Skip to main content

NPS Withdrawal and Exit Rules

 

Government is doing everything to allure people towards NPS. Recently, NPS account opening form has been cut down from 6 pages to 2 pages. Subscribers opening account through banks are not required to furnish KYC (Know you customer) details, if it's already been done by Banks.

Also, in budget 2015, an additional deduction of Rs.50,000/- is made available for contribution towards NPS u/s 80CCD. This made people inclined towards NPS but there was one more change which had to be done to rope in the interest people to open NPS account, i.e. Relaxation in NPS Withdrawal Rules.

NPS did not allow any withdrawal before the retirement age of 60 years which made people to stay away from including NPS in their retirement portfolio but now, this much awaited modification in the withdrawal rules of National Pension System has been done. The harsh rule of National Pension System (NPS) has been amended to allow partial withdraw up to 25% of contributions. Subscribers will be able to make partial withdraw in specified emergencies plus flexibility has also been made in the exit rules.

Let's understand the modifications in detail along with the basics of National Pension System.

How NPS works?

NPS (National Pension System), similar to the US retirement scheme- 401(K), is a Government approved defined contribution pension scheme which requires a minimum contribution of Rs.6,000/- per annum till the age of 60 years. While state and central government employees have to compulsorily subscribed, it is optional for others. The minimum contribution of Rs.6,000/- can be paid at once or in installments of Rs.500/- per month.

NPS currently offers three funds to invest: government securities fund, fixed-income instruments other than government securities fund and equity fund. Maximum of 50% can be invested in equity through index funds.

NPS withdrawal in Short

At the age of 60 years, you can take 60 percent of the account balance as a lump-sum and rest 40 percent should be used to buy annuity which gives you periodic pension or fixed income.

NPS Partial Withdrawal Rules

As already stated that no partial withdrawal was allowed from NPS, but post-modification of the rules, you will be able to withdraw up to 25 percent of the contributions. The point to note is that the limit of withdrawal of 25 percent will be calculated on the contributed amount not on the account balance. Suppose you have contributed Rs.5,000 per month for 10 years, you would be eligible to withdraw Rs.1.50 lakhs i.e. 25% of Rs.6 lacs. In case of employees provident fund (EPF) you are allowed to withdraw a portion of account balance for specified emergencies.

 Further, partial withdrawal can only be made if you have made contributions for minimum of 10 years and only 3 withdrawals are allowed that too in a gap of five years between each withdrawal.

The specified emergencies includes children's higher education or marriage, treatment of critical illness for self, spouse, children or dependent parents, construction or purchasing the first house and in case of fatal accidents. Also, no withdrawal will be permitted in case the subscriber already owns solely or jointly a residential house or flat other than ancestral property.

The regulation has listed 13 critical illnesses and included fatal accidents or any other ailments of life threatening nature for withdrawal reasons as mentioned below:

  • Cancer;
  • Kidney Failure (End Stage Renal Failure);
  • Primary Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension;
  • Multiple Sclerosis;
  • Major Organ Transplant;
  • Coronary Artery Bypass Graft;
  • Aorta Graft Surgery;
  • Heart Valve Surgery;
  • Stroke;
  • Myocardial Infarction;
  • Coma;
  • Total blindness;
  • Paralysis;
  • Accident of serious/ life threatening nature.
  • Any other critical illness of a life-threatening nature as stipulated in the circulars, guidelines or notifications issued by the Authority from time to time.

Though each withdrawal required a gap of five years but this condition is not applicable in case of critical illnesses.

NPS Exit Rules

Earlier NPS has prescribed the age of retirement to be 60 years but post-modification rules, corporate NPS subscribers can exit at an age designated for retirement by their employers. Some of the organizations have 58 years as the retirement age.

Further, following are the options available with the subscribers to exit from NPS:

1. Once the subscriber attains the age of retirement, he has to buy annuity plans (pension product) for atleast 40% of the accumulated corpus from the Government Authorized agencies. He can withdraw remaining 60% of the accumulated corpus in lump-sum or in phased manner. If the subscriber don't want to avail this default option of NPS, than he can take any of the following actions.

2. He can opt to extend the time to buy the annuity for 3 years from the date of turning to 60 years of age. This relaxation in exit rule is a breather for the subscribers who have a major portion of their contributions in the equities. If market is going from a rough phase at the time of his retirement, he can postpone his to annuitize his corpus.

