not liquid |
| Tuition Fees | NA (expense) | Indirect (tax saving) | Nil | Not liquid |
| Sukanya Samriddhi (SSY) | 21 years | 8.2% (Q1 FY25) | Nil (sovereign) | Partial after 18 |
What is the maximum deduction under Section 80C?
The maximum deduction under Section 80C (combined with 80CCC and 80CCD(1)) under Section 80CCE is ₹1,50,000 per financial year. This limit has been unchanged since FY 2014-15. There is an additional exclusive deduction of ₹50,000 under Section 80CCD(1B) for NPS contributions, which is over and above this ₹1.5 lakh limit.
Which 80C investment gives the best returns?
ELSS (Equity Linked Savings Scheme) has historically delivered the best returns — 12-15% CAGR over 10+ years — among all 80C instruments. However, returns are market-linked and not guaranteed. PPF (7.1%) and NPS equity (10-12%) follow. NSC and tax-saving FDs give 6.5-7% but are fully safe. For investors with long time horizons (10+ years), ELSS is generally the best choice for returns, while PPF suits conservative investors.
Can both spouses claim 80C deduction?
Yes, each spouse can independently claim up to ₹1.5 lakh under Section 80C on their respective incomes. For example, a husband can claim ₹1.5 lakh on his own ELSS and PPF investments, and the wife can independently claim ₹1.5 lakh on her separate investments. Jointly held investments like joint home loan principal repayment can be apportioned between spouses based on their ownership share.
Is ELSS better than PPF for tax saving?
ELSS has a shorter lock-in (3 years vs 15 years for PPF) and has historically delivered better returns (12-15% vs 7.1%). However, ELSS returns are not guaranteed and depend on equity markets. PPF provides sovereign-guaranteed, tax-free returns. The ideal strategy for most investors is to maintain PPF for capital preservation and invest in ELSS for growth. If market volatility is a concern, PPF and NSC are safer alternatives.
Does EPF contribution automatically count for 80C?
Yes. The employee's contribution to EPF (12% of basic + DA) is eligible for Section 80C deduction. It is automatically included without any additional action. However, the employer's EPF contribution does not qualify for 80C — only the employee's own contribution counts. For high-income employees whose EPF contribution alone exceeds ₹1.5 lakh, the 80C limit is fully utilised without any additional investment.
Are LIC premiums eligible for 80C deduction?
Yes, life insurance premiums paid to LIC or any other IRDAI-registered insurer are eligible for Section 80C deduction. However, from FY 2023-24, if the annual premium on a traditional/endowment policy (not term insurance) exceeds ₹5 lakh, the maturity proceeds become taxable (previously they were always exempt under Section 10(10D)). Term insurance premiums have no such restriction — they are always tax-deductible and the death benefit is tax-free.
Can I claim 80C for school fee and investment both?
Yes. Tuition fees (not development fees or other charges) paid for your children's full-time education at any school, college, or university in India count toward the 80C limit. You can combine this with other investments — for example, ₹60,000 in school fees + ₹90,000 in ELSS = ₹1.5 lakh total 80C deduction. Up to 2 children's tuition fees can be claimed.
What happens to 80C investments if I switch to the new tax regime?
The investments themselves are not affected — your PPF continues to earn tax-free interest, ELSS continues to grow, EPF contributions continue. However, you lose the upfront tax deduction benefit when computing income tax for that year. The interest/returns on PPF and EPF remain exempt even under the new regime. ELSS LTCG and FD interest are taxed regardless of regime. The 80C deduction benefit is only the upfront income tax saving — and that is not available in the new regime.
প্রো টিপ
Start your ELSS SIP on the 5th of April each financial year rather than investing in March. This gives your money an extra 11+ months of compounding. A ₹12,500/month ELSS SIP (₹1.5 lakh/year) started in April versus March makes a difference of approximately ₹2-3 lakh over a 15-year horizon at 12% CAGR.
আপনি কি জানেন?
Section 80C was introduced in its current form in the Finance Act of 2005 by the then Finance Minister P. Chidambaram, consolidating several older sections (88, 88B, 88C). The ₹1 lakh limit set in 2005 was raised to ₹1.5 lakh in Budget 2014 by Finance Minister Arun Jaitley — and has remained unchanged since, despite the rate of inflation reducing its real value by over 40% in the intervening decade.