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PPF Account India 2026: Interest Rate, Deposit Rules, Tax Benefits & Complete Guide

Savings and investment planning India

The Public Provident Fund (PPF) is one of India's most popular long-term savings instruments — and for good reason. It offers a government-backed interest rate of 7.1% per annum (as of 2026), complete tax exemption at all three stages (deposit, interest, and maturity), and zero risk. Whether you are a salaried employee, self-employed professional, or small business owner, PPF is a cornerstone of smart financial planning in India.

This comprehensive guide explains everything about PPF — how to open an account, deposit rules, partial withdrawal, loan facility, and how it compares with Fixed Deposits and NPS.

What is PPF and Who Can Open an Account?

PPF is a government savings scheme introduced in 1968 under the Public Provident Fund Act. It is managed by the Ministry of Finance and available at all nationalised banks, major private banks, and all post offices across India.

  • Any resident Indian individual can open a PPF account.
  • You can open an account in your own name or on behalf of a minor child (as guardian).
  • NRIs (Non-Resident Indians) cannot open a new PPF account. Existing accounts can be continued till maturity but cannot be extended.
  • HUFs (Hindu Undivided Families) are no longer allowed to open PPF accounts.
EEE Status: PPF enjoys the rare Exempt-Exempt-Exempt (EEE) tax status in India. The deposit qualifies for Section 80C deduction, the interest earned is tax-free, and the maturity amount is fully exempt from income tax. This makes it extremely tax-efficient.

PPF Deposit Rules and Interest Calculation

Minimum and Maximum Deposit

You must deposit at least ₹500 per financial year to keep the account active. The maximum permissible deposit in a single PPF account is ₹1,50,000 per financial year (April to March). Deposits exceeding ₹1.5 lakh in a year do not earn interest on the excess amount.

How Interest is Calculated

PPF interest is calculated on the minimum balance between the 5th and the last day of each month. This means if you deposit before the 5th of every month, you earn interest for that full month. Deposits made after the 5th earn interest only from the following month. The interest is credited to your account at the end of each financial year (March 31).

The PPF interest rate is set by the government every quarter. It has been steady at 7.1% per annum compounded annually for several quarters. To maximise your PPF corpus, make a lump-sum deposit of ₹1.5 lakh before April 5 each year.

15-Year Lock-In and Extension Rules

PPF has a mandatory 15-year lock-in period. The account matures at the end of the 15th financial year from the year of opening. For example, if you opened the account in FY 2011–12, it matures in FY 2026–27.

After maturity, you have three options:

  1. Close the account and withdraw the full maturity amount — fully tax-free.
  2. Extend without contribution for any number of 5-year blocks — the balance continues to earn interest at the prevailing rate.
  3. Extend with contribution for 5-year blocks — you can continue making fresh deposits and enjoy all the tax benefits.
Note: The option to extend must be exercised within one year of maturity. If you do not inform the bank/post office, the account continues without fresh contributions but still earns interest.

Partial Withdrawal Rules

Full withdrawal is only allowed after the 15-year maturity. However, partial withdrawals are permitted from the 7th financial year onwards, subject to the following limits:

From YearMaximum Withdrawal AllowedHow Many Times
Year 1–5Not allowed
From Year 750% of balance at end of 4th year OR 50% of balance at end of preceding year — whichever is lowerOnce per financial year
After Maturity (extended)60% of balance at start of extension block — spread over 5 yearsOnce per financial year

PPF Loan Facility

If you need funds urgently and have not yet reached the 7-year mark for partial withdrawal, you can avail a loan against your PPF balance. The loan is available between the 3rd and 6th financial years. The maximum loan amount is 25% of the balance at the end of the 2nd preceding financial year. The loan must be repaid within 36 months. The interest rate charged is 1% above the PPF interest rate.

PPF vs FD vs NPS – Which is Better?

FeaturePPFFixed Deposit (Bank)NPS (Tier 1)
Interest Rate7.1% (govt-set)6.5%–7.5% (varies)9%–12% (market-linked)
RiskZero (govt-backed)Very Low (DICGC insured up to ₹5L)Moderate (equity exposure)
Lock-in15 yearsFlexible (7 days to 10 years)Till age 60
Tax on InterestFully Tax-FreeTaxable as per slabPartially tax-free at maturity
Section 80C BenefitYes (up to ₹1.5L)Only for 5-year Tax-Saver FDYes + extra ₹50,000 (80CCD 1B)
LiquidityLow (partial after 7 years)High (premature withdrawal with penalty)Very Low (till 60)
Best ForConservative long-term saversShort to medium term goalsRetirement planning

How to Open a PPF Account

At a Bank (Online or Offline)

Most major banks — SBI, HDFC, ICICI, Axis, Bank of Baroda, Canara Bank — allow you to open a PPF account online through Internet banking. You need your Aadhaar, PAN, and a linked savings account. The process takes under 10 minutes online.

At a Post Office

Visit your nearest post office with your KYC documents (Aadhaar, PAN, photo, address proof) and an initial deposit of at least ₹500. The post office will open the account and provide a passbook.

Pro Tip: To build the maximum corpus over 15 years, invest ₹1,50,000 as a lump sum on or before April 5 each year. At 7.1% compounded annually, investing ₹1.5 lakh every year for 15 years results in a corpus of approximately ₹40.68 lakh — completely tax-free.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I open more than one PPF account?
No. An individual can only hold one PPF account in their name at any given time. However, you can also open one PPF account as a guardian for a minor child. The combined deposits across both accounts cannot exceed ₹1.5 lakh per year.
What happens if I miss a PPF deposit in a year?
If you do not deposit the minimum ₹500 in any financial year, the account becomes dormant/discontinued. You can reactivate it by paying ₹500 as the minimum deposit plus a penalty of ₹50 for each year the account was inactive. You must visit your bank or post office to revive it.
Is PPF interest taxable?
No. PPF interest is completely tax-free under Section 10(11) of the Income Tax Act. You do not need to declare it in your ITR as taxable income, although you should disclose it under exempt income for transparency.
Can I transfer my PPF account from one bank to another?
Yes. You can transfer your PPF account from one bank to another, or from a bank to a post office and vice versa, without losing any balance or interest. Submit a transfer request form at your current bank/post office along with your PPF passbook.