If you have ever sat down to use up your Section 80C limit, you have probably found yourself staring at the same two acronyms that every personal-finance blog and bank relationship manager talks about: PPF and ELSS. They are very different products — one is a 15-year sovereign-backed savings scheme, the other is a 3-year-locked equity mutual fund — but for tax-saving purposes the Indian taxpayer treats them as direct rivals competing for the same Rs 1.5 lakh deduction.

This article compares the two, side by side, on every dimension that actually matters: returns, risk, lock-in, tax treatment, liquidity, and the kind of investor each suits. By the end you should know which one (or in what proportion) belongs in your annual tax plan.

What is PPF?

The Public Provident Fund is a long-term savings scheme launched by the Government of India in 1968 and still operated through banks and post offices. Anyone with a PAN — salaried, self-employed, or not earning at all — can open one PPF account in their own name and another for each minor child. NRIs cannot open new accounts but can continue contributing to one they had as residents.

The headline numbers as of 2026:

PPF is one of the oldest pieces of furniture in Indian household finance, and for very good reason — it gives a sovereign-backed, fully tax-free return on a long-horizon savings goal. It is essentially the Indian equivalent of a tax-free government bond with annual top-ups.

What is ELSS?

An Equity-Linked Savings Scheme is a category of mutual fund that invests at least 80% of its corpus into equities (Indian listed shares). It comes with a mandatory 3-year lock-in from the date of each investment, and the principal qualifies for Section 80C deduction up to Rs 1.5 lakh.

The headline numbers:

ELSS was introduced in 1992 to encourage retail equity participation while giving a tax deduction. Its popularity exploded after 2014 as more Indians became comfortable with mutual funds via SIPs.

Side-by-side comparison

FeaturePPFELSS
Type of instrumentGovernment-backed savingsEquity mutual fund
Lock-in period15 years3 years
Returns (typical)~7.1% (sovereign-fixed)~12-14% (equity, variable)
RiskEffectively zeroModerate to high (market-linked)
Section 80C eligibilityYes, up to Rs 1.5 lakhYes, up to Rs 1.5 lakh
Tax on returnsFully tax-free (EEE)LTCG over Rs 1.25 lakh taxed at 12.5%
Min / max investment per yearRs 500 / Rs 1.5 lakhRs 500 / no upper limit
Premature withdrawalLimited from year 7Not allowed in first 3 years
Loan facilityYes, year 3 to year 6No
Account typeSingle (1 per person)Buy any number of schemes
Best suited forCapital protection, retirementLong-term wealth, can stomach swings

Historical returns: a 15-year look

Returns are obviously the headline difference between these two. Here is what each has actually delivered over the last 15 years for an Indian investor.

PPF: predictable, declining

The PPF interest rate is set quarterly by the central government. Roughly:

The compound annual growth rate over the full 15-year period for a PPF investor has been roughly 7.7-7.9% per year. This is broadly in line with India's CPI inflation over the same period (around 6-6.5%), which means the real return is small but positive — and it is fully tax-free, which makes it competitive against any taxable debt instrument.

ELSS: bumpy, but higher

The category average for diversified ELSS funds, according to AMFI data:

So on average, ELSS has roughly doubled the return of PPF over long periods — at the cost of some quite ugly years along the way. An investor who started in mid-2007 had to live through a 50% drawdown by early 2009 before the recovery. An investor who can do that, mathematically, ends up far ahead.

The behavioural catch: the average ELSS fund has returned 12-14% per year. The average ELSS investor has earned far less, because they tend to redeem in panic at the bottom and re-enter near the top. The advantage of PPF is that it is structurally illiquid, so you cannot panic-sell. That is a feature, not a bug, for many investors.

Worked example: Rs 1.5 lakh per year for 15 years

Suppose Priya invests her full Rs 1.5 lakh 80C limit on the 1st of April every year for 15 years, starting today. Two scenarios:

Scenario A: 100% PPF

Scenario B: 100% ELSS at 12% CAGR

Even after factoring in capital-gains tax, ELSS produced almost double the post-tax wealth of PPF in this example. But this assumed a smooth 12% CAGR. The reality of ELSS is that the same Rs 22.5 lakh invested could have ended at Rs 50 lakh, Rs 62 lakh, or Rs 78 lakh depending on the 15-year window, and any individual year could be deep in the red.

