Tier I is your pension vault — locked, tax-privileged, built for retirement. Tier II is your flexible investment account — open, market-linked, and taxed like any other. Understanding which one does what is the first thing every NPS subscriber must get right.
When most people open an NPS account, they open a Tier I account and stop there. They get their tax deduction, make their annual contribution, and file their return — never giving Tier II a second thought. Some do not even know Tier II exists. Others assume it is a bigger or better version of Tier I with the same rules. It is neither. The difference between NPS Tier I and Tier II goes far deeper than most people realise: they are two structurally different financial instruments sitting inside the same PRAN number, each with its own purpose, its own withdrawal rules, and — most critically — its own tax treatment. Confusing them, or ignoring one entirely, can mean leaving genuine tax advantages unclaimed on one side, or paying unnecessary tax on the other.
Here is the complete, legally verified picture of how NPS Tier I vs Tier II actually works — and which one deserves your money, and when.
What Are NPS Tier I and Tier II? The Foundational Difference
The National Pension System operates on a two-tier account structure under a single PRAN (Permanent Retirement Account Number). Think of the PRAN as the umbrella — Tier I and Tier II are two separate pockets underneath it, each with its own rules, purpose, and tax treatment.
NPS Tier I — The Pension Core
Tier I is the primary NPS account and the one that gives NPS its identity as a retirement instrument. It is mandatory for central and state government employees who joined service after January 2004. For all other Indian citizens — salaried employees in the private sector, self-employed professionals, freelancers — it is voluntary but carries significant tax advantages that make it worth considering. Tier I is a pension-first, retirement-locked structure. Your money stays in until you reach age 60 (or meet specific exit conditions), and a portion of it must be converted into a monthly pension via annuity at exit. In exchange for this illiquidity, you get meaningful tax benefits at the contribution stage, during accumulation, and at withdrawal.
NPS Tier II — The Flexible Companion
Tier II is a voluntary savings account that you can open only if you already hold an active Tier I account. It looks and feels very different from Tier I: no lock-in, no mandatory annuity, no restricted withdrawal reasons, no minimum annual contribution requirement after opening. You can withdraw the full amount or any part of it at any time, for any reason, with no penalty and no exit load. It functions more like a mutual fund with NPS infrastructure — same fund managers, same asset classes, same investment options — but without the retirement protection structure of Tier I.
You cannot open NPS Tier II without first having an active NPS Tier I account. However, you can hold Tier I indefinitely without ever opening Tier II. They are not interchangeable — Tier II is strictly an optional add-on to Tier I, not a standalone account or an alternative to it.

NPS Tier I vs Tier II — Complete Comparison Table 2026
Every parameter, side by side. Verified against PFRDA December 2025 Amendment Regulations and the Income Tax Act.
| Parameter | 🔵 NPS Tier I | 🟢 NPS Tier II |
|---|---|---|
| Account type | Primary retirement account — mandatory for govt employees | Optional savings add-on — requires active Tier I |
| Minimum to open | ₹500 (first contribution) | ₹1,000 (first contribution) |
| Minimum annual contribution | ₹1,000 per financial year (to keep account active) | None — no mandatory annual contribution |
| Maximum contribution | No upper limit | No upper limit |
| Lock-in period | Normal exit after 15 yrs of subscription or age 60, whichever is earlier. Premature exit: allowed anytime (no minimum lock-in for non-govt since Dec 2025). Corpus ≤₹5L on premature exit: 100% lump sum (raised from ₹2.5L by Dec 2025 amendment). Above ₹5L: 20% lump sum + 80% annuity | None — withdraw anytime, no lock-in, no annuity ever |
| Tax deduction — own contribution | 80CCD(1): up to 10% of salary (salaried) / 20% of gross income (self-employed), within the shared ₹1.5L ceiling under Sec 80CCE. Plus 80CCD(1B): additional ₹50K above the 80CCE ceiling — old regime only for both | No deduction for most subscribers. Only central govt employees with 3-yr lock-in can claim Section 80C (within ₹1.5L 80CCE ceiling, old regime only) |
