Section 80C Deductions in India 2026: Save ₹46,800 Tax Every Year (Complete Guide)

Section 80C is India’s most powerful — and most misunderstood — tax saving provision. ₹1.5 lakh in deductions, every year, legally reduces your taxable income and saves you up to ₹46,800 in tax. Yet most Indians either underuse it, invest in the wrong instruments, or don’t know half the options available.

This complete guide covers every 80C investment, which ones to actually choose based on your age and goals, and the exact math to save ₹46,800 this financial year.

— SPONSORED · TOP BANNER —
AdSense banner will appear here

What is Section 80C?

Section 80C of the Income Tax Act allows you to claim deductions of up to ₹1.5 lakh per year from your taxable income. This works only under the Old Tax Regime — if you’ve opted for the New Tax Regime (which is now the default), 80C deductions don’t apply.

The Tax Saving Math

Your Tax Slab 80C Deduction Annual Tax Saved
20% (₹5L–₹10L income) ₹1.5 lakh ₹30,000 + cess = ₹31,200
30% (Above ₹10L income) ₹1.5 lakh ₹45,000 + cess = ₹46,800
5% (₹2.5L–₹5L income) ₹1.5 lakh ₹7,500 + cess = ₹7,800

Note: If your total income is under ₹7 lakh and you’ve chosen the new regime, you already pay zero tax via Section 87A rebate. In that case, 80C is irrelevant — don’t switch to old regime just for 80C unless your deductions are truly large.

Every Section 80C Investment Option Ranked

Investment Returns Lock-in Risk Best For
ELSS Mutual Funds 12–15% (market-linked) 3 years (shortest) Medium-High Young investors (20–40)
PPF (Public Provident Fund) 7.1% (guaranteed) 15 years Zero Conservative investors, all ages
NPS (National Pension System) 9–12% (market-linked) Until retirement Low-Medium Retirement planning (30–50)
Tax-Saving FD 6.5–7.5% (fixed) 5 years Zero Ultra-conservative investors
Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana 8.2% (guaranteed) Until girl turns 21 Zero Parents of daughters
NSC (National Savings Cert.) 7.7% (fixed) 5 years Zero Short lock-in with fixed return
Life Insurance Premium 4–6% (low) Policy duration Zero Only if genuinely needed for coverage
EPF (Employer PF) 8.25% (current) Until retirement Zero Auto-deducted for salaried
Home Loan Principal N/A (debt reduction) Loan tenure Zero Anyone with home loan
Children’s Tuition Fees N/A None Zero Parents of school-going children
Stamp Duty on House N/A One-time Zero First-time homebuyers (year of purchase)
— SPONSORED · IN-ARTICLE —
AdSense banner will appear here

Which 80C Investment Should YOU Choose?

Age 20–35: Maximize ELSS

If you’re young with 20+ years before retirement, put the full ₹1.5 lakh in ELSS mutual funds. Here’s why:

  • Shortest lock-in (3 years) — money isn’t trapped for 15 years like PPF
  • Highest potential returns (12–15% vs 7.1% for PPF)
  • After 3 years, LTCG tax is only 12.5% on gains above ₹1.25 lakh
  • ₹1.5 lakh/year in ELSS at 13% for 25 years = ₹2.2 crore

Age 35–50: Split Between ELSS + PPF

Balance growth with safety:

  • ₹1 lakh → ELSS (growth)
  • ₹50,000 → PPF (guaranteed, tax-free at maturity)

Age 50+: Shift Toward PPF + NSC

Capital preservation becomes priority:

  • ₹75,000 → PPF or Tax-Saving FD
  • ₹75,000 → NSC or Senior Citizen Savings Scheme

For Parents of Daughters: Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana

If you have a daughter under 10, SSY is one of the best guaranteed-return investments in India — 8.2% tax-free, government-backed. You can invest up to ₹1.5 lakh per year per daughter and claim 80C for it. Returns at maturity are completely tax-free.

The 80C Mistake Most Indians Make

“Most people rush to buy insurance policies in March to ‘save tax’ without realizing they’re getting terrible returns and locking up money for 20+ years.” — Every CA who has ever given honest advice

Endowment and money-back insurance policies (LIC Traditional Plans, etc.) are the worst 80C investment for most people:

  • Returns: 4–5% effective (worse than inflation)
  • Lock-in: 20–25 years
  • Surrender value: terrible in early years
  • What to do instead: Buy term insurance (pure protection, cheap) + invest separately in ELSS/PPF

80C + Other Deductions: The Full Tax-Saving Stack

80C is just the beginning. Stack these deductions for maximum savings under the old regime:

