Retirement

NPS Tier 1 vs. Tier 2: Which One Should You Choose?

June 10, 2026
9 min read
SalaryCalc Team

The National Pension System (NPS) is a government-backed voluntary retirement savings scheme. It is low-cost, tax-efficient, and flexible. But the dual tier structure often confuses investors.

Tier 1 Account: The Retirement Corpus

This is the primary pension account. It comes with restrictions to ensure you save for retirement.

  • Lock-in: You cannot withdraw freely until age 60.
  • Tax Benefits: Contributions are eligible for deduction under Section 80C *and* an exclusive ₹50,000 under Section 80CCD(1B).
  • Mandatory Annuity: At maturity, you must use at least 40% of the corpus to buy an annuity plan (monthly pension).

Tier 2 Account: The Investment Account

This works like a mutual fund. You can invest and withdraw anytime. You must have an active Tier 1 account to open Tier 2.

  • Liquidity: No lock-in period. Withdraw money whenever you need it.
  • No Tax Benefits: Contributions do not get any tax deduction (except for Govt employees with a 3-year lock-in).
  • Transfers: You can transfer funds from Tier 2 to Tier 1 anytime, but not vice versa.

Feature Comparison

Criteria Tier 1 Tier 2
Purpose Retirement Savings Investment / Savings
Withdrawal Restricted (Age 60) Unrestricted
Tax Benefit Yes (80C + 80CCD) No (Generally)
Min. Contribution ₹500 ₹250

The ₹50,000 Advantage

NPS is the only instrument that offers an additional tax deduction of ₹50,000 over the ₹1.5 Lakh 80C limit. For taxpayers in the 30% slab, this saves ₹15,600 in tax straight away.

Conclusion

Open a Tier 1 account immediately to secure your retirement and save tax. Consider Tier 2 only if you want a low-cost alternative to mutual funds for your surplus cash, without any tax benefits.