Press Information Bureau
Government of India
Ministry of Defence
Dated: 11-04-2017
The provision that the withdrawal from
National Pension Scheme is taxed to the extent of 60 per cent has been
introduced into the Income Tax Act, 1961 (‘Act’) vide Finance Act, 2016
by inserting clause (12A) in Section 10 of the Act.
Prior to Finance Act, 2016, National Pension
Scheme (NPS), referred to in section 80CCD, was under Exempt, Exempt and
Tax (EET) regime i.e., the monthly/periodic contributions during the
pension accumulation phase were allowed as deduction from income for tax
purposes; the returns generated on these contributions during the
accumulation phase were also exempt from tax but the terminal benefits
on exit or superannuation, in the form of lump sum withdrawals, were
taxable in the hands of the individual subscribed or his nominee in the
year of receipt of such amounts unlike PPF and EPF which have been
enjoying EEE regime i.e. Exempt, Exempt, Exempt.
In order to rationalize the taxability of
receipts from pension plans, vide Finance Act, 2016, section 10 of the
Act was amended to provide that any payment from National Pension Scheme
to an employee on account of closure or his opting out of the NPS shall
also be exempt from tax, to the extent it does not exceed forty percent
of the total amount payable to him at the time of closure or his opting
out of the scheme. Further, Finance Act, 2017 has amended section 10 of
the Income-tax Act to exempt partial withdrawals by employees (to the
extent of 25% of the employee’s contribution) from their NPS accounts in
accordance with the guidelines prescribed under Pension Fund Regulatory
and Development Authority Act, 2013.
This was stated by Shri Santosh Kumar
Gangwar, Minister of State in the Ministry of Finance in written reply
to a question in Rajya Sabha today.
Source : PIB

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