Skip to main content

Tax Savings under Section 80C

1.      What is a tax deduction?


A tax deduction is simply an item that helps you reduce your taxable income by the amount of the deduction. So by utilizing that particular deduction, you can reduce the amount of income tax by reducing the amount of your taxable income.

For example: If you have a taxable income of Rs. 2,50,000 for the financial year, and you invest Rs. 70,000 in PPF and Rs. 30,000 in Equity Linked Savings Schemes, then your taxable income is: Gross Taxable Income: Rs. 2,50,000

Deductions:
PPF: Rs. 70,000
ELSS: Rs. 30,000
Total Deductions: Rs. 1,00,000
Net Taxable Income: Rs. 1,50,000

2.      How can I save tax using different tax deductions?


There are different tax deductions available to an individual under different Sections of the IT Act. Section 80C for example has a deduction limit of Rs. 1 lakh per annum.
You can save tax by making use of the various deductions available to you under different sections of the IT Act i.e. investing in these instruments.

3.      What are the investment options available under Section 80C?


The specified investment schemes under section 80C are:

a.       Life Insurance Premiums

b.      Contributions to Employees Provident Fund (EPF)

c.       Public Provident Fund (PPF)

d.      National Savings Certificates (NSC)

e.       Unit Linked Insurance Plan (ULIP)

f.       Repayment of Housing Loan (Principal)

g.      Equity Linked Savings Scheme (ELSS) of Mutual Funds

h.      Fixed Deposit (FD) with Banks having a lock-in period of five years

i.        Pension Funds

 

4.      Does Section 80C include Section 80CCC and 80CCD?


Yes. The total deduction available under Section 80C is Rs. 1 lakh, inclusive of Section 80CCC and Section 80CCD. These two sub sections are to do with pension. Under Section 80CCC, you can invest up to Rs. 1 lakh in a Pension fund of LIC of India or any other insurance company. Under Section 80CCD you can invest in the National Pension Scheme of the Central Government up to 10% of your salary. Any contribution to this scheme of more than 10% of your salary will not be eligible for tax deduction.

5.      What is the limit for Section 80CCF: Long Term Infrastructure Bonds?


An additional deduction of Rs. 20,000 has been introduced by way of investment into long term infrastructure bonds.


Here, any investment made into the specified long term infrastructure bonds between April 1st, 2010 and March 31st, 2011 will be eligible for a tax deduction up to Rs. 20,000.
This is in addition to the Rs. 1 lakh deduction available under Section 80C.

This is not applicable for Year 2012 - 2013

6.      How does Life Insurance Premium payment contribute to Section 80C investment?


An amount up to Rs 1 lakh that you pay towards life insurance premium for yourself, your spouse or your children can be included in Section 80C deduction and reduced from your taxable income.
If you are paying premium for more than one insurance policy, all the premiums can be included, subject to the limit of Rs. 1 lakh.

a.       Can I include life insurance premiums paid for my parents?

No. Life insurance premium paid for your parents or your in-laws is not eligible for deduction.

b.      Does this apply to all life insurance products such as endowment, money back, term plans, ULIPs etc?

Yes. Any premium paid for any life insurance in any life insurance product is eligible for tax deduction under Section 80C.

Also note that any sum, including the bonus, received on maturity of a life insurance policy is tax free. Death benefits received are also exempt from tax.

Most importantly, remember to invest in a life insurance policy only if you need it, and not for the tax benefit. If you opt for it keeping in mind the tax benefit, you may end up being under-insured or possibly over-insured.

 

7.      How do I save tax by contributing to my employee's provident fund?


The EPF is a scheme intended to help employees from both private and non-pensionable public sectors save a fraction of their salary every month in a savings scheme, to be used in an event that the employee is temporarily or no longer fit to work or upon retirement.

An employee can withdraw full amount at the credit in the fund on retirement from service after attaining the age of 55 year.

EPF is automatically deducted from salary. Both employee and employer contribute to it. Employee's contribution is counted towards Section 80C investments.

Employees also have the option to contribute additional amounts through voluntary contributions (VPF).

