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How to open a Senior Citizen Savings Scheme (SCSS) account — complete 2026 guide
Quick answer. The Senior Citizen Savings Scheme (SCSS) is the Government of India's flagship fixed-income product for the 60+. Current interest rate (Q1 FY 2026-27): 8.2% per annum, paid quarterly to your linked savings account. Tenure: 5 years, extendable once by 3 years. Maximum deposit: ₹30 lakh per individual (raised from ₹15 lakh in Union Budget 2023, w.e.f. 1 April 2023). Open at any India Post Office or at participating banks (SBI, PNB, Bank of Baroda, Canara, Indian Bank, Union Bank, ICICI, HDFC at select branches). Eligibility: Indian resident aged 60+, or 55-60 years if VRS / superannuation retiree, or 50+ years if defence retiree (excluding Civil Defence). Documents: Aadhaar + PAN + age proof + linked savings account + photo + initial deposit cheque/UPI. Deposit qualifies for §80C deduction up to ₹1.5 lakh; quarterly interest is taxable but eligible for §80TTB deduction up to ₹50,000 for seniors. NRIs are NOT eligible. Account opens same day; passbook issued.
Lakshmi Devi's story — "₹15 lakh from gratuity, ₹30,750 quarterly interest, sleeps well at night"
Lakshmi Devi Subramanian, 64, retired from her 38-year career as a primary-school Tamil teacher at a government school in Coimbatore. Husband (also retired teacher) draws his own pension. They live in their own house in R.S. Puram. One son in the US, one daughter married in Chennai.
“When I retired in March 2024 — I got ₹14.5 lakh as gratuity, ₹3.2 lakh as Earned Leave encashment, and a ₹6 lakh commuted portion of my EPS-95 pension. Plus ₹4 lakh in my GPF maturity. So about ₹27 lakh in hand all at once, in April 2024.
My son in California said 'Amma, just put it all in mutual funds, equity will give 12-15%'. My husband said 'Bank FD, safe, 7%'. The bank manager at our branch — SBI R.S. Puram — said something I had never heard properly: 'Madam, for senior citizens like you, there is SCSS — Senior Citizen Savings Scheme — Government of India backing, currently 8.2% interest, paid every three months to your account. Absolutely safe.'
I did some quick maths in my head. 8.2% on ₹15 lakh = ₹1,23,000 a year, divided by 4 = about ₹30,750 every quarter. That alone covers our monthly groceries, electricity, gas — comfortably.
So in April 2024, at the same SBI R.S. Puram branch, I opened an SCSS account. Documents I carried: Aadhaar, PAN, my SBI savings passbook, my pension order copy (which proved I'd just retired and was 64), two passport-size photos. I signed Form A (the standard SCSS application). For the initial deposit I gave a cheque from my SBI savings account for ₹15 lakh. The remaining ₹12 lakh I split — ₹1 lakh in PPF (already had a maturing one), ₹4 lakh in another bank FD, ₹2 lakh in liquid mutual fund, kept ₹5 lakh as emergency in savings.
The SCSS account was opened the same day — passbook in hand by 4 pm. Quarterly interest started landing on the first day of the next quarter — so the first payout was on 1 July 2024 (proportionate, since I'd opened in mid-April), then full ₹30,750 every quarter from 1 October.
My nominee is my husband, with both children as alternate nominees in equal share. The post office bank manager helped fill the nomination form (Form SC-2) right at account-opening; very important, otherwise heirs need a Succession Certificate later — see the full guide on that.
The 5-year tenure ends in April 2029 (I'll be 69). I've already decided I'll extend by another 3 years under the auto-renewal route — that's permitted exactly once after maturity, at the prevailing rate at the time of extension. By then I'll have earned about ₹6.15 lakh in pure interest over 5 years, on a fully government-guaranteed deposit. Compare that to a bank FD at 7% earning ₹5.25 lakh — the SCSS gives me ₹90,000 more.
My daughter-in-law in Chennai keeps asking 'Why don't you put it in the share market?' I told her: 'At 64, with a fixed monthly need, I want predictability, not excitement. The SCSS gives me both — government safety + 8.2% — that's enough.'”
—Lakshmi Devi, January 2026
About 2.6 crore SCSS accounts were live across India Post + banks at the end of FY 2024-25 (Department of Posts annual statistics + RBI banking returns). The 2023 limit hike from ₹15 lakh to ₹30 lakh added an estimated ₹2.4 lakh crore to senior savings flows in FY 2024-25 alone. SCSS today is the largest single small-savings instrument by net annual flow after PPF.
