Section 80D of the Income Tax Act 1961 lets an individual or HUF deduct health insurance premium up to Rs 25,000 a year, rising to Rs 50,000 where the insured person is a senior citizen aged 60 or above. A separate deduction is available for premium paid on your parents, and the whole benefit sits inside the old tax regime only. If you have opted for the default new regime under Section 115BAC, you cannot claim Section 80D at all.
Quick answer: Section 80D allows a deduction for health insurance premium, preventive health check-up, and certain medical expenditure. The base limit is Rs 25,000 for you, your spouse and dependent children, plus another Rs 25,000 for parents, which becomes Rs 50,000 if a parent is a senior citizen. Premium must be paid by any mode other than cash. The deduction is available under the old tax regime only.
Section 80D is a deduction under Chapter VI-A of the Income Tax Act 1961. It reduces your taxable income by what you spend on health cover for yourself and your family. Only an individual or a Hindu Undivided Family (HUF) can claim it. The deduction covers three things: health insurance premium, preventive health check-up, and, for senior citizens with no insurance, actual medical expenditure. It is a deduction, not a rebate, so it lowers the income on which your tax is calculated.
The statute sets two ceilings, Rs 25,000 and Rs 50,000, and you read them per group of insured people. The headline figures below are the limits in the bare text of Section 80D.
Because the self and parent groups carry separate ceilings, the practical totals add up. A person under 60 covering their family (Rs 25,000) plus senior-citizen parents (Rs 50,000) can deduct up to Rs 75,000. Where both you and your parents are senior citizens, the two Rs 50,000 limits stack to a maximum of Rs 1,00,000. These totals are arithmetic, not separate statutory ceilings.
Worked example
Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak, aged 52, pays Rs 22,000 by UPI for a family floater covering himself, his wife and daughter Kashvi Pathak. He also pays Rs 4,000 in cash for a preventive health check-up. His self-and-family deduction is Rs 25,000 (Rs 22,000 premium plus Rs 3,000 of the check-up, capped at the Rs 25,000 limit). Separately, he pays Rs 38,000 by card for a policy covering his father, aged 71, a senior citizen. That parent deduction is Rs 38,000, within the Rs 50,000 senior-citizen ceiling. His total Section 80D deduction is Rs 63,000, claimed under the old regime.
RTI is narrow here. The Income Tax Act and your private insurer are not directly answerable through a normal citizen RTI for your own deduction, and private insurers are usually outside the RTI Act. RTI does help where a public-sector insurer such as a government general insurance company holds records, or where you want policy or claim documents from a government health scheme like CGHS. You can use the AI RTI Drafter to frame a clean request for premium certificates or scheme records, and the First Appeal Builder if the public authority misses the 30-day reply window.
No. Section 80D is available under the old tax regime only. The default new regime under Section 115BAC removes most Chapter VI-A deductions, including 80D, in exchange for lower slab rates. Opt out of the new regime to claim it.
No. The preventive health check-up amount, up to Rs 5,000, is included within your Rs 25,000 or Rs 50,000 limit, not added on top.
A senior citizen is a resident individual who is 60 years of age or older at any time during the relevant previous year, as stated in the Explanation to Section 80D.
No. Insurance premium must be paid by any mode other than cash to qualify. Only the preventive health check-up component can be paid in cash, up to Rs 5,000.
Yes. Where a senior-citizen parent is not covered by any health insurance, you can claim actual medical expenditure up to Rs 50,000, counted within that parent's senior-citizen limit.
Yes. Self, spouse and dependent children form one group with its own limit, and parents form a separate group with their own limit, so you can claim both in the same year.