Summary of Employees Provident Fund

Return (p.a.)

8.5%

Risk

NIL

Lock In

Working Life

Income from Investment

Interest earned is Tax Free

Maturity Proceeds

Exempt under Section 10(11).

NRI/PIO eligible

Yes

8.      How to save tax by contributing to the Public Provident Fund (PPF)?


PPF is eligible for tax deduction up to Rs. 70,000. So any amount up to Rs. 70,000 invested towards your PPF account will be eligible for tax deduction. The minimum investment in PPF is Rs 500 per year and the maximum investment is Rs 70,000 per year.

The unique feature of PPF is that in case of insolvency it will not be attached to the assets of the insolvent. So this is an attractive tax saving tool for business people in fluctuating and highly leveraged businesses. Withdrawals from your PPF account are allowed during certain years for specific purposes.

Summary of PPF Details

Return (p.a.)

8.0%

Risk

NIL

Lock In

15 years

Income from Investment

Interest earned is Tax Free

Maturity Proceeds

Exempt from tax.

NRI/PIO eligible

No

9.      How to save tax by investing in National Savings Certificate (NSC)?


NSC is a good medium term investment option. An advantage of the NSC is that it can be pledged as security against a loan to banks/ government institutions.

The minimum investment starts from Rs 100 and there is no maximum limit for the investment in a year.

Return (p.a.)

8.0% compounded half-yearly, i.e., the effective annual rate of interest is 8.16%.

Risk

NIL

Lock In

6 years

Income from Investment

·         Interest accrued every year is liable to tax (i.e., to be included in your taxable income).

·         However, interest is also deemed to be reinvested and thus eligible for section 80C deduction.

Maturity Proceeds

It includes interest which is already taxed

NRI/PIO eligible

No

10.  How to save tax by taking a Unit Linked Insurance Plan (ULIP)?


Unit-Linked Insurance Plan (ULIP) is life insurance solution that provides for the benefits of risk protection and flexibility in investment. Part of the premium you pay goes towards the sum assured (amount you get in a life insurance policy) and the balance will be invested in whichever investments you choose as per what is available under the scheme - equity, debt or a mixture of both.

Summary of ULIP Details

Return (p.a.)

Market linked

Risk

Market and Fund manager risk

Lock In

5 years

Income from Investment

N.A.

Maturity Proceeds

·         Exempt under Section 10(10)D for any sum received from insurance policy as maturity proceeds. Death benefits are exempt from tax.

·         However for ULIPs the maturity benefit is tax free only if the premium paid per year is less the 20% of the life insurance cover. In other words the life cover has to be at least 5 times the premium.

NRI/PIO eligible

Yes

11.  How to use home loan to save tax?


The EMI (equated monthly installment) that you pay to repay your home loan consists of two components - one is the principal and the other is the interest. The principal component of the EMI qualifies for deduction under section 80C.

Even the interest component can save you significant income tax - but that would be under Section 24 of the Income Tax Act. Currently, anybody with a housing loan gets a deduction up to Rs 150,000, paid as interest for the loan, from his total income, for a self occupied property.

For more information on how a home loan can help you save tax – please see our Section on Income from House Property (Question 10).

12.  How to save tax by investing in Equity Linked Savings Schemes (ELSS)?


Investment in ELSS is considered to be one of the best option to save tax because of many reasons like low expenses, short lock-in period, high liquidity and high growth in long-term. Year 2008 and 2009 had been extremely volatile. Still, many mutual funds have delivered positive return in past 3 years.

The limitations in ELSS are that premature withdrawal is not allowed. There is a 3 year lock in period. Also ELSS returns are not guaranteed as they are market linked investments.

Summary of ELSS Details

Return (p.a.)

Market linked
(The last 5 years' return from ELSS has been approximately 20% compounded annually)*

Risk

Market and Fund manager risk

Lock In

3 years

Income from Investment

Basically, dividend which is Tax Free

Maturity Proceeds

Long term capital gain on sale of equity oriented mutual fund is tax free.