What this is — and how it compares with PPF / FD / Annuity
The Senior Citizen Savings Scheme (SCSS) is a government-backed fixed-deposit-style scheme designed exclusively for senior citizens. It is operated under:
- Senior Citizen Savings Scheme Rules 2004 — original notification.
- Government Savings Promotion Act 1873 + Government Savings Promotion Rules 2018 — overarching framework that consolidated all small-savings schemes.
- Union Budget 2023 amendment (w.e.f. 1 April 2023) — limit raised from ₹15 lakh to ₹30 lakh per individual.
- Quarterly rate notifications by the Ministry of Finance (Department of Economic Affairs) — published by the 25th of the previous month for each quarter.
How SCSS compares with other instruments commonly used by seniors:
- vs PPF (Public Provident Fund) — PPF is 7.1% currently, 15-year lock-in, ₹1.5 lakh annual cap, fully tax-free interest. SCSS is 8.2%, 5-year tenure, ₹30 lakh cap, taxable interest but §80TTB deduction. SCSS is better for lump-sum deployment of retirement corpus; PPF is better for long-term tax-free build-up. See How to open PPF account.
- vs Bank FD — Senior FDs are typically 7-7.5% (with 0.5% senior-citizen premium). SCSS at 8.2% beats by 70-120 bps. SCSS has government guarantee (vs DICGC ₹5 lakh insurance only on FDs).
- vs LIC Saral Pension / Jeevan Akshay annuity — Annuities are lifelong but rates today are 6-7%; SCSS gives higher rate but ends at 5+3 years.
- vs RBI Floating-Rate Savings Bonds (FRSB) — FRSB is currently 8.05% (NSC + 35 bps), 7-year lock-in, no upper cap, half-yearly interest. SCSS is similar yield but pays quarterly and has the §80C benefit upfront.
- vs Pradhan Mantri Vaya Vandana Yojana (PMVVY) — PMVVY (operated by LIC) was discontinued for new subscribers from 31 March 2023. SCSS is now the primary government-backed senior product.
In short, for a recently-retired person with a lump sum, SCSS is usually the first ₹30 lakh you should park before considering anything else.
Eligibility — who can open
Under SCSS Rules 2004 (read with subsequent amendments):
- Indian resident aged 60 years or above at the date of account opening — primary eligibility.
- Aged 55 years to less than 60 years — eligible if retired on superannuation, VRS, or special VRS AND the account is opened within 1 month from receipt of retirement benefits, AND the deposit does not exceed the retirement benefits received.
- Aged 50 years or above — eligible if retired defence personnel (excluding Civil Defence) under similar conditions about retirement benefits.
- Joint account — only with spouse (no other joint holders allowed). The first / primary holder must satisfy the age condition; the spouse can be of any age.
- NRIs are NOT eligible. A resident who later becomes NRI must close the account.
- HUF / trust / company are NOT eligible — only individual natural persons.
- One person — multiple accounts allowed, but the aggregate deposit across all accounts must not exceed ₹30 lakh.
Where to open — post office vs banks
- India Post Office (POSB) — most common channel; available at virtually every post office that handles savings (CSP / sub-post / head post). Signed up by Department of Posts + Ministry of Finance — gives you the cleanest, untouched government experience.
- State Bank of India (SBI) — at every branch. SBI handles the largest SCSS book among banks.
- Public Sector Banks — PNB, Bank of Baroda, Canara Bank, Indian Bank, Union Bank, Bank of India, Bank of Maharashtra, Central Bank, UCO Bank, Punjab & Sind Bank — all empanelled.
- Private Banks (limited branches) — ICICI Bank and HDFC Bank handle SCSS at select branches; not all branches do — call ahead.
The interest rate is identical at all channels (it's set by the government, not by the bank). The choice comes down to your existing relationship and convenience. If you have an existing savings account with one of these, opening SCSS at the same bank is simplest because the linked savings account for quarterly interest credit is already there.
Step-by-step process
Step 1 — Take stock of your retirement corpus and decide deposit size
Walk into the post office / bank with a clear number in mind. Maximum is ₹30 lakh per individual (across all SCSS accounts combined). Many couples open ₹30 lakh in each spouse's name — total household exposure ₹60 lakh.
Don't deposit money you'll need within 5 years — premature withdrawal carries a penalty. Reserve a separate emergency liquid fund (3-6 months of expenses).
Step 2 — Carry the documents
- Aadhaar card (mandatory under PMLA + SCSS Rules 2018 amendment).
- PAN card (mandatory; SCSS interest crosses TDS threshold easily).
- Age proof — birth certificate / school certificate / passport / Aadhaar / driving licence / PAN.
