National Pension System (NPS): the myths, and the real way it works (2026)
Before you read a single rule, clear three ideas that stop most people from ever opening an NPS account. First, many believe NPS is only for government employees. That is false. Any Indian citizen between 18 and 70, salaried or self-employed, resident or NRI, can join the All Citizen Model on their own. Second, people think the whole retirement corpus is taxed when you take it out. That is also false. A large part of the lump sum you withdraw at retirement is tax-exempt under the Income Tax Act, and NPS carries one of the few deductions that survive even inside the newer tax structure. Third, people assume the government decides where your money goes and you have no say. Wrong again. You choose your pension fund manager and you choose how much sits in equity, corporate bonds and government bonds, or you let a lifecycle setting do it by age.
Once those three myths fall away, NPS becomes clear. It is a voluntary, low-cost, market-linked retirement account regulated by the Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority. You put money in over your working years, it grows in professionally managed funds, and at retirement you take part of it as cash and turn the rest into a pension that pays you for life. The rest of this guide walks through the real mechanics, honestly, including the parts that changed in the last two years.
NPS is a voluntary retirement account for every Indian from 18 to 70. You choose the funds, get an extra Rs 50,000 tax deduction on top of Section 80C, and draw a lifelong pension at exit.
Opened to all citizens: 2009 · Regulated by: Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority (PFRDA)
Myth versus fact, laid out plainly
| What people believe | What is true |
|---|---|
| NPS is only for sarkari staff | Open to every citizen 18 to 70, and to NRIs, in the All Citizen Model |
| The full corpus is taxed at exit | The retirement lump sum is largely tax-exempt, only the annuity pension is taxed as income when you receive it |
| You cannot pick your funds | You choose the fund manager and the equity to debt mix, or use an auto lifecycle option |
| You cannot touch the money till 60 | Limited partial withdrawals are allowed for defined needs, and rules have been eased in recent years |
| It gives a fixed guaranteed return | Returns are market-linked, so they move with equity and bond performance, not a fixed rate |
Keep this table in mind as you read the detail below, because each row has a real rule behind it.
Also on RTI Wiki: RTI for your business · Filing RTI from abroad (NRI guide)
Tier I and Tier II, the two accounts
NPS has two account types and the difference matters.
- Tier I is the retirement account. This is the main one. It has withdrawal limits so the money stays invested for your old age, and this is the account that carries the tax benefits. To open it you pay a minimum of Rs 500, and you keep it active by putting in at least Rs 1,000 in a financial year.
- Tier II is an optional add-on that works like a flexible savings account. You can put money in and take it out freely, with no lock-in. You need an active Tier I account first. It opens with a minimum of Rs 1,000 and later contributions can be as small as Rs 250. For most people Tier II carries no special tax break, so treat it as a parking space, not a tax tool.
There is no maximum on how much you can contribute in either account.
Who can join
- Any Indian citizen, resident or NRI, in the age band for the All Citizen Model. Entry starts at 18 and the upper age has been extended over the years. Confirm the current maximum entry age on the official portal before you apply if you are past your mid-sixties.
- Salaried, self-employed, business owners, homemakers with an income source, all can open an account independently.
- You need an Aadhaar, a PAN and a bank account for the online route, plus a photograph and signature.
- Government employees are enrolled through their department, but that is a separate corporate arrangement. The point stands that private citizens are welcome on their own.
The tax benefit, section by section
This is where NPS earns its place in a tax plan, and it is worth being precise.
- Section 80CCD(1) covers your own contribution up to 10 per cent of salary for the salaried, within the overall Rs 1.5 lakh ceiling shared with Section 80C.
- Section 80CCD(1B) is the headline extra. It allows a further deduction of up to Rs 50,000 for money you put into Tier I, over and above the Rs 1.5 lakh limit. This is the piece that pushes many savers toward NPS.
- Section 80CCD(2) covers your employer contribution to your NPS, deductible up to 10 per cent of salary for most, and up to 14 per cent for central and state government staff and for those under the newer tax regime. This benefit sits outside your own limits.
A short honesty note. Several of these breaks behave differently under the older tax regime and the newer default regime. The extra Rs 50,000 under 80CCD(1B), for instance, is claimed under the older regime, while the employer route under 80CCD(2) survives in the newer one. Check which regime you are in and confirm the current limits on the income tax portal before you file.
How to open an NPS account, step by step
- Go to the official eNPS portal or your bank. You can open an account online through eNPS on the CRA portal, or through a Point of Presence such as a bank or India Post.
- Complete Aadhaar or PAN based KYC. The online route verifies you with an OTP on your Aadhaar-linked mobile, or through your PAN and bank.
- Pick Active or Auto choice. In Active choice you set the split across equity, corporate bonds, government bonds and alternative assets, within the allowed equity cap. In Auto choice a lifecycle formula lowers your equity share as you age.
- Pick your pension fund manager. Several PFRDA-registered managers are on offer. You can change your manager and your allocation later, within the allowed frequency.
- Make your first contribution. Pay the opening amount and set up regular contributions by auto-debit or manual payment. Keep at least Rs 1,000 a year going into Tier I to avoid the account freezing.
- Get your PRAN. You receive a Permanent Retirement Account Number, usually the same day for the online route. This number stays with you for life and across jobs and cities.
A before and after scenario
Picture a 30 year old software tester in a private firm who always assumed pensions were a government-only thing. She keeps her savings in a low-interest deposit and pays full tax on her salary. Every year she loses a slice of income to tax that she could have deferred, and her retirement plan is a vague hope.
