Non-government NPS subscribers can now withdraw up to 80% of their retirement corpus as a lump sum upon exit, and in some ...
The National Pension System (NPS) has become more attractive for individual investors with a major rule change announced by ...
PFRDA allows non-govt NPS subscribers to withdraw 80% of corpus. Exit age raised to 85. New rules offer greater flexibility.
National Pension System subscribers can choose their fund managers – each of which has a unique portfolio of assets based on ...
PFRDA allows NPS funds to invest in gold, silver ETFs, AIFs, REITs, and bonds adding diversification options for pension subscribers.
In premature exit before eligibility, at least 80% of the corpus must be annuitised; only 20% can be withdrawn as lump sum.
Under the revised guidelines, pension funds must invest contributions prudently across several regulated asset categories.
PFRDA has eased NPS exit rules for non-government subscribers, allowing up to 80% lump sum withdrawal and relaxed annuity ...
They also make more sense if you fall in the 0–20% tax bracket, where the pre-tax advantage of products like NPS largely ...
Revised norms boost retirement liquidity by slashing mandatory annuity requirements and raising the full lump-sum withdrawal ...
A practical look at how the two biggest long-term savings tools behave over decades — and why the better option depends on ...
The new amendment has removed the mandatory lock-in period of five years for the non-government subscribers of NPS.