| Tax deduction — employer contribution | 80CCD(2) up to 14% of Basic+DA (available in both old & new regime) | Not applicable — no employer contribution to Tier II |
| Tax on withdrawal | 60% lump sum tax-free (Sec 10(12A)); annuity pension taxable at slab (Sec 80CCD(3)) | Gains taxed as capital gains — no Section 10(12A) exemption |
| Annuity requirement at exit | Yes — minimum 20% of corpus (non-govt, corpus >₹12L at normal exit); 100% lump sum if corpus ≤₹8L | None — 100% withdrawable as lump sum at any time |
| Partial withdrawal rules | Up to 25% of self-contributions; max 4 times before 60 (4-yr gap); approved reasons only | Unlimited withdrawals; any amount; any reason; any time |
| Asset classes available | Equity (E), Corporate bonds (C), Govt securities (G), Alternative assets (A) | Same — Equity (E), Corporate bonds (C), Govt securities (G) |
| Maximum equity allocation | 75% in Scheme E (active choice); reduces with age in auto choice | Up to 100% in Scheme E (no auto-choice age restriction) |
| Fund management fees | 0.09%–0.30% p.a. (among the lowest in India) | Same fund managers, same fee structure |
| Transfer to Tier I | N/A | Allowed — you can move Tier II balance into Tier I anytime |
| NRI eligibility | Some NRIs eligible (FEMA rules apply) | NRIs are NOT allowed to open or hold NPS Tier II |
| Death benefit | 100% to nominee (tax-free, with corpus-size conditions per PFRDA 2025) | 100% to nominee — no restrictions |
| Sources: PFRDA.org, NPS Trust (npstrust.org.in), Income Tax Act 2026, PFRDA Exit & Withdrawals Amendment Regulations December 2025. | ||
Tax Benefits: The Most Critical Difference Between Tier I and Tier II
If there is one dimension that separates Tier I and Tier II more sharply than any other, it is tax. The two accounts are taxed in almost completely opposite ways — and understanding this difference is not optional. It is the entire basis for deciding which account deserves your money.
- Section 80CCD(1): Own contribution deductible — up to 10% of salary (salaried) or 20% of gross income (self-employed), subject to the overall ₹1.5L ceiling under Section 80CCE shared with Section 80C and 80CCC. This is not an additional ₹1.5L over 80C — it is part of the same ₹1.5L pool (old regime only)
- Section 80CCD(1B): Additional ₹50,000 deduction over and above ₹1.5L ceiling (old regime only)
- Section 80CCD(2): Employer contribution up to 14% of Basic+DA — fully deductible in both old and new tax regimes
- Section 10(12A): 60% of lump sum at retirement — fully tax-free
- Section 80CCD(5): Annuity purchase amount — exempt at time of investment
- Section 10(12B): Partial withdrawals — tax-free (employee-subscribers only)
- No Section 80CCD(1) deduction on Tier II contributions for anyone
- No Section 80CCD(1B) deduction on Tier II contributions
- No Section 10(12A) exemption at withdrawal — gains are taxable
- Gains taxed as capital gains — short-term or long-term depending on holding period and asset class
- One exception: Central government employees with a mandatory 3-year lock-in on Tier II can claim Section 80C deduction up to ₹1.5L — but this is unavailable under the new tax regime
- Conclusion for most subscribers: Tier II = zero tax advantage on contributions, zero tax exemption at exit
Many subscribers assume their NPS contributions — regardless of which account they are made to — qualify for tax deductions. They do not. Contributions to Tier II do not qualify for any deduction under Sections 80CCD(1), 80CCD(1B), or 80CCD(2). Only Tier I contributions attract these deductions. If you are contributing to Tier II expecting a tax benefit that does not exist, you are making a costly error. Redirect those contributions to Tier I if tax efficiency is your goal.

Withdrawal Rules: Tier I is Controlled, Tier II is Free
Tier I — Withdrawal by Design, Not by Demand
Tier I withdrawals are structured around the purpose of the account: retirement. At normal exit (age 60 or after 15 years of subscription), non-government subscribers with a corpus above ₹12 lakh can withdraw up to 80% as a lump sum — but only 60% of that enjoys tax exemption under Section 10(12A). The remaining minimum 20% must be used to purchase a compulsory annuity from a PFRDA-empanelled insurer, which then provides a monthly pension — fully taxable at your income slab rate.