He can do same by writing to the concerned authority 15 days prior to his retirement. But, remember, in case of death of the subscriber happens in between the deferment period, than his spouse must buy the annuity.

3. He can defer the withdrawal of 60% till the age of 70 years. He can also make fresh contributions till he reaches to 70 years. After this he will have to withdraw the amount either in lump-sum or in phased manner. He can do so by writing to the concerned authority 15 days prior to his retirement.

Earlier, even if subscriber deferred the annuity, no fresh contributions were entertained but under new norms fresh contributions till the age of 70 years are allowed.

Further, in case of deferment of any kind, the subscriber has to bear the cost of maintenance of Permanent Retirement Account, including the charges payable to the central record keeping agency, pension fund, Trustee Bank or any other intermediary, as may be applicable from time to time.

Exemption from Annuitisation

1. In case the subscriber wishes to leave NPS before attaining the retirement age, he needs to buy pension plan for the minimum of 80% of the accumulated corpus. The remaining 20% is available for withdrawal after such utilization. The same is applicable post-modification but an exception has been made for smaller investors. If the accumulated corpus is equal to or less than Rs.1 lakh, the subscriber can withdraw the entire corpus without purchasing any annuity plan.

 

Further, if the subscribers dies before attaining the retirement age and the same concept of 80% into annuity and 20% in lump-sum applies but if the corpus is less than Rs.2 lacs than the same is withdrawable by his legal heirs without going for any annuity plans.

2. If after attaining the Retirement age, the accumulated corpus is less than or equal to Rs.2 lakh, than the subscriber can withdraw all of it and is not require to purchase any annuity plan.

Changing the Annuity Service Provider

Once an annuity plan is purchased, the option of cancellation and reinvestment with another annuity service provider or in another annuity scheme shall not be allowed unless the same is done within the free-look period specified by the service provider.

Taxation of NPS

Deduction of contribution u/s 80C and 80CCD:

Currently, 10% of the salary contributed towards NPS qualifies for tax deduction up to Rs.1.50 lakh under section 80CCD (comes under section 80C). In addition to this, budget 2015-16 has also allowed an additional tax exemption of Rs.50,000/- under Section 80CCD to encourage investors. So in total you can invest Rs.2 lacs into NPS.

Tax on Lump-sum amount and Pension Amount after Retirement:

The lump-sum amount received from the NPS after retirement is taxable in the hands of the subscriber under Income from Other Source while the pension receivable from the NPS is taxable under the head of salary.

Setback of NPS new norms

Though the new norms have relaxed the stringent laws of NPS but what it still remains to address that if subscriber switches job from Government sector NPS to private sector NPS whether the subscriber has to exit from the NPS and 80% of the corpus annuitized and open a fresh account in the private sector or his NPS account gets transferred from Government to private as happens in EPF.

Conclusion: Avoid making NPS Withdrawals

You should not get hampered by the relaxation in NPS withdrawal and exit rules because all the specified emergencies for partial withdrawal are long-term goals with atleast 10-15 years timeline and should already be taken care of by following simple financial planning.

Even if you start investing at 35 years of age, most of these goals would be achievable by creating a balanced portfolio consisting equity mutual funds, PPF, NSC and gold.

Expense for your children education and marriage can be met simply by building corpus through long-term debt oriented funds such as PPF, Sukanya Samriddhi Account etc.

Similarly, your dream of owing a house shall be fulfilled by home loan which also gives tax benefits. As for medical emergencies, health insurance policy with a family floater option would be sufficient.

Thus one should not withdraw corpus from NPS before the maturity.

Best Tax Saver Mutual Funds or ELSS Mutual Funds for 2015

1. BNP Paribas Long Term Equity Fund

2. Axis Tax Saver Fund

3. IDFC Tax Advantage (ELSS) Fund

4. ICICI Prudential Long Term Equity Fund

5. Religare Tax Plan

6. Franklin India TaxShield

7. DSP BlackRock Tax Saver Fund

8. Birla Sun Life Tax Relief 96

9. Reliance Tax Saver (ELSS) Fund

10. HDFC TaxSaver

Invest Rs 1,50,000 and Save Tax under Section 80C. Get Good Returns by Investing in ELSS Mutual Funds Online

Invest in Tax Saver Mutual Funds Online

Invest Online

Download Application Forms

For further information contact Prajna Capital on 94 8300 8300 by leaving a missed call

