Section 80C Deductions in New Income Tax Act 2026: What Changed?

For most Indian taxpayers, Section 80C has been the backbone of tax planning for over two decades. PPF deposits, ELSS investments, life insurance premiums, home loan principal repayment — all neatly packed into a ₹1.5 lakh annual deduction. With the New Income Tax Act 2026 now effective, here’s exactly what’s changed and what remains.

Does Section 80C Still Exist?

This is the question everyone is asking. The old Act’s Section 80C has been renumbered and restructured in the New Income Tax Act 2026. The label ’80C’ as we know it from the 1961 Act no longer exists as such — but the substance of the deduction for qualifying investments and expenditures largely survives under a new section number within the new Act’s cleaner structure.

Think of it like this: the phone number changed, but the person on the other end is largely the same.

Important: The deduction for qualifying investments (PPF, ELSS, LIC, home loan principal, etc.) continues to exist under the New Income Tax Act 2026. The key change is that it’s available ONLY in the old tax regime — not in the new regime with lower rates.

Eligible Investments Under 80C (New Act Equivalent)

Investment / ExpenditureStatus Under New ActDeduction Limit
PPF (Public Provident Fund)ContinuesWithin ₹1,50,000 combined limit
ELSS Mutual FundsContinuesWithin ₹1,50,000 limit
Life Insurance PremiumContinues (revised conditions)Within ₹1,50,000 limit
Home Loan Principal RepaymentContinuesWithin ₹1,50,000 limit
Employee PF ContributionContinuesWithin ₹1,50,000 limit
NSC (National Savings Certificate)ContinuesWithin ₹1,50,000 limit
SSY (Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana)ContinuesWithin ₹1,50,000 limit
5-Year Tax Saver FDContinuesWithin ₹1,50,000 limit
Tuition Fees (2 children)ContinuesWithin ₹1,50,000 limit
ULIP (certain plans)Modified conditionsSubject to annual premium cap

What Has Changed?

Life Insurance Premium Conditions Tightened

Policies issued after April 2023 where the annual premium exceeds ₹5 lakh: the maturity amount becomes taxable. This condition is now clearly embedded in the new Act’s text rather than buried in an amendment circular.

ULIP Rules Clarified

ULIPs issued after February 2021 where the annual premium exceeds ₹2.5 lakh are taxable at maturity. The new Act explicitly codifies this.

Deadline: Act Before 31st March

For FY 2025-26, the deadline to make 80C investments is 31st March 2026. PPF deposits, ELSS purchases, NSC investments — all must be completed before end of business on March 31st.

The 80C Deduction Is Alive — But Regime-Dependent The New Income Tax Act 2026 has not killed Section 80C in substance. The deduction survives under a new section number and cleaner language. What the new Act reinforces is the fundamental trade-off: if you want deductions like 80C, stay in the old regime. If you want lower slab rates, move to the new regime and give up most deductions.

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