Before age 60, partial withdrawals from Tier I are permitted — up to 25% of your own self-contributions (not employer contributions, not investment returns), for specific PFRDA-approved reasons only: higher education of children, marriage, purchase or construction of a house, treatment of a critical illness, settlement of a loan against NPS, or skill development. A maximum of 4 such withdrawals are allowed before age 60, with a minimum 4-year gap between each.
- Corpus ≤ ₹8L at normal exit: 100% lump sum, no annuity, fully tax-free
- Corpus ₹8L–₹12L at normal exit: ₹6L lump sum + balance via annuity or SUR
- Corpus > ₹12L (non-govt): up to 80% lump sum (60% tax-free; extra 20% currently taxable at slab); min 20% to annuity
- Government employees: 60% lump sum (tax-free) + 40% compulsory annuity — regardless of corpus size
- Premature voluntary exit (corpus ≤ ₹5L): 100% lump sum permitted — no annuity required. (PFRDA Dec 2025 raised this from the earlier ₹2.5L threshold)
- Premature voluntary exit (corpus > ₹5L): 20% lump sum only + 80% compulsory annuity — no exceptions
- Deferral: can stay invested until age 85 under PFRDA December 2025 rules
- New — Financial Assistance Against NPS Tier I (PFRDA Dec 2025): PFRDA has introduced a lien/charge marking facility on Tier I accounts, allowing subscribers to use up to 25% of their own contributions as security for financial assistance from regulated lenders — without triggering a withdrawal or exit. The corpus stays invested and continues earning returns while the lien is active. This facility is being operationalised by PFRDA; confirm current availability with your POP or CRA before applying
Tier II — Withdraw What You Want, When You Want
Tier II is structurally the opposite of Tier I when it comes to withdrawal. There is no lock-in, no minimum holding period, no approved reasons required, no maximum withdrawal limit, and no annuity obligation. You can withdraw your entire Tier II balance at any point — after a day, a week, or a decade — and you face no exit penalty or exit load. The only consequence is the tax one: gains are treated as capital gains and taxed accordingly.
- Withdraw anytime: full or partial, for any reason, zero exit load, zero annuity obligation
- Equity funds (Scheme E) held >12 months: LTCG at 12.5% above ₹1.25 lakh annual exemption (Section 112A). Held ≤12 months: STCG at 20% (Section 111A). Budget 2026 confirmed no change to these rates for FY 2026-27
- Debt / Govt Securities funds (Scheme G/C) — purchased on or after April 1, 2023: Always taxed at your income slab rate regardless of holding period — no LTCG benefit applies. Pre-April 2023 units: 12.5% LTCG after 24 months
- The ₹1.25 lakh annual LTCG exemption matters for Tier II planning: If your Tier II equity gains stay under ₹1.25 lakh in a year, they are completely tax-free — making Tier II a genuinely efficient short-term equity parking account for smaller investors
- Transfer to Tier I: any time, without any tax event at the point of transfer
- NRIs: not eligible for Tier II — resident Indians only

NPS Tier II vs Mutual Funds — The Honest Comparison
The most frequent question about Tier II is not about NPS at all — it is about whether Tier II makes more sense than simply investing in mutual funds. This comparison matters because for most subscribers, Tier II is competing directly with direct mutual funds for the same discretionary rupees.