Section What It Covers Max Deduction
80C EPF, PPF, ELSS, LIC, home loan principal, children’s fees ₹1,50,000
80CCD(1B) Additional NPS contribution (over and above 80C) ₹50,000
80D Health insurance premium (self + spouse + children) ₹25,000
80D Health insurance for parents (senior citizens) ₹50,000
80E Education loan interest No limit (8 years)
Section 24 Home loan interest (self-occupied property) ₹2,00,000
80TTA Savings account interest ₹10,000
80G Donations to approved charities 50–100% of donation
Standard Deduction For salaried employees ₹50,000

Maximum possible deductions (salaried, senior citizen parents, home loan, NPS):
80C: ₹1.5L + NPS: ₹50K + Health insurance: ₹75K + Home loan interest: ₹2L + Standard deduction: ₹50K = ₹5.25 lakh in deductions

— SPONSORED · MID-ARTICLE —
AdSense banner will appear here

EPF Already Counts Toward 80C — Are You Counting It?

If you’re salaried, your Employee Provident Fund (EPF) contribution is automatically deducted — and it counts toward 80C. Many salaried employees don’t realise this and double-invest unnecessarily.

Check your salary slip: your EPF contribution (typically 12% of basic salary) is already using your 80C limit. Subtract it from ₹1.5 lakh to know how much more you need to invest.

Example: Basic salary = ₹50,000/month → EPF deduction = ₹6,000/month = ₹72,000/year. Remaining 80C room = ₹1,50,000 − ₹72,000 = ₹78,000 to invest yourself.

Home Loan + 80C: Double Benefit

If you have a home loan:

  • Principal repayment counts toward 80C (up to ₹1.5L combined with other investments)
  • Interest paid is separately deductible under Section 24 (up to ₹2L for self-occupied property)
  • First-time homebuyers also get Section 80EEA deduction (additional ₹1.5L on interest)

80C Checklist — Before 31 March 2026

  • ☑ Calculate how much EPF you’ve already contributed this year
  • ☑ Check children’s school fees paid (counts toward 80C)
  • ☑ If home loan — note principal repaid this year
  • ☑ Calculate remaining 80C room (₹1.5L minus above)
  • ☑ Invest remaining amount in ELSS (best returns) or PPF (guaranteed)
  • ☑ Also invest ₹50,000 extra in NPS under 80CCD(1B) for additional deduction
  • ☑ Ensure health insurance premium paid (80D)
  • ☑ Verify old regime is selected when filing ITR

Best ELSS Funds in India 2026

Fund Name 3-Year Return 5-Year Return Min SIP
Mirae Asset ELSS Tax Saver 18.4% 17.2% ₹500
Quant ELSS Tax Saver 24.1% 24.6% ₹500
Axis Long Term Equity 12.8% 14.1% ₹500
Canara Robeco Equity Tax Saver 16.2% 16.8% ₹500
DSP Tax Saver Fund 17.5% 16.4% ₹500

Note: Past returns don’t guarantee future performance. Always verify current NAV and returns on AMFI website before investing.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I claim 80C if I’m in the new tax regime?

No. Section 80C deductions are only available under the old tax regime. If you’ve opted for the new regime (now the default), you cannot claim 80C. Switch to old regime when filing ITR if your total deductions make it worthwhile.

Is there an 80C limit for HUF?

Yes — HUFs can also claim 80C deduction up to ₹1.5 lakh. Investments like PPF, ELSS, and term insurance (for HUF members) qualify.

Can both spouses claim 80C separately?

Yes. Each spouse has their own ₹1.5 lakh 80C limit. A working couple can collectively save ₹93,600 in taxes (at 30% slab) by fully utilizing both limits.

Can I invest a lump sum in ELSS instead of SIP?

Yes — ELSS accepts both SIP and lump sum. If you’re investing close to March 31 to save tax, a lump sum is faster. However, SIP throughout the year averages your cost and is generally better for market-linked returns.

What if I can’t invest ₹1.5 lakh this year?

Invest whatever you can. Even ₹50,000 in ELSS saves ₹15,600 in tax (at 30% slab). The 80C limit doesn’t need to be fully utilized — partial investment is better than none.

Summary: Your 80C Action Plan

Section 80C rewards consistency, not last-minute scrambling. Start an ELSS SIP today — even ₹5,000/month — and you’ll have ₹60,000 invested by year-end without feeling the pinch. Add your PPF contribution, let EPF run automatically, and you’ll hit the ₹1.5 lakh limit effortlessly.

For the full breakdown with investment-specific calculations and age-based plans, download our free Section 80C: ₹46,800 Saved Yearly PDF. And to see if government schemes can further reduce your tax liability as a business owner, try our free Government Scheme Finder.

Exit mobile version