Is my NPS contribution deductible?

Short answerYes. Your own NPS contribution is deductible under Section 80CCD(1) within the ₹1.5 lakh 80C limit, plus an extra ₹50,000 under 80CCD(1B). Your employer’s NPS contribution is separately deductible under 80CCD(2) — and that employer deduction is the one break that survives in the new regime.

Your own contribution

Your personal NPS contribution is deductible under Section 80CCD(1), but it sits inside the overall ₹1.5 lakh 80C ceiling — so it competes with PF, LIC and ELSS. Over and above that, Section 80CCD(1B) gives an extra ₹50,000 deduction exclusively for NPS, beyond the ₹1.5 lakh. That extra ₹50,000 is the part most people specifically use NPS for.

The employer contribution

If your employer contributes to NPS, that is deductible separately under Section 80CCD(2) — up to 10% of salary (14% for government employees) — and does not count against your ₹1.5 lakh. Crucially, this is the one NPS deduction that remains available in the new regime. Confirm the current percentage limits per the Finance Act.

A worked example

Example (old regime): you invest ₹1.5 lakh in PF/ELSS (filling 80C) and ₹50,000 in NPS — you claim the full ₹1.5 lakh plus ₹50,000 under 80CCD(1B), a ₹2 lakh total. If your employer also puts 10% of salary into NPS, that is deducted separately under 80CCD(2). In the new regime, only the employer’s 80CCD(2) portion helps. Our team can structure it for your regime.

Talk to CA Vijay R Singh

Want to maximise your NPS deduction? You can message him directly, or book a short call to talk through your situation.

This answer is general information for taxpayers, not tax advice. Tax rates, thresholds and forms change with each Finance Act — please confirm the current position for your own facts, or speak to us, before acting.

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