NPS reforms now allow non-government subscribers to withdraw up to 80% of their corpus under various conditions, a ...
The 2025 amendments scrap key lock-ins and vesting conditions, allowing earlier and more flexible exits. The ruling links withdrawals to corpus size, giving subscribers greater control over timing and ...
This explainer compares both government-backed schemes, explaining returns, risk, flexibility, and pension benefits to help ...
India's National Pension System has just undergone one of its biggest reforms in years. Exit rules are easier, liquidity is ...
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New NPS rules explained: How non-government subscribers can now withdraw up to 80% of their retirement corpus
PFRDA has eased NPS exit norms for non-government subscribers, cutting mandatory annuity to twenty per cent and allowing up ...
The most notable change is for non-government subscribers, who can now withdraw up to 80 per cent of their NPS corpus as a lump sum under specified conditions., Personal Finance, Times Now ...
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New NPS Rules: How Your Retirement Planning Just Got More Attractive
Under the new rules, you will now need to invest only Rs 4 lakh (20%) in an annuity product. The remaining 80% can be withdrawn as a lump sum — the tax treatment on this withdrawal would still be ...
The Budget provided a tax benefit on NPS investments but did nothing to address a long-standing problem. Under the current rules, the NPS corpus is taxable at the time of withdrawal. While admitting ...
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