NRI/PIO eligible

Yes

13.  How to save tax by investing in Bank FD?


A fixed deposit is meant for those investors who want to deposit a lump sum of money for a fixed period; say for a minimum period of 15 days to five years and above. Investor gets a lump sum (principal + interest) at the maturity of the deposit.

The 5-year tax-saving bank deposit gives tax benefit under Section 80C as the amount you invest in the 5 year FD is deducted from your taxable income.
However interest received on the FD is taxable.

Summary of 5 Yr Bank FD Details

Return (p.a.)

Typical interest rate is 8.00 to 8.50% with an additional 0.25 to 0.5% for senior citizens. The interest rate varies between banks and with time.

Risk

NIL

Lock In

5 years

Income from Investment

Interest received is taxable

Maturity Proceeds

Includes interest which is already taxed

NRI/PIO eligible

Yes

14.  How to save tax investing in New Pension Scheme?


This is a new, market-linked vehicle for those who do not have an EPF facility to target long-term retirement planning. It is open to any Indian citizen between the age of 18 and 55. Minimum investment is fixed at Rs. 6,000 p.a.

 

The NPS offers two accounts: tier I and tier II. Currently only tier I account is available. This is a non-withdrawable account and investments in this keep accumulating till you turn 60.

Summary of New Pension Scheme Details

Return (p.a.)

Market Linked

Risk

Market and Fund Manager Risk

Lock In

Till age of 60

Income from Investment

N.A.

Maturity Proceeds

·         Tax will be levied if you withdraw the money on maturity

·         You can save paying tax by transferring the entire corpus to an annuity service provider and receiving a pension

NRI/PIO eligible

No

15.  How to save tax by investing in Senior Citizens Savings Scheme (SCSS)?


It allows a retired person having a lump sum to invest it at a reasonably good interest rate. If you are 60 years old (or took voluntary retirement at 55), you are eligible for the scheme.

Minimum Investment under the scheme is Rs. 1,000 and maximum Rs. 15 lakhs.
The amount invested into SCSS is eligible for tax deduction under Section 80C thus reducing your taxable income in the year of investment.

This is a popular investment with senior citizens as it offers liquidity as well as periodic income – interest is paid out quarterly.

Summary of SCSS Details

Return (p.a.)

9%

Risk

NIL

Lock In

5 years (May be extended for another 3 years at the option of depositor)

Income from Investment

Fully taxable

Maturity Proceeds

Maturity proceeds includes interest which is already taxed every year

NRI/PIO eligible

No

16.  How to save tax by investing in Post Office Time Deposit (POTD)?


POTDs are similar to bank fixed deposits.

Although available for varying time duration like one year, two year, three year and five year, only 5-Yr post-office time deposit (POTD) qualifies for tax saving under section 80C.


The current rate of interest on the 5 year POTD is 7.50% p.a., compounded quarterly. The minimum investment amount is Rs. 200, there is no maximum investment amount. Interest on these deposits is calculated quarterly and paid out annually.

Return (p.a.)

Effective 7.71% as interest is compounded quarterly

Risk

NIL

Lock In

5 years

Income from Investment

Fully taxable

Maturity Proceeds

Maturity proceeds includes interest which is already taxed every year

NRI/PIO eligible

No

17.  How to save tax using Pension Plan?


Today pension plans are available with all life insurance companies. They typically come without any life cover (zero death benefit).

Pension funds are exempted under Section 80CCC, this section stipulates that an investment in pension funds is eligible for deduction from the income.

Section 80CCC investment limit is clubbed with the limit of Section 80C which means that the total deduction available for 80CCC and 80C is Rs 100,000. This also means that your investment in pension funds up to Rs 100,000 can be claimed as deduction under section 80CCC.

Of the maturity amount only one-third can be commuted in cash as tax free maturity. The rest of the amount (or the full amount as the case may be) has to be used to by a pension plan (annuity). Pension receipts from the same will be treated as income in the hands of the assessee and taxed accordingly. Recently, the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority (IRDA) has come out with a clear rule that maturity amount should not be withdrawn as cash this is coming to effect from July 1, 2010. Currently, the maturity amount can be withdrawn as cash but the amount will be added to income and will be taxed accordingly.