- Retirement / VRS proof — only if claiming under-60 eligibility — pension order, VRS letter, defence release order.
- Linked savings account passbook (for quarterly interest credit) — at the same bank or post office (RTGS/NEFT to a different bank's account is also allowed).
- 2 passport-size photographs.
- Cheque / DD / UPI for initial deposit (cash above ₹2 lakh deposit not allowed under §269ST IT Act).
- Spouse's documents — if opening joint account: spouse Aadhaar, PAN, photo.
- Nominee details — name, age, relationship, address of nominee(s) — strongly recommend you fill at account opening.
Step 3 — Fill Form A (SCSS application)
The standard form is Form A under SCSS Rules — available at the counter or downloadable from indiapost.gov.in / your bank's website. Fields:
- Name of depositor (and joint depositor if any).
- Aadhaar + PAN.
- Date of birth.
- Address.
- Bank account for interest credit (account number + IFSC).
- Deposit amount.
- Mode of payment (cheque / cash / transfer).
- Tenure (default 5 years).
- Nominee details (Form SC-2).
Sign in front of the official; thumb-impression with witness if you can't sign.
Step 4 — Make the deposit
- Minimum deposit: ₹1,000 (in multiples of ₹1,000).
- Maximum deposit: ₹30 lakh (single + joint combined per individual).
- Mode: cheque / DD / online transfer / UPI (at participating banks). Cash above ₹2 lakh is barred.
- The account is opened the same day as deposit clearance.
Step 5 — Receive passbook + nomination acknowledgement
Post office hands a printed passbook with:
- Account number.
- Date of opening.
- Deposit amount.
- Maturity date (5 years from opening).
- Nominee name + share.
Banks issue either a passbook or an account statement on net banking. Set up netbanking access immediately — useful for quarterly interest tracking.
Step 6 — Receive quarterly interest credits
Interest is credited on the first working day of each quarter — i.e., 1 April, 1 July, 1 October, 1 January.
- The first credit is proportionate (if you opened mid-quarter, only the days from opening to quarter-end).
- Credits go to the linked savings account specified at opening.
- Quarterly amount = Deposit × 8.2% / 4 (e.g., ₹15 lakh × 8.2%/4 = ₹30,750).
Step 7 — Track and (after maturity) extend or withdraw
At the end of 5 years:
- Withdraw — close the account; principal returned; final interest credited.
- Extend by 3 years — submit Form B (Extension Application) within one year of maturity. Extension allowed only once. Extended account earns the prevailing SCSS rate at the date of extension (not the original 8.2%).
- Premature withdrawal at any time — penalties:
- Before 1 year of opening: account closed, NO interest paid; deposit + simple interest at SB rate refunded; bank deducts the §80C-claimed amount as taxable income for the original year.
- After 1 year but before 2 years: 1.5% of deposit deducted as penalty.
- After 2 years: 1% of deposit deducted as penalty.
- On death of depositor — account closes; balance + interest till date of death paid to nominee / heir; for amounts above ₹5 lakh without nomination, Succession Certificate may be needed (see guide).
Sample fee + interest + tax-impact table
+------------------------------------+-------------------------------------+ | Current interest rate (Q1 FY27) | 8.2% per annum | +------------------------------------+-------------------------------------+ | Interest payment frequency | Quarterly (1 Apr / Jul / Oct / Jan) | +------------------------------------+-------------------------------------+ | Tenure | 5 years | +------------------------------------+-------------------------------------+ | Extension | One extension of 3 years (max) | +------------------------------------+-------------------------------------+ | Minimum deposit | ₹1,000 (in multiples of ₹1,000) | +------------------------------------+-------------------------------------+ | Maximum deposit | ₹30 lakh per individual (raised in | | | Budget 2023 from ₹15 lakh) | +------------------------------------+-------------------------------------+ | §80C deduction on deposit | Up to ₹1.5 lakh in year of deposit | | | (only Old tax regime) | +------------------------------------+-------------------------------------+ | §80TTB on interest | Up to ₹50,000 deductible for seniors| | | (Old tax regime) | +------------------------------------+-------------------------------------+ | TDS on interest | 10% if total annual interest > ₹50k | | | for seniors (₹1 lakh from FY 2025-26| | | per Finance Act 2025 §194A revision)| | | Submit Form 15H to avoid if no tax | +------------------------------------+-------------------------------------+ | Quarterly payout on ₹15 lakh @8.2% | ₹30,750 | +------------------------------------+-------------------------------------+ | Quarterly payout on ₹30 lakh @8.2% | ₹61,500 | +------------------------------------+-------------------------------------+ | Total interest in 5 years (₹30L) | ₹12.30 lakh | +------------------------------------+-------------------------------------+ | Premature exit (1-2 yrs) | 1.5% penalty on deposit | +------------------------------------+-------------------------------------+ | Premature exit (after 2 yrs) | 1.0% penalty on deposit | +------------------------------------+-------------------------------------+ | NRI eligible? | NO | +------------------------------------+-------------------------------------+ | Statutory reference | SCSS Rules 2004 + 2023 amendment; | | | Govt Savings Promotion Act 1873; | | | IT Act §80C, §80TTB, §194A | +------------------------------------+-------------------------------------+ | RTI fee for account query | ₹10 by IPO. BPL = free. | +------------------------------------+-------------------------------------+
Common reasons your SCSS account opening / operation gets stuck
- VRS proof missing for under-60 retirees. The branch insists on a VRS letter from the previous employer + the date of retirement. Get a fresh VRS confirmation letter from HR; without it, wait till you turn 60.