Now picture the same person after she opens an NPS Tier I account. She contributes a fixed sum each month by auto-debit, claims the extra Rs 50,000 deduction under 80CCD(1B), and lets an auto lifecycle setting hold a healthy equity share while she is young. Over three decades that money compounds in low-cost funds. At retirement she takes a large part as a tax-friendly lump sum and turns the rest into a monthly pension that lands in her account for the rest of her life. Nothing here is guaranteed to a fixed figure, because returns are market-linked, but the structure is doing the heavy lifting that a bank deposit never could.
What happens at exit
At normal exit, the core rule is simple to state. You take part of your corpus as a lump sum, and part of it must be used to buy an annuity, which is the product that pays you a pension for life from an insurer. You choose the annuity provider and the annuity type.
The exact split has been liberalised in recent years, and this is an area in flux, so treat the principle as fixed and the percentages as something to confirm. Broadly, a larger corpus lets you take a bigger share as cash, and a small corpus up to a defined threshold can often be withdrawn in full. The lump sum you take at retirement is largely tax-exempt under the Income Tax Act, while the pension you later draw from the annuity is taxed as income in the year you receive it. Because the precise lump sum and annuity percentages and the corpus thresholds are being revised, check the latest exit and withdrawal rules on the PFRDA and CRA portals before you plan your retirement date.
Limited partial withdrawals from Tier I are allowed before exit for defined reasons such as higher education, marriage of children, a first home, or serious illness, subject to conditions and a cap on how much and how often.
NPS Vatsalya, for your child
If you want to start a pension pot for a minor, NPS Vatsalya is the version launched on 18 September 2024. A parent or guardian opens and runs the account for a child under 18, with a minimum of Rs 1,000 a year and no upper limit. When the child turns 18 the account converts into a regular NPS account in their name. It is a long horizon tool, so the value comes from the decades of compounding, not from any short-term gain.
The Unified Pension Scheme option
From 1 April 2025 central government employees under NPS were given the option of the Unified Pension Scheme. In brief, it offers an assured payout of 50 per cent of the average basic pay of the last 12 months for those with at least 25 years of qualifying service, with a proportionate amount for shorter service and a floor payout for those with at least 10 years. This applies to eligible central government staff, not to the ordinary private citizen on the All Citizen Model. If you are a covered government employee, read the official UPS material carefully before you choose between staying on NPS and moving to UPS, because the choice can be one-time.
Common problems and how to handle them
- Your Tier I account is frozen. This happens if you miss the Rs 1,000 minimum in a year. You reactivate it by paying the pending minimum and a small charge through the portal.
- Annuity rate looks low at retirement. Annuity rates change with the market. Compare the rates and options across the listed annuity providers before you lock in, since the choice is effectively for life.
- KYC or name mismatch. If your Aadhaar and PAN names differ, correct one so they match, then redo the KYC step to avoid the account being stuck.
- Confusion between Tier I and Tier II. Remember that only Tier I carries the retirement lock-in and the tax benefits. Do not park emergency money in Tier I expecting to pull it out freely.
Benefit delayed or a request stuck? Use RTI
If your account, exit or grievance sits unresolved past the official timeline, a Right to Information request to the concerned public authority often moves the file, because the office then has to answer or explain the delay in writing. Ask narrow, factual questions about the status of your case and the officer handling it. Draft it in minutes with the AI RTI Drafter and learn the full filing and appeal route in The RTI Playbook.
Where this scheme came from
The National Pension System began in 2004 for new central government recruits and was opened to all citizens in 2009. Under the Union government led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi it was widened and strengthened, with the extra Rs 50,000 deduction under 80CCD(1B) introduced in 2015 and NPS Vatsalya for children launched in 2024. You can see it alongside every other central and state welfare scheme on the All Modi-era Sarkari Yojana index 2014 to 2026.
Frequently asked questions
Is NPS only for government employees?
No. The All Citizen Model is open to any Indian from 18 to 70, salaried or self-employed, and to NRIs. Government staff join through their department, but private citizens can open an account on their own.
Is the whole corpus taxed when I retire?
No. The lump sum you take at retirement is largely tax-exempt under the Income Tax Act. Only the pension you later receive from the annuity is taxed as income in the year you get it.
Can I choose where my money is invested?
Yes. You pick your pension fund manager and, in Active choice, the split across equity, corporate bonds, government bonds and alternative assets, within the allowed equity cap. Auto choice manages the mix by your age.
What is the minimum I must contribute?
For Tier I you open with Rs 500 and must put in at least Rs 1,000 in a financial year to keep it active. Tier II opens with Rs 1,000 and takes contributions from Rs 250, with no annual minimum.
Does NPS give a guaranteed return?
No. Returns are market-linked, so they rise and fall with equity and bond performance. There is no fixed guaranteed rate on the All Citizen Model.
Can I open an account for my child?
Yes, through NPS Vatsalya, launched in September 2024. A guardian runs it for a minor with a minimum of Rs 1,000 a year, and it converts to a regular NPS account when the child turns 18.
Summary and next step
Bottom line: NPS is a voluntary retirement account for every Indian from 18 to 70, not only government staff. You choose the funds, claim an extra Rs 50,000 deduction under 80CCD(1B), and at exit take a tax-friendly lump sum plus a lifelong pension. Open it on the official eNPS or CRA portal, and confirm the current exit and tax rules there before you plan.
- Regulator portal: pfrda.org.in
- If a request is stuck, draft an RTI: AI RTI Drafter
- All government schemes: Sarkari Yojana index
Related schemes
Sources
- PFRDA, National Pension System All Citizen Model: pfrda.org.in
- PFRDA, Unified Pension Scheme details: pfrda.org.in
- NPS Trust, Tax Benefits under NPS: npstrust.org.in
- PFRDA and PIB, NPS Vatsalya launch September 2024
- PFRDA, Exits and Withdrawals under NPS Regulations
By Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak
Last reviewed: 1 July 2026.
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