Section 80C Investment Planner
Plan your Section 80C investments to maximize the ₹1.5 Lakh deduction
This calculator is for informational and educational purposes only. Tax calculations are based on the Income Tax Act, 2025 (effective April 1, 2026) and may not reflect all individual circumstances. Tax slabs, rebate thresholds, and deduction limits are subject to change through government notifications. This tool should not be considered as tax advice. Always verify the latest tax rules at incometax.gov.in and consult a qualified Chartered Accountant for personalized guidance.
Latest Updates & Regulatory Changes
Income Tax Act, 2025 Effective
The new Income Tax Act, 2025 came into effect from April 1, 2026, replacing the Income Tax Act, 1961. New tax slabs, revised rebate u/s 87A (up to ₹60,000), and ₹75,000 standard deduction under the default New Regime are now applicable.
New Tax Regime is Default
Under the Income Tax Act, 2025, the New Tax Regime is the default regime. Taxpayers must explicitly opt for the Old Regime. Salaried individuals with taxable income up to ₹12,75,000 pay zero tax under the New Regime.
Rebate u/s 87A Enhanced
Section 87A rebate increased to ₹60,000 (from ₹25,000) for taxable income up to ₹12,00,000 under the New Regime. This effectively makes salaried income up to ₹12,75,000 tax-free.
7-Slab Structure Introduced
The New Regime now has 7 tax slabs (0%, 5%, 10%, 15%, 20%, 25%, 30%) instead of the previous 5-slab structure, providing more gradual tax progression.
Terms, Rules & Regulations
Income Tax Act, 2025
All income tax calculations are governed by the Income Tax Act, 2025, effective from April 1, 2026. The Act replaces the Income Tax Act, 1961 and introduces revised tax slabs, enhanced rebates, and updated compliance requirements. Taxpayers must file returns as per the new provisions.
Assessment Year & Financial Year
The Financial Year (FY) runs from April 1 to March 31. The Assessment Year (AY) is the year following the FY in which income is assessed and taxed. For FY 2026-27, the AY is 2027-28. ITR must be filed by the due date specified for the applicable AY.
Tax Regime Selection
The New Tax Regime is the default regime under the Income Tax Act, 2025. Taxpayers wishing to opt for the Old Regime must explicitly select it while filing their ITR. Once opted out of the New Regime, salaried individuals can switch back only once. Business/professional taxpayers have limited switching options.
Data Accuracy
Tax slabs, rebate limits, and deduction caps are sourced from the Income Tax Act, 2025 as notified by the Government of India. Surcharge rates, marginal relief provisions, and cess rates are applied as per statutory guidelines. Users are advised to cross-verify with official sources.
Frequently Asked Questions
Find answers to common questions about section 80c planner. Click on any question to expand the answer.
Section 80C of the Income Tax Act allows individuals and HUFs to claim a deduction of up to ₹1.5 lakh per financial year from their gross total income by investing in specified tax-saving instruments. The actual tax saving depends on your income tax slab — for example, under the 30% slab, you can save up to ₹46,800 (including 4% cess) by fully utilizing the ₹1.5 lakh limit. Section 80C is one of the most popular and widely used tax-saving provisions in India, covering investments like PPF, ELSS, NPS, LIC premiums, and expenses like children's school fees and home loan principal repayment.
The best Section 80C investments depend on your risk appetite, financial goals, and investment horizon. ELSS (Equity Linked Savings Scheme) mutual funds offer the highest potential returns (12-15% historically) with the shortest lock-in of just 3 years and are ideal for long-term wealth creation. PPF (Public Provident Fund) offers guaranteed tax-free returns (currently 7.1% p.a.) with a 15-year tenure, making it suitable for risk-averse investors. NPS (National Pension System) offers additional ₹50,000 deduction under Section 80CCD(1B) and is best for retirement planning. LIC and other insurance policies provide life cover along with tax savings. The Section 80C Planner tool helps you compare all options and create an optimized tax-saving portfolio.
No, Section 80C deductions cannot be claimed under the New Tax Regime (Section 115BAC) which is the default regime from FY 2023-24 onwards. The New Tax Regime offers lower slab rates but removes most deductions and exemptions including Section 80C, 80D, HRA, and LTA. To claim Section 80C benefits, you must opt for the Old Tax Regime while filing your ITR. Use our Old vs New Tax Regime Calculator to compare which regime gives you a lower tax outgo based on your income and eligible deductions before making the choice.
Lock-in periods vary significantly across Section 80C investments: ELSS mutual funds have the shortest lock-in of 3 years, National Savings Certificate (NSC) has 5 years, 5-year Fixed Deposits with banks and Post Office have a 5-year lock-in, PPF has a 15-year maturity (partial withdrawal allowed from 7th year), NPS has lock-in till retirement (age 60), Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana has a 21-year tenure (matures when girl child turns 21), and LIC policies have lock-in as per policy term. Understanding lock-in periods is crucial for liquidity planning — the Section 80C Planner helps you balance tax savings with your liquidity needs.
Yes, the principal repayment component of your home loan EMI is eligible for deduction under Section 80C, subject to the overall limit of ₹1.5 lakh per year. Additionally, stamp duty and registration charges paid for purchasing a residential property are also eligible under Section 80C in the year of payment. However, this deduction is available only for a self-occupied or let-out residential property, and not for commercial property. Note that if you sell the property within 5 years of possession, the Section 80C deduction claimed on principal repayment will be added back to your income in the year of sale.
To maximize your Section 80C benefit, first claim deductions that you're already entitled to without additional investment — such as EPF contribution from salary, children's tuition fees (up to 2 children), and home loan principal repayment. Then, bridge the remaining gap with strategic investments based on your goals: use ELSS for growth, PPF for safety, and NPS for retirement. You can also claim LIC premium, health insurance premium (under Section 80D separately), and 5-year tax-saving FDs. The Section 80C Planner tool automatically calculates your existing deductions and suggests the best combination of additional investments to reach the ₹1.5 lakh limit optimally.
Section 80C covers a wide range of investments and expenses up to ₹1.5 lakh (PPF, ELSS, LIC, EPF, home loan principal, NSC, tuition fees, etc.). Section 80CCC covers premiums paid for pension plans from insurance companies, and this limit is clubbed within the overall ₹1.5 lakh limit of Section 80C. Section 80CCD covers contributions to NPS (National Pension System) — 80CCD(1) allows 10% of salary (or 20% of gross income for self-employed) up to ₹1.5 lakh (clubbed with 80C limit), while 80CCD(1B) provides an additional exclusive deduction of ₹50,000 for NPS contributions over and above the ₹1.5 lakh limit. Section 80CCD(2) allows employer's NPS contribution up to 14% of salary (for central government) or 10% of salary (others).
The taxability of returns varies by investment: PPF interest and maturity proceeds are completely tax-free (Exempt-Exempt-Exempt). EPF is tax-free if continuous service is 5+ years. ELSS long-term capital gains above ₹1.25 lakh per year are taxed at 12.5% (as per Budget 2024). NPS — 60% of corpus withdrawn at retirement is tax-free, 40% must be used for annuity (annuity income is taxable). 5-year tax-saving FD interest is fully taxable at your slab rate. NSC interest is taxable but reinvested interest qualifies for Section 80C deduction. LIC maturity is tax-free if premium does not exceed 10% of sum assured. Understanding the tax on returns is critical — the Section 80C Planner shows post-tax returns for each investment option.

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