- Spouse's age too low for joint account. Many are surprised — in a joint account, only the first / primary holder needs to satisfy age criteria. So a 65-year-old husband can open with his 55-year-old wife as joint holder. Confirm primary-holder age before opening.
- Existing SCSS already in another bank. Your aggregate exposure across all SCSS accounts is capped at ₹30 lakh. The system (and your PAN-based aggregation) will block a fresh deposit pushing you above ₹30 lakh.
- KYC mismatch. Aadhaar address says one thing, PAN says another — branch flags. Update KYC in advance — easier at SBI / PNB through their net banking; for post office, fresh Form 60 / Aadhaar update.
- Nominee details not provided. Some branches still process accounts without nominee — disastrous for heirs later. INSIST on filling Form SC-2 at opening.
- Cheque returned / UPI failed. Initial deposit cheque bounced; account opening reversed. Re-attempt with cleared cheque or DD.
- Rate confusion. A new applicant is told the rate is what was on the previous quarter — clarify in writing the rate locked at the date of opening; SCSS rate at deposit date is fixed for the full 5-year tenure.
- Quarterly interest not credited. Bank account closure / IFSC change / dormant SB account. Update mandate at the SCSS branch.
- TDS deducted despite Form 15H. Form 15H must be submitted at the start of every financial year (April), and is only valid if total income is below taxable limit. Late submission → TDS deducted.
- Extension form not submitted in time. If you don't apply for extension within 1 year of maturity, the account is treated as matured and the principal lies in your savings account earning SB rate — interest opportunity lost. Diary-mark maturity date in advance.
If stuck — the escalation ladder
Rung 1 — Branch / Postmaster
- Bank: branch manager / SCSS desk officer.
- Post office: postmaster / sub-postmaster.
- Most operational issues (interest credit miss, KYC, nominee change) resolve at branch in 2-3 visits.
Rung 2 — Bank's nodal grievance officer / Department of Posts
- Each public sector bank has a published grievance officer per circle / state. Find on bank's website → Customer Service → Grievance Redressal.
- Department of Posts complaints: https://www.indiapost.gov.in/_layouts/15/dop.portal.complaints/complaintform.aspx or call 1800-266-6868 (toll-free, 9 am-6 pm).
Rung 3 — Banking Ombudsman / RBIOS
- For bank SCSS accounts: file at https://cms.rbi.org.in under Reserve Bank Integrated Ombudsman Scheme (RBIOS) 2021.
- 30-day SLA after the bank's 30-day own SLA expires. Free, fast, statutory.
Rung 4 — CPGRAMS
- https://pgportal.gov.in → Ministry of Finance (Department of Financial Services for banks) OR Ministry of Communications (Department of Posts for post office accounts).
- Higher escalation visibility.
Rung 5 — Right to Information (RTI)
India Post (Department of Posts) and public sector banks are public authorities under §2(h) of the RTI Act 2005. Even private banks acting as agency banks for the SCSS scheme can be RTI'd through the RBI (which is a public authority) for the policy / regulatory side.
RTI helps here when:
- SCSS account opening application has been pending more than 7 working days without explanation — RTI to PIO India Post / bank for “reason for delay and current status of application reference number X”.
- Quarterly interest of multiple consecutive quarters is missing — RTI for “interest credit log for SCSS account number X for periods Y and Z and reason for non-credit”.
- Nominee change request submitted but not processed — RTI for “copy of nominee change request received on date X and current status”.
- Premature closure form submitted but principal not refunded within 7 working days — RTI for “date of receipt of closure request, processing notes, expected payout date”.
- Extension application within the 1-year window not acknowledged and the rate dispute arises — RTI for “date of receipt of extension Form B and the rate locked”.