If you want to play with these numbers yourself, our SIP calculator handles ELSS-style monthly investments and our PPF calculator handles PPF. Both are free and require no signup.

Tax treatment compared

This is where the two products differ most cleanly:

PPF — exempt, exempt, exempt (EEE)

ELSS — exempt, exempt, taxed (EET, with exemption slab)

Net of tax, PPF's tax-free 7.1% is roughly equivalent to a taxable 10.2% return for someone in the 30% slab — still less than ELSS's long-term average, but closer than the headline numbers suggest.

Who should choose what?

Choose PPF if…

Choose ELSS if…

The smart middle path: combining both

For most working-age investors, the answer is "both", in a proportion that reflects their risk tolerance and what they already own elsewhere.

A common allocation framework:

ProfilePPF allocationELSS allocation
Conservative / near retirement (55+)Rs 1.50 lakh (full)Rs 0
Moderate / late career (45-54)Rs 1.00 lakhRs 50,000
Balanced / mid-career (35-44)Rs 50,000Rs 1.00 lakh
Growth / early career (25-34)Rs 0 to 50,000Rs 1.00 to 1.50 lakh

If your employer EPF contributions are already eating most of your Section 80C limit, then your "spare" 80C capacity may only be Rs 30,000-50,000. In that case, putting it into ELSS gives you both the deduction and the equity exposure that EPF alone cannot provide. A young salaried professional with EPF + ELSS + small PPF is a perfectly balanced 80C portfolio.

One important rule: never start a fresh PPF account in a year you may need that money back within 6-7 years. The lock-in is real, the partial-withdrawal rules are restrictive, and breaking PPF before maturity can trigger penalties. Use it only for goals at least a decade out.

Common mistakes investors make

Frequently Asked Questions

Which gives better returns — PPF or ELSS?

Historically, ELSS has delivered around 12-14% CAGR over rolling 10-year periods compared to PPF's 7.1% — so on average ELSS has produced significantly more wealth. But ELSS returns are volatile and can be deeply negative in any given year, while PPF returns are sovereign-backed and stable. The right answer depends on your time horizon and tolerance for swings.

Which has a shorter lock-in?

ELSS has the shortest lock-in of any Section 80C product at just 3 years per investment. PPF has a 15-year lock-in, though partial withdrawals are allowed from the 7th year and a loan against balance is available between years 3 and 6.

Are PPF and ELSS gains tax-free?

PPF is fully tax-free at every stage — investment, interest, and maturity (EEE status). ELSS gains beyond Rs 1.25 lakh per financial year are taxed as long-term capital gains at 12.5%, while the original investment qualifies for Section 80C deduction.

Can I invest in both PPF and ELSS in the same year?

Yes. The Section 80C ceiling of Rs 1.5 lakh is a combined limit, so you can split it between PPF, ELSS, EPF, life insurance and other 80C instruments in any proportion. Many investors put a portion in each to balance safety and growth.

Can I extend my PPF beyond 15 years?

Yes. After the initial 15 years, you can extend in blocks of 5 years, with or without further contributions. The extension keeps the EEE tax status and lets your balance keep compounding.

What happens to my ELSS if the fund underperforms?

You are locked in for the first 3 years from each contribution. After that, you can switch to a different ELSS or to a regular equity mutual fund. Switching from one ELSS to another counts as a redemption and a fresh investment, so it triggers any LTCG tax on the redemption side.

Bottom line

PPF and ELSS aren't really competitors so much as complements. PPF is the predictable, sovereign-backed bedrock — slow, safe, fully tax-free, ideal for retirement and very long-term goals. ELSS is the growth engine — volatile, equity-linked, with the shortest lock-in and the highest historical returns, ideal for investors who can wait.

If you are young and your 80C budget is small, ELSS does double duty as both tax-saver and equity exposure. If you are older or already have plenty of equity, PPF gives you the cleanest tax-free debt allocation. For the broad middle, a 50:50 split is a defensible default. Plug your numbers into our SIP calculator for ELSS or our PPF calculator to see exactly what your savings rate produces over the long run.

IFSCNOW Editorial Team

Personal-finance writers covering deposits, mutual funds, and tax planning. Past performance is not a guarantee of future returns. Returns and tax slabs referenced are correct as of FY 2025-26 and may change.