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Tax Savings

Section 80C Explained — Complete Tax Saving Guide

beginner
16 min read24 January 2026Updated 25 May 2026

Section 80C offers up to Rs 1.5 lakh in tax deductions annually. This guide covers all eligible investments, contribution limits, and strategies to maximize your 80C benefits.

Section 80C of the Income Tax Act, 1961 is one of the most widely used tax-saving provisions in India, offering a deduction of up to Rs 1.5 lakh per year from your taxable income. Understanding the full range of eligible investments and contributions helps optimize tax planning. ## Overview of Section 80C The Section 80C deduction reduces your gross total income, thereby reducing your tax liability. For an individual in the 30% tax bracket, the maximum Section 80C deduction translates to tax savings of Rs 46,800 annually (including 4% cess). For someone in the 20% bracket, the saving is Rs 31,200. The deduction is available to individual taxpayers and Hindu Undivided Families. The Rs 1.5 lakh limit is a combined ceiling across all eligible investments and expenditures, requiring strategic selection based on your financial goals and risk appetite. ## Eligible Investments Under Section 80C ### Public Provident Fund (PPF) PPF remains one of the most popular 80C investments, offering 8.2% interest rate (revised quarterly by the government) with a minimum contribution of Rs 500 and maximum of Rs 1.5 lakh per year. The account has a 15-year lock-in with partial withdrawal provisions after the sixth year. The interest earned and maturity proceeds are completely tax-free under Section 10, making PPF the most tax-efficient debt instrument available to individual investors. For a taxpayer maximizing annual PPF contributions over 15 years, the tax-free maturity corpus exceeds Rs 40 lakh based on current rates. ### Equity Linked Savings Scheme (ELSS) ELSS is the only equity investment qualifying for Section 80C deduction, combining tax savings with equity market growth potential. These diversified equity mutual funds have a mandatory three-year lock-in period, the shortest among all tax-saving instruments under 80C. The HDFC Tax Saver Fund and Mirae Asset Tax Saver Fund have delivered 15-18% annualized returns over 10-year periods, significantly outperforming debt instruments. However, equity market risks mean past performance does not guarantee future returns. ELSS suits investors with medium-to-high risk tolerance seeking long-term capital appreciation. ### Employee Provident Fund (EPF) Both employee and employer contributions to the EPF qualify for 80C deduction. The employee's 12% basic salary contribution (capped at Rs 15,000 basic) is deductible, while the employer's 12% contribution (split between EPF and pension fund) also qualifies for deduction up to Rs 1.5 lakh annually. The interest rate on EPF is set by the government, currently 8.25% for FY 2024-25. EPF is mandatory for employees in organizations covered under the Employees' Provident Funds and Miscellaneous Provisions Act, making it an automatic tax-saving investment for salaried individuals. ### Life Insurance Premiums Premiums paid for life insurance policies qualify for Section 80C deduction. For policies issued after April 2012, the deduction is available only if the premium does not exceed 10% of the sum assured for non-ULIP policies and 15% for unit-linked insurance plans. A term insurance plan with Rs 50 lakh coverage costing Rs 12,000 annually in premiums qualifies for full deduction, providing substantial life coverage alongside tax benefits. Endowment and money-back policies with high sum assured relative to premium are optimal for tax planning. ### National Savings Certificate (NSC) NSC is a government-backed savings instrument with a 5-year lock-in period, currently offering 8.2% interest rate compounded half-yearly. The accumulated interest is reinvested and qualifies for deduction, effectively offering higher effective yield through tax deferral. ### Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana Parents or guardians of girl children can invest up to Rs 1.5 lakh annually in Sukanya Samriddhi accounts for each daughter, with the account maturing after 21 years or upon marriage after age 18. The current interest rate of 8.2% and tax-free maturity proceeds make this exceptionally attractive for girl child planning.