- TDS certificate (Form 16A) for SCSS interest not issued by 31 May — RTI to PIO at the bank's TDS cell for the certificate.
RTI does NOT help here when:
- You want a higher rate than 8.2% — the rate is fixed by Ministry of Finance quarterly notification; RTI cannot override.
- You want SCSS opened though you're 58 and not on VRS — eligibility is statutory; RTI cannot waive eligibility.
- You want to deposit ₹50 lakh in SCSS — the ₹30 lakh cap is statutory under Budget 2023 amendment; RTI cannot exceed it.
- You want NRI status to be allowed — Rule 13 of SCSS Rules excludes NRIs; RTI doesn't change rules.
- You want investment advice (SCSS vs FD vs MF) — RTI is “information held”, not advisory. Talk to a SEBI-registered investment adviser.
- You want the bank to forgive a 1.5% premature withdrawal penalty — penalty is statutory; RTI can confirm the rule but cannot waive it.
FAQs
Q. What's the difference between SCSS interest rate locked at opening vs prevailing rate?
The interest rate is fixed for the full 5-year tenure at the rate applicable on the date of account opening. So if you opened in April 2025 at 8.2%, that 8.2% applies for all 20 quarters even if the government revises rates later. On extension after 5 years, you re-lock at the rate prevailing at the date of extension for another 3 years.
Q. Can I open one SCSS in my name and one in my wife's name to deposit ₹60 lakh total?
Yes, perfectly legal. Each individual has an independent ₹30 lakh cap. Many couples do this for a household deposit of ₹60 lakh.
Q. I retired at 56 with VRS in March 2024 but am opening SCSS only now in November 2025 — am I still eligible?
The “within 1 month of retirement benefits” condition is for opening before turning 60 as a VRS retiree. Since you're now 57 (still under 60), you'd technically be late. However, the better path: wait till you turn 60 (a few months) and open without any VRS-related condition. Or, if you can't wait, talk to the postmaster — interpretations vary, and some accept the retirement benefits proof if it's still the same retirement corpus being deposited.
Q. Is SCSS interest fully tax-free?
No. The interest is fully taxable as “Income from Other Sources” in your slab. However:
- §80TTB allows seniors to deduct interest income up to ₹50,000 per year (combined SB interest + FD + SCSS interest).
- §80C allows the deposit itself (up to ₹1.5 lakh) as deduction in the year of deposit.
- TDS is applied at 10% if total annual interest crosses the threshold (currently ₹50,000 — raised to ₹1 lakh from FY 2025-26 per Finance Act 2025).
- Submit Form 15H at the bank/post office at the start of each FY if your total income is below taxable limit, to prevent TDS.
Q. Can SCSS be used as collateral for a loan?
Loan against SCSS is NOT permitted — explicitly barred by the SCSS Rules. The deposit must remain unencumbered for the full tenure.
Q. What happens if both joint holders die during tenure?
The account is closed; balance + accrued interest paid to nominee. If no nominee, the legal heirs receive after producing Legal Heir Certificate (smaller amounts) or Succession Certificate (above bank/post office threshold).
Q. I am turning 60 in 3 months — should I wait or open now under VRS?
Wait. Once you turn 60, you can deposit up to ₹30 lakh without retirement-benefit-linked restrictions. Under VRS (55-60), the deposit is capped at the retirement benefits received, which may be less than ₹30 lakh.
Q. Can I open SCSS through net banking from home?
SBI YONO / iMobile / HDFC NetBanking allow SCSS opening online if you're an existing customer with full KYC + a savings account at the bank. Otherwise it's a branch / post office visit.
Q. The branch officer told me the new SCSS rate is 7.6% from next quarter — should I rush to lock 8.2% now?
Maybe. Quarterly rate notifications come around the 25th-end of the previous month. If a downward revision is rumoured, opening before the quarter-end at 8.2% locks it for 5 years. But don't rush a poor decision — verify the rumour against the actual notification on https://dea.gov.in before crashing in.
Q. Can I transfer my SCSS from one branch to another within the same bank?
Yes, transfer between branches of the same bank (or between post offices) is allowed by submitting an application at the source branch — typically processed in 7-10 working days. Transfer between different banks is not permitted (but you can close at one and re-open at another, with the 1-2% premature penalty if before 5 years).
Related on RTI Wiki
Last reviewed: 26 April 2026 by RTI Wiki editorial team. SCSS interest rate is reviewed quarterly by the Ministry of Finance — verify the current rate at https://dea.gov.in or https://www.indiapost.gov.in before opening, or write to admin@bighelpers.in if you spot anything outdated.

