Yes, you can now surrender an NPS annuity policy in two specific cases under a PFRDA clarification dated 14 May 2026: if you or a family member faces a critical illness, or if your policy was issued before 24 October 2024 and already had a surrender clause in writing. In every other case the annuity stays a lifelong pension that you cannot cash out.
Quick answer: PFRDA circular PFRDA/2026/30/SUP-ASP/01 dated 14 May 2026 allows surrender of an NPS annuity policy in two situations only. One, critical illness of the annuitant or a family member, subject to the Annuity Service Provider assessment. Two, policies issued before 24 October 2024 that already carried an explicit surrender clause. The surrender value can be far lower than what you paid.
If you are short on time, skip to the step-by-step surrender process below.
When you exit the National Pension System, a part of your corpus is used to buy an annuity. An annuity is a lifelong monthly pension bought from an Annuity Service Provider, which is a life insurance company. Until recently this purchase was almost a one-way street.
The earlier baseline, set around 24 October 2024, treated NPS annuities as locked once bought. Surrender or cancellation was barred except inside the short free-look window. This left people stuck even when a medical emergency made a lump sum more useful than a small monthly pension.
The 14 May 2026 clarification carves out narrow exceptions. It does not reopen annuities for everyone. It opens two doors: a critical-illness door for any annuitant, and a contract door for older policies that were sold with a surrender clause. This page is only about surrendering the annuity policy itself. It does not cover the 80/20 lump-sum exit split, which the NPS exit rules guide explains separately.
You may be able to surrender your NPS annuity if you fall in one of these two cases.
If you do not fall in either case, the annuity remains a lifelong pension and cannot be surrendered for cash.
The circular leaves the definition and assessment of critical illness to each Annuity Service Provider. There is no single PFRDA list of illnesses in the public clarification. The insurer applies its own standard process, so the same illness may be treated differently by different companies. Ask your ASP for its critical-illness criteria in writing before you apply.
Be ready for a low number. A surrender value is not a refund of your premium. The insurer deducts charges, costs and any taxes, and pays only what is left. After several years of pension already drawn, the surrender value can be far below what you originally paid for the annuity.
For older policies, the surrender value is whatever the original contract says. Read the surrender clause in your own policy document, or ask the ASP to quote the exact figure, before you commit.
Caution: Surrender is usually a loss-making exit. You give up a guaranteed lifelong pension for a one-time amount that may be a fraction of what you paid. Treat it as an emergency option, not a routine withdrawal.
Consider Ramesh Iyer, a 64-year-old retiree in Coimbatore. He bought an NPS annuity in 2023 and drew a monthly pension. In 2026 his wife was diagnosed with a critical illness needing costly treatment. Under the old rule his annuity was locked and he could not touch the corpus.
After the 14 May 2026 clarification, Ramesh applied to his Annuity Service Provider on critical-illness grounds, attached his wife medical reports, and asked for a written surrender-value disclosure. The insurer assessed the case, disclosed a surrender amount well below his original purchase price, and processed the payout only after he signed his written consent. The figures here are illustrative and depend on the insurer assessment.
No. Surrender is allowed only in two cases under the PFRDA clarification dated 14 May 2026: critical illness of you or a family member, or an old policy issued before 24 October 2024 that already had a surrender clause. In all other cases the annuity is a lifelong pension that cannot be cashed out.
No. A surrender value is not a refund of premium. The Annuity Service Provider deducts charges, costs and taxes, and pays only the balance. After you have drawn pension for some years, the surrender value can be much lower than what you originally paid for the annuity.
Your Annuity Service Provider does. The circular leaves the definition and assessment to each insurer under its own standard medical process. Approval is not automatic. Ask your ASP for its critical-illness criteria in writing before you apply, since different insurers may apply different standards.
Only if the original policy document contains an explicit surrender clause. Policies issued before 24 October 2024 can be surrendered on the terms written into that contract. If there is no surrender clause in the document, this route is not available to you.
The circular does not fix a single completion deadline. It requires the ASP to give a written surrender-value disclosure, obtain your written consent, and, as reported, share the surrendered-annuity details with your Central Recordkeeping Agency within 7 working days. The insurer assessment itself can take longer, so apply early.
Yes. The 80/20 split decides how much of your corpus you take as a lump sum and how much buys an annuity at exit. This page is only about surrendering the annuity policy after it is already bought. See the NPS exit rules guide for the lump-sum side.