Now that you know about the various investment instruments available, before you invest – ask yourself the following questions:

0.      How much risk are you willing to take on the investment?

1.      For how long will you not need to use these funds? i.e. what lock in period is suitable for you?

2.      Do you want your returns to be tax free?

3.      Do you want the maturity values of your investments to be non taxable?

4.      Do you need liquidity?

 

S. No.

Factor

Criteria

1.

Risk and Returns

·         Fixed rate of return with more safety - NSC, PPF, Bank FD OR

·         Market return with more risk - ELSS or ULIP.

2.

Lock-in period

·         Range: Up to 15 years lock-in;

·         ELSS has the least lock-in period of 3 years, whereas PPF has the highest of 15 years;

·         Others fall in between

3.

How return are taxed

The most crucial part is to look at how the returns are taxed.

·         Only PPF and ELSS offer tax free returns; whereas

·         Interest on NSC, Post Office term deposits and bank FDs is taxable

4 (a)

Tax Treatment on Maturity

·         Usually products offer tax deduction on investment

·         Few offer tax exemption on returns at the time of maturity

·         The taxability on maturity reduces the effective return that an investment offers.

4 (b)

EEE or EET category

·         Exempt-Exempt-Exempt (EEE) tax status - tax benefits at the investment stage, the accrual (accumulation) stage and maturity stage - PPF, ELSS and Life Insurance

·         Exempt-Exempt-Tax (EET) tax status - tax benefits at the investment stage and the accrual (accumulation) stage and are taxed at the maturity stage - Bank FDs.

·         In the new Direct Tax Code, lot of investment products will shift from EEE to EET wherein these products will be taxed at the maturity stage

5.

Maximum Investment Limit

·         If a product has maximum investment limit in a year, a tax payer will not be able to claim entire tax benefits for any amount invested above the maximum limit;

·         PPF has maximum investment in a year of Rs. 70,000

·         In case of ELSS and ULIPs there is no maximum investment limit.

6.

Liquidity

·         Most tax saving investment products come with a lock-in period;

·         PPF allows partial withdrawal during the 15 years tenure of the investment.

·         Tax savings bank FD cannot be broken before maturity and also banks normally don't give loans against these FDs.

·         Traditional Life insurance policies and ULIPs allow partial withdrawals but only after completion of 3 years. Also, as an investor you can take loans against life insurance policies.

·         An investor can also take loan against NSC Certificates.

7.

Inflation protection

·         Returns from financial products should beat inflation;

·         Low fixed returns products are to be avoided by investors during periods of high inflation as they yield negative returns.

·         In the long run equities have consistently given higher inflation adjusted returns than returns given fixed return securities.

 

---------------------------------------------

Invest Mutual Funds Online

Transact Mutual Fund Online

 

Download Mutual Fund Application Forms from all AMCs

Download Mutual Fund Application Forms

 

Best Performing Mutual Funds

    1. Largecap Funds:
      1. DSP BlackRock Top 100 Fund
      2. ICICI Prudential Focused Blue Chip Fund
      3. Birla Sun Life Front Line Equity Fund
    2. Large and Midcap Funds
      1. ICICI Prudential Dynamic Plan
      2. HDFC Top 200 Fund
      3. UTI Dividend Yield Fund
    3. Mid and SmallCap Funds
      1. Reliance Equity Opportunities Fund
      2. DSP BlackRock Small & Midcap Fund
      3. Sundaram Select Midcap
      4. IDFC Premier Equity Fund
    4. Small and MicroCap Funds
      1. DSP BlackRock MicroCap Fund
    5. Sector Funds
      1. Reliance Banking Fund
      2. Reliance Banking Fund
    6. Gold Mutual Funds
      1. Relaince Gold Savings Fund
      2. ICICI Prudential Regular Gold Savings Fund
      3. HDFC Gold Fund


 

