While all three offer guaranteed interest, tax benefits, and are backed by the Government of India, they differ significantly in terms of eligibility, return rates, contribution rules, liquidity, tax treatment, lock-in period, and withdrawal terms. Understanding these differences is essential before choosing the right retirement product.
PPF is a long-term savings scheme introduced under the Public Provident Fund Act, 1968. It is designed to encourage individuals to save for retirement while also benefiting from guaranteed interest and tax-free returns. Unlike EPF and VPF, PPF is open to every Indian resident, regardless of employment type.
| Who Can Open? | Any Indian resident (salaried, self-employed, business owner, NRI not allowed for new accounts) |
| Minimum Annual Deposit | ₹500 |
| Maximum Annual Deposit | ₹1.5 lakh |
| Current Interest Rate (2025) | ~7.1% (revised quarterly by Ministry of Finance) |
| Deposit Mode | Lump sum or monthly deposits allowed |
| Lock-in Period | 15 years (extendable in 5-year blocks) |
| Premature Withdrawal | Allowed from 7th year, subject to conditions |
| Loan Facility | Available between 3rd and 6th year |
| Tax Benefit | Deduction up to ₹1.5 lakh under Section 80C |
| Tax Status | EEE: Investment, interest, and maturity proceeds fully tax-free |
| Where to Open? | Post Office, Nationalised Banks, SBI, ICICI, Axis Bank, etc. |
EPF is a compulsory retirement savings scheme for employees working in organisations registered under the Employees’ Provident Fund Organisation (EPFO). Both employer and employee contribute to the EPF account every month, making it one of the most powerful retirement accumulation tools in India.
| Who Is Eligible? | Salaried employees earning up to ₹15,000 basic salary (mandatory), optional above that limit |
| Employee Contribution | 12% of Basic + DA |
| Employer Contribution | 12% (8.33% goes to EPS pension fund, 3.67% to EPF) |
| Current Interest Rate | ~8.25% (announced annually) |
| Lock-in | Till retirement, job exit, or account transfer |
| Partial Withdrawal | Allowed for medical, education, home loan, marriage, etc. |
| Full Withdrawal | Allowed at retirement or after 2 months of unemployment |
| Tax Benefit | Employee contribution eligible under Section 80C |
| Tax Status | EEE if withdrawn after 5 years of continuous service |
VPF is an extension of EPF where an employee voluntarily contributes more than the mandatory 12% of their basic salary. The employer is not required to match this additional contribution. The account earns the same rate of interest as EPF and enjoys the same tax benefits.
| Eligibility | Only for salaried individuals contributing to EPF |
| Contribution Limit | Any voluntary amount up to 100% of Basic + DA |
| Employer Contribution | Not applicable on VPF portion |
| Interest Rate | Same as EPF (~8.25%) |
| Lock-in | Same as EPF (till retirement or job change) |
| Tax Benefits | Eligible under Section 80C |
| Tax Status | EEE if held for minimum 5 years |
| Feature | PPF | EPF | VPF |
|---|---|---|---|
| Eligibility | Any Indian resident | Salaried employees | Salaried employees with EPF |
| Contribution | ₹500 – ₹1.5 lakh per year | 12% of Basic + DA | Any % above 12% (voluntary) |
| Employer Contribution | No | Yes (12%) | No |
| Interest Rate (2025) | ~7.1% | ~8.25% | ~8.25% |
| Lock-in Period | 15 years | Retirement / job exit | Same as EPF |
| Withdrawal Rules | Partial after 7 years | Partial allowed under EPFO rules | Same as EPF |
| Tax Benefit | Section 80C up to ₹1.5 lakh | Section 80C + employer benefit | Section 80C |
| Tax Status | EEE | EEE (after 5 years) | EEE (after 5 years) |
| Best For | Self-employed / freelancers | Salaried workers | Salaried workers with surplus income |
EPF and VPF generally offer higher returns than PPF, as they are linked to government-declared EPFO interest rates which have historically remained above 8%.
| EPF | ~8.25% (highest, plus employer contribution) |
| VPF | ~8.25% (same as EPF, no employer share) |
| PPF | ~7.1% (lower but fully tax-free) |
For salaried employees, EPF + VPF is usually the best combination for maximising long-term wealth without taking market risk. For self-employed individuals, PPF is the only provident fund option.
1. Can I have both PPF and EPF?
Yes. Many salaried individuals invest in both for diversification and tax planning.
2. Can I contribute to VPF if I don’t have EPF?
No. VPF is only available to existing EPF account holders.
3. Is the interest from EPF or VPF taxable?
It is tax-free only if the employee has completed 5 years of continuous service.
4. Can I open two PPF accounts?
No, opening more than one PPF account is illegal under the PPF Act.
5. What happens to EPF if I change jobs?
You can transfer the same EPF account to the new employer using UAN.
6. Is VPF better than PPF?
For salaried individuals, VPF gives higher returns but has less liquidity than PPF.
If you are a salaried employee, EPF is compulsory and VPF is a powerful add-on if you want higher tax-free returns than fixed deposits or traditional insurance plans. The employer contribution makes EPF far more rewarding than PPF.
If you are self-employed or not eligible for EPF, PPF is the best long-term, risk-free investment option with guaranteed tax-free maturity.
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