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NPS Calculator — Pension & Retirement Corpus

Project your National Pension System corpus at age 60, the tax-free lumpsum you can withdraw, and the monthly pension the annuity portion will pay — all from your monthly contribution.

Total invested by 60

₹18,00,000

Corpus at 60

₹1,13,96,627

Lumpsum you can withdraw

₹68,37,976

Estimated monthly pension

₹22,793

At retirement, at least 40% of the NPS corpus must be used to buy an annuity (which pays the monthly pension); up to 60% can be withdrawn tax-free as a lumpsum. Returns are market-linked — this projection assumes a constant rate.

Frequently Asked Questions

How is the NPS pension calculated?

Your contributions grow at the market-linked return until age 60. At retirement, at least 40% of the corpus buys an annuity — the monthly pension is the annuity corpus multiplied by the annuity provider's rate, divided by 12. The rest (up to 60%) is withdrawn as a tax-free lumpsum.

What return should I assume for NPS?

NPS returns depend on your equity/debt allocation. Aggressive (75% equity) portfolios have historically returned around 10–12%, conservative ones 8–9%. The default 10% is a reasonable middle estimate for long horizons.

Can I withdraw the full NPS corpus at 60?

Only if the total corpus is ₹5 lakh or less. Otherwise a minimum 40% must buy an annuity. The lumpsum portion (up to 60%) is tax-free.

What are the NPS tax benefits?

Employee contributions qualify under 80CCD(1) within the 80C limit, plus an extra ₹50,000 under 80CCD(1B) in the old regime. Employer contributions up to 14% of basic salary are deductible in the new regime too.