If you are a salaried employee, VPF usually earns a higher interest rate than PPF and has no upper deposit limit, while PPF is open to anyone, is fully tax-free, and locks money for 15 years. Pick VPF for a bigger payout if you stay within the ₹2.5 lakh tax-free band; pick PPF for guaranteed tax-free returns and flexibility on who can invest.
Short on time? Jump to the comparison table below, then read “Who should pick which”.
VPF (Voluntary Provident Fund) is extra money you choose to put into your EPF account, on top of the compulsory 12% of basic pay plus dearness allowance. Only salaried employees who are EPF members can use it. Your employer does not have to match these extra contributions.
PPF (Public Provident Fund) is a government savings scheme that almost anyone in India can open at a bank or post office. You do not need a job or an employer. A homemaker, a freelancer, a business owner, or a salaried person can all open one.
Both are backed by the government, so the money is very safe. The difference is in who can join, how much you can put in, the interest, the lock-in, and the tax.
Take Anjali, a 32-year-old software engineer in Pune. Her basic salary is ₹80,000 a month. Her EPF already takes 12% automatically. She has ₹40,000 a month left to save for retirement and wants the safest option.
If she routes it through VPF, she earns the EPF interest rate, which is usually higher than PPF, and there is no cap on how much she adds. But once her own yearly contribution to EPF and VPF combined crosses ₹2.5 lakh, the interest on the extra part becomes taxable.
If she uses PPF instead, her returns stay 100% tax-free, but she can only put in ₹1.5 lakh a year and the money is locked for 15 years. The right answer depends on her tax bracket, how much she wants to save, and when she may need the cash.
VPF earns the same rate as EPF. The EPF interest rate is declared each year by the EPFO and approved by the government. For FY 2024-25 it was set at 8.25%. This rate is reviewed yearly and can change, so do not assume it is fixed forever.
PPF pays a rate that the Ministry of Finance resets every quarter as part of the small-savings scheme rates. For the April to June 2026 quarter it is 7.1%, compounded yearly. It has stayed at 7.1% since April 2020, but because it is a quarterly rate it can be revised.
In short, VPF has generally paid a higher rate than PPF in recent years. Always check the latest declared rates before you decide, because both can move.
| Feature | VPF | PPF |
|---|---|---|
| Who can open | Salaried EPF members only | Almost anyone in India |
| Interest rate | Same as EPF (8.25% for FY 2024-25) | 7.1% for Apr-Jun 2026 (set quarterly) |
| Yearly limit | No statutory cap | ₹500 minimum, ₹1.5 lakh maximum |
| Lock-in | Tied to your EPF until you retire or leave the job | 15 years, extendable in 5-year blocks |
| Section 80C | Yes, up to ₹1.5 lakh (old regime only) | Yes, up to ₹1.5 lakh (old regime only) |
| Interest tax | Tax-free up to ₹2.5 lakh own contribution; taxable above | Fully tax-free (EEE) |
| Safety | Government-backed | Government-backed |
VPF has no legal upper limit. You can contribute up to 100% of your basic salary plus dearness allowance. But there is a catch on the tax side, explained below.
PPF has firm limits. You must deposit at least ₹500 in a year to keep the account active, and you cannot deposit more than ₹1.5 lakh in any financial year.
PPF runs for 15 years from the year you open it. After that you can close it, or extend in blocks of 5 years, with or without fresh deposits. Partial withdrawals are allowed only from the 7th year. So PPF needs patience.
VPF is tied to your EPF account. The money stays until you retire or leave your job, though EPF rules allow partial advances for specific needs like a house, medical treatment, or a child's wedding. There is no fixed 15-year clock like PPF.
Both VPF and PPF contributions qualify for a deduction under Section 80C, up to a combined ₹1.5 lakh a year. Important: this 80C deduction works only under the OLD tax regime. The NEW regime is the default since FY 2023-24 and does NOT allow 80C. So if you are on the new regime, you get no 80C benefit from either one.
PPF is fully tax-free, often called EEE: the deposit, the interest, and the final maturity amount are all exempt. The interest and maturity stay tax-free under BOTH the old and new regimes. Only the 80C contribution deduction is old-regime-only.
VPF interest is tax-free only up to a point. If your OWN contribution to EPF and VPF combined crosses ₹2.5 lakh in a financial year, the interest on the excess is taxable. This came in with the Finance Act 2021 and is worked out under Rule 9D. The threshold is higher, ₹5 lakh, where the employer makes no contribution. For a full explanation, see how EPF interest is taxed above the ₹2.5 lakh limit.
So VPF is great until you cross ₹2.5 lakh of own contribution a year. Above that, part of the shine comes off.
A simple rule: PPF for certainty and flexibility on eligibility, VPF for a higher rate while you stay under the tax threshold.
Yes. VPF money sits inside your EPF account and earns the same rate the EPFO declares each year. For FY 2024-25 that rate was 8.25%. The rate is reviewed every year, so it can rise or fall.
Yes. They are separate schemes. A salaried person can contribute to VPF through their EPF account and also run a PPF account at a bank or post office. The ₹1.5 lakh PPF cap and the combined ₹1.5 lakh Section 80C cap still apply to each as described above.
PPF is still useful because its interest and maturity stay tax-free under both regimes. But you lose the Section 80C deduction on the contribution, since 80C applies only under the old regime. VPF loses the same 80C benefit under the new regime.
There is no legal upper cap. You can contribute up to 100% of your basic pay plus dearness allowance. But if your own EPF plus VPF contribution crosses ₹2.5 lakh in a year, the interest on the excess becomes taxable under Rule 9D.
PPF has a fixed 15-year term, extendable in 5-year blocks, with partial withdrawals only from the 7th year. VPF stays in your EPF account until you retire or change jobs, though EPF allows advances for specific needs. Neither is meant for short-term savings.
Yes. Both are backed by the Government of India. EPF and VPF are managed under the EPFO framework, and PPF is a government small-savings scheme. The principal is considered very secure in both.