| Parameter | 🟢 NPS Tier II | 📊 Direct Mutual Fund |
|---|---|---|
| Fund management cost | 0.09%–0.30% p.a. — extremely low | 0.5%–1.5% p.a. in direct plans |
| Tax benefit on contribution | None (except central govt employees) | ELSS: 80C deduction up to ₹1.5L (old regime only) |
| Tax on gains | Equity (E): LTCG 12.5% (>12 months, above ₹1.25L); STCG 20%. Debt (G/C, post-April 2023): slab rate always | Same LTCG/STCG rates apply. No structural difference in tax rates vs Tier II |
| Withdrawal flexibility | Any time, no exit load | Any time (except ELSS: 3-yr lock-in) |
| Maximum equity allocation | Up to 100% in Scheme E | Up to 100% — full range of equity funds |
| Number of fund options | Limited to 11 PFRDA-regulated pension fund managers | Hundreds of fund houses and schemes |
| NRI eligibility | Not allowed | Allowed (with some restrictions) |
| Regulatory oversight | PFRDA — strong, structured | SEBI — well regulated |
| SIP facility | Available via D-Remit/bank mandate | Fully automated, flexible SIPs |
Where Tier II wins: Cost. At 0.09%–0.30% fund management fees, Tier II is meaningfully cheaper than even direct mutual fund plans. Over 15–20 years, this fee advantage can compound into a real difference in corpus. If you are a disciplined investor comfortable with the limited fund choice and the CRA portal interface, Tier II’s cost efficiency is a genuine advantage.
Where Mutual Funds win: Choice, flexibility, and ecosystem. Hundreds of funds, automated SIPs, app-based management, and a broader range of strategies — from small-cap to international to sectoral — that Tier II simply cannot match. For most retail investors, the convenience and fund diversity of mutual funds outweigh Tier II’s fee advantage.
Bottom line: For a cost-conscious long-term investor who is already familiar with NPS infrastructure, Tier II is a legitimate low-cost investment option. For everyone else, direct mutual funds offer a better all-round experience with minimal cost difference in the current fee environment.

Who Should Open Tier II — and Who Shouldn’t
- Are a central govt employee who wants the Section 80C benefit with 3-yr lock-in
- Want the lowest-cost market-linked investment in India and are comfortable with limited fund choice
- Want to accumulate emergency savings within the NPS ecosystem before sweeping them to Tier I later
- Have already maxed your Tier I contributions and want additional market exposure without the retirement lock-in
- Want to use Tier II as a short-term parking account before transferring to Tier I to boost your retirement corpus
- Are expecting tax deductions on Tier II contributions — there are none for most subscribers
- Are an NRI — Tier II is not available to non-resident Indians
- Want fund variety, automated SIPs, and app-based convenience — mutual funds serve you better
- Are in the new tax regime as a private sector employee — even the 80C Tier II benefit (central govt only) does not apply
- Are not already an active NPS Tier I subscriber — you cannot open Tier II without Tier I
The Smart Way to Use Both Tiers Together
For subscribers who have both accounts, the smartest strategy is to use each account for what it does best — not to treat them as interchangeable.
Use Tier I for retirement compounding. Every rupee in Tier I is earning tax-free returns on tax-deducted contributions, compounding at ultra-low cost for decades. It is untouchable by design — which is actually its greatest strength. Do not fight the lock-in. Embrace it. Maximise Tier I contributions first, especially via employer 80CCD(2) routing.
Use Tier II as a short-term staging account. Some subscribers use Tier II as a temporary holding account — parking money there when their cash flow is irregular, and then sweeping it into Tier I via inter-account transfer. The transfer from Tier II to Tier I is permitted under PFRDA regulations and is generally not treated as a taxable event because no redemption takes place. It can also help you build your Tier I retirement corpus during months when you cannot make a direct Tier I contribution.
Use Tier II for medium-term goals at low cost. If you have a financial goal 3–7 years away — a property down payment, an education corpus, a car — and you want equity-linked growth at the lowest available fund management cost, Tier II is a legitimate low-cost option. Just remember: gains are taxable as capital gains when you exit, with no Section 10(12A) shelter.
If you receive an unexpected lump sum — a bonus, an inheritance, a consulting payout — and you want to invest it quickly in equity at near-zero cost while deciding where it ultimately goes, Tier II is an excellent temporary home. Market-linked returns, PFRDA regulation, and the option to sweep it into Tier I later make it uniquely useful for this purpose. It is not a retirement account — it is a smart antechamber to one.

Frequently Asked Questions — NPS Tier I vs Tier II