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

Leave your comment with mail ID and we will answer them

OR

You can write to us at

PrajnaCapital [at] Gmail [dot] Com

OR

Leave a missed Call on 94 8300 8300

Popular posts from this blog

ICICI Prudential Dynamic Plan Invest Online

Download Tax Saving Mutual Fund Application Forms Invest In Tax Saving Mutual Funds Online Buy Gold Mutual Funds Leave a missed Call on 94 8300 8300   ICICI Prudential Dynamic Plan             Invest Online This fund does remarkably well during falling markets, but fails to show the same prowess during a rising market. The fund sticks to its mandate to adapt to the dynamic nature of the market by shuttling between debt and equity. It takes aggressive asset calls in equity when the market surges by investing in quality mid-cap stocks. At the same time, it adopts a defensive strategy by investing in debt and cash when markets get overvalued, making it a good long-term choice.     For further information contact Prajna Capital on 94 8300 8300 by leaving a missed call     Leave a missed Call on 94 8300 8300   Leave your comment with mail ID and we will ...

Lump Sum or SIP?

Invest Mutual Fund Online     You have a lump sum in hand and you wish to invest in equity funds. However, you have heard a lot of talk about investing in equity funds through Systematic Investment Plans (SIPs) because they help average costs, ensure you do not ill-time the market, and help you invest in small sums, besides giving you many other advantages. So, should you invest the money you have in hand in one go, or let it remain in your bank account and then do an SIP? There is no harm in investing a lump sum amount. For all you know, compounding, over the long term, could work better with lump sum. However, make sure you fulfill all of these three criteria if you want to invest in one go. Else, SIP is the way to go. #1: You invest for the long term According to past data, ideally, if you have a time frame of 12 years or more, you can consider lump sum investing (provided you satisfy the other two conditions that follow). So, what is the sanctity behind 12 years? Is it because only...

Tax Returns: Myths and facts of filing your Tax Returns

THE fiscal year has ended and many choose to make tax-filling. Despite this being a regular, annual ritual, several tax payers have some misconceptions, some of which are listed below: Misconception No. 1 Filing tax returns is a complex and cumbersome process. I need a Chartered Accountant to help me file my tax returns. Contrary to popular belief, preparing and filing tax returns is actually quite simple. If you have a digital signature you can accomplish the entire process sitting at home on your computer thanks to the e-filing facility on www.incometaxindiaefiling.gov.in. Alternatively, you can submit the returns online, print a one-page receipt, sign it and drop it off at the income tax office within fifteen days of submitting the returns. No documents are required to be submitted with the receipt. However, if you want help, there are several third party service providers who offer tax preparation and filing services for a fee as low as Rs 200. Misconception No. 2 The interest I p...

Stock Market Concepts: Derivatives and taxation

DERIVATIVES refer to an instrument, which derives its value from the value of something else — that is, an underlying asset. In India, the derivatives space has traditionally been the playground for large institutional investors who use it for hedging or for speculative activities. However, with time, we have seen a steep augmentation in the per capita income of an average Indian. Consequently, the appetite for investment in alternative instruments has transcended into the need to explore untested territories, and one of the most lucrative of all the available options, is the derivatives. Taxation Of Derivatives: Let's have a sharp overview of how taxability impacts the dealings in futures and options: Futures: Since, there is no transfer or delivery of the underlying asset in case of futures, the income or loss from it cannot be taxed under the head "capital gains". Therefore, depending upon the fact whether the assessee is a trader or an investor, the head of income...

Mutual Fund Review: Reliance Regular Savings Balanced

Reliance Regular Savings Balanced fund has shown great resilience during market crash After a shaky start, this fund has established itself as a strong contender in this space. In the past three years it has ridden the market well by not only delivering during the market run-ups but also displaying resilience during the crash. In 2008, it witnessed the second lowest fall among its category and last year it was amongst the top three performers with a return of 76 per cent (category average: 61%).   The poor underperformance in 2006 can well be credited to the low equity allocation of the fund, which stood at just over 10 per cent for only four months that year. Though the fund has the leeway to go up to 75 per cent in equity, it has never touched that limit. In fact, it has exceeded 70 per cent in just five months in its entire history. During the crash of 2008, the fund managers had no problem going right down to 54 per cent (equity exposure). Fund managers Omprakash Kukian and A...
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