Popular posts from this blog

Tata Mutual Fund

Being a part of the Tata group, the fund has the backing of a very trusted brand name with strong retail connect. While the current CEO has done an excellent job in leveraging the Tata brand name to AMC's advantage, it is ironic that this was just not capitalised on at the start. Incorporated in 1995, Tata Mutual Fund remained an 'also-ran' fund house for around eight years. Till March 2003, it had a little over Rs 1,000 crore in assets and 19 AMCs were ahead of it. But soon after that the equation changed. It was the fastest growing fund house in 2004 and 2005. During these two years, it aggressively launched six equity funds, two debt funds and one MIP. The fund house as of now stands at No. 8 in terms of asset size. This fund house has a lot to offer by way of choice. And, it also has a number of well performing schemes. Tata Pure Equity, Tata Equity PE and Tata Infrastructure are all good funds. It also has quite a few good debt funds. The funds of Tata AMC are known to...

UTI Mutual Fund

Even though only a few of UTI’s funds are great performers, this public sector fund house has many advantages that its rivals do not. It has a huge base of retail equity investors and a vast distribution network. As a business, it looks stronger than ever, especially in the aftermath of credit crunch. UTI is, by a large margin, the most profitable fund company in the country. This is not surprising, since managing equity funds is more profitable than debt. Its conservative approach and stable parentage is likely to make it look more attractive to investors in times to come. UTI’s big problem is the dragging performance that many of its equity funds suffer from. In recent times, the management has made a concerted effort to improve performance. However, these moves have coincided with a disastrous phase in the stock markets and that has made it impossible to judge whether the overhaul will eventually be a success. UTI’s top performers are a few index funds, some hybrid funds and its inf...

Salary planning Article

1. The salary (basic + DA) should be low. The rest should come by way of such allowances on which the employer pays FBT and you don't pay any tax thereon. 2. Interest paid on housing loan is deductible u/s 24 up to Rs 1.5 lakh (Rs 150,000) on self-occupied property and without any limit on a commercial or rented house. 3. The repayment of housing loan from specified sources is also deductible irrespective of whether the house is self-occupied or given on rent within the overall ceiling of Rs 1 lakh of Sec. 80C. 4. Where the accommodation provided to the employee is taken on lease by the employer, the perk value is the actual amount of lease rental or 20 per cent of the salary, whichever is lower. Understandably, if the house belongs to a family member who is at a low or nil tax zone the family benefits. Yes, the maximum benefit accrues when the rent is over 20 per cent of the salary. 5. A chauffeur driven motor car provided by the employer has no perk value. True, the company would...

8 Investing Strategy

The stock market ‘meltdown’ witnessed since the start of 2005 (notwithstanding the recent marginal recovery) has once again brought to the forefront an inherent weakness existent in our markets. This is the fact that FIIs, indisputably and almost entirely, dominate the Indian stock market sentiments and consequently the market movements. In this article, we make an attempt to list down a few points that would aid an investor in mitigating the risks and curtailing the losses during times of volatility as large investors (read FIIs) enter and exit stocks. Read on Manage greed/fear: This is an important point, which every investor must keep in mind owing to its great influencing ability in equity investment decisions. This point simply means that in a bull run - control the greed factor, which could entice you, the investor, to compromise with your investment principles. By this we mean that while an investor could get lured into investing in penny and small-cap stocks owing to their eye-...

Debt Funds - Check The Expiry Date

This time we give you an insight into something that most debt fund investors would be unaware of, the Average Portfolio Maturity. As we all know, debt funds invest in bonds and securities. These instruments mature over a certain period of time, which is called maturity. The maturity is the length of time till the principal amount is returned to the security-holder or bond-holder. A debt fund invests in a number of such instruments and each of these instruments would be having different maturity times. Hence, the fund calculates a weighted average maturity, which would give a fair idea of the fund's maturity period. For example, if a fund owns three bonds of 2-year (Rs 30,000), 3-year (Rs 10,000) and 5-year (Rs 20,000) maturities, its weighted average maturity would be 3.17 years. What is the big deal about average maturity then, you may ask. Well, knowing a fund's average maturity is important because it tells you how sensitive a fund is to the change in interest rates. It is ...
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...
Invest in Tax Saving Mutual Funds Download Any Applications
Transact Mutual Funds Online Invest Online
Buy Gold Mutual Funds Invest Now