When you complete the four-year Agnipath engagement, you receive a one-time lump sum called the Seva Nidhi, drawn from the Agniveer Corpus Fund. The commonly cited tax-free amount is about ₹11.71 lakh, which is inclusive of accrued interest. This guide explains how that corpus is built, why it is exempt from income tax, and what Section 80CCH lets you deduct while you serve.
On finishing 4 years of service, an Agniveer gets the Seva Nidhi as a single tax-free payout. It is built from roughly ₹5.02 lakh of your own contribution plus a matching ₹5.02 lakh from the government (about ₹10.04 lakh of contributions), and rises to around ₹11.71 lakh once accrued interest is added. The payout is exempt under Section 10(12C).
The Seva Nidhi is the exit package paid from the Agniveer Corpus Fund, a non-lapsable, interest-bearing account created under the Agnipath Scheme, 2022. Every month, 30% of your monthly package goes into your Corpus Fund, the government adds an equal amount, and the combined balance plus interest is paid to you when your 4-year term ends. It is not a pension.
The Agnipath Scheme was launched in 2022 for enrolment into the Indian Armed Forces on a four-year engagement. The Ministry of Defence created the Agniveer Corpus Fund through its Seva Nidhi order, which came into force on 1 November 2022.
The build-up works like this:
Over the full term, your own contribution adds up to roughly ₹5.02 lakh and the government match adds another ₹5.02 lakh, for about ₹10.04 lakh in contributions. With accrued interest on top, the lump sum commonly cited is around ₹11.71 lakh. The ₹11.71 lakh figure is inclusive of interest, not in addition to it.
| Component | Approximate amount |
|---|---|
| Your contribution (30% of package) | ₹5.02 lakh |
| Government matching contribution | ₹5.02 lakh |
| Sub-total of contributions | ₹10.04 lakh |
| Seva Nidhi with accrued interest | about ₹11.71 lakh |
The Seva Nidhi you receive from the Agniveer Corpus Fund on completing service is exempt from income tax under Section 10(12C) of the Income-tax Act, 1961. The exemption covers the entire amount you receive, your own contribution, the government's contribution, and the interest, so the full lump sum reaches you tax-free.
This exemption, along with Section 80CCH, was introduced by the Finance Act, 2023, and applies from assessment year 2023-24 onwards.
While you are serving, your contributions to the Corpus Fund are addressed by Section 80CCH. There is no upper monetary limit on the deduction, but the regime you choose changes what you can claim:
Because the new tax regime is now the default, this distinction matters: most Agniveers under the new regime get the deduction only for the government's share, not their own. If your salary is low enough to fall below the taxable threshold, the deduction may not change your liability, but it is still worth understanding before you pick a regime.
The Agnipath Scheme is a fixed four-year engagement, so for that period:
After the term, up to about 25% of each batch may be selected for enrolment into the regular cadre of the Armed Forces, based on merit and organisational requirement. Those selected then come under the regular terms and conditions, including the pension rules that apply to that cadre.
Consider Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak's nephew, who enrolled as an Agniveer in late 2022. Through his service, 30% of his monthly package is set aside each month and the government matches it rupee for rupee. As he approaches the end of his four years around late 2026, his Corpus Fund holds roughly ₹10.04 lakh in contributions, which with accrued interest is expected to reach about ₹11.71 lakh. When his term ends, he will receive that amount as a single Seva Nidhi payout, and because of Section 10(12C) he will pay no income tax on it.
Your Agniveer Corpus Fund is maintained by the designated Accounts Officer under the Controller General of Defence Accounts. To track your balance or payout status:
It is commonly cited as about ₹11.71 lakh, paid as a single lump sum on completing the four-year engagement. This figure is inclusive of accrued interest on roughly ₹10.04 lakh of contributions.
No. The Seva Nidhi received from the Agniveer Corpus Fund on completion of service is exempt from income tax under Section 10(12C) of the Income-tax Act, 1961, including your contribution, the government's contribution, and the interest.
Under Section 80CCH, your own contribution is deductible only under the old tax regime. The government's contribution to your account is deductible under both the old and the new regime, with no upper limit.
No. The four-year engagement does not carry gratuity or pensionary benefits. Up to about 25% of a batch may later be selected for the regular cadre, where the applicable pension rules then apply.
The first batch enrolled from late 2022, so their four-year engagement completes around late 2026 into 2027, at which point they receive the Seva Nidhi.