ELSS vs PPF: Which Tax-Saver Should You Choose?
A side-by-side look at two popular Section 80C options — equity-linked ELSS versus the government-backed Public Provident Fund.
ELSS (Equity Linked Savings Scheme) and PPF (Public Provident Fund) are two of the most popular ways Indians save tax under Section 80C, which allows a deduction of up to ₹1.5 lakh per financial year under the old tax regime. But they sit at opposite ends of the risk spectrum: ELSS is an equity mutual fund whose returns rise and fall with the market, while PPF is a sovereign-backed savings scheme with a fixed, government-set rate. Choosing between them is really a choice about risk, lock-in and how you want your returns taxed.
Quick Comparison: ELSS vs PPF
| Factor | ELSS | PPF |
|---|---|---|
| Type | Equity mutual fund (market-linked) | Government savings scheme (fixed rate) |
| Returns | Not guaranteed; ~10–12% p.a. long-term average (varies with the market) | 7.1% p.a., government-set (Jul–Sep 2025) |
| Lock-in | 3 years (shortest under 80C) | 15 years (extendable in 5-year blocks) |
| Risk | Moderate to high (equity volatility) | Very low (sovereign-backed) |
| Taxation of gains | LTCG: gains over ₹1.25L/yr taxed at 12.5% (FY 2025-26) | EEE — maturity fully tax-free |
| 80C benefit | Yes, up to ₹1.5L (old regime) | Yes, up to ₹1.5L (old regime) |
| Liquidity | Full redemption after 3-year lock-in | Partial withdrawal from year 7; loan from year 3 |
| Ideal horizon | 5+ years (ride out volatility) | 15 years (retirement / long-term) |
Returns: Market-Linked vs Guaranteed
ELSS invests predominantly in equities, so its returns are not guaranteed. Historically, diversified equity funds have delivered around 10–12% annualised over long periods, but any single year can be sharply positive or negative. PPF, by contrast, pays a fixed 7.1% for the July–September 2025 quarter — a rate the government reviews every quarter. PPF protects your capital; ELSS trades that certainty for higher growth potential. You can model an ELSS SIP with our SIP Calculator and project a PPF balance with the PPF Calculator.
Lock-in and Liquidity
ELSS has the shortest lock-in of any 80C instrument at 3 years, after which you can redeem fully. If you invest via SIP, note that each monthly instalment is locked for 3 years from its own date. PPF has a much longer 15-year tenure, softened by partial withdrawals from the 7th year and a loan facility between years 3 and 6. For anyone who may need the money in the medium term, ELSS is far more flexible.
Taxation
PPF enjoys full EEE treatment — the contribution, the interest and the maturity amount are all tax-free. ELSS is taxed like any equity fund on exit: long-term capital gains up to ₹1.25 lakh in a financial year are exempt, and gains above that are taxed at 12.5% without indexation (as of FY 2025-26). Remember that the ₹1.5 lakh 80C deduction itself is only available under the old tax regime; under the new regime neither ELSS nor PPF gives an 80C deduction, though PPF maturity stays tax-free.
Pros & Cons
ELSS
Pros
- Highest long-term return potential
- Shortest 80C lock-in (3 years)
- SIP option for disciplined investing
Cons
- Returns not guaranteed; can fall in value
- Gains above ₹1.25L taxed at 12.5%
- Needs patience through market swings
PPF
Pros
- Capital-safe, sovereign-backed
- Fully tax-free (EEE) maturity
- Ideal for long-term / retirement goals
Cons
- Long 15-year lock-in
- Lower returns than equity over long run
- Rate can be revised each quarter
Which Should You Choose?
Choose ELSS if you have a horizon of 5+ years, can stomach short-term volatility, want the shortest lock-in, and are comfortable investing through a monthly SIP for higher growth potential.
Choose PPF if you want guaranteed, tax-free returns, are building a safe long-term or retirement corpus, and prefer certainty over higher-but-uncertain gains.
For many investors the answer is both: use PPF as the stable, tax-free debt anchor of your portfolio and ELSS for equity growth, splitting your ₹1.5 lakh 80C limit between them according to your risk appetite. This article is general educational information for FY 2025-26 and not personalised financial advice — verify current rates and rules before investing.