The National Pension System (NPS) has now emerged as one of the most tax-efficient instruments for retirement, especially for salaried employees in India. Although participation in the system is increasing for citizens, the actual opportunity for growth is in adopting it under the Corporate NPS model, wherein it can be tied into the overall salary system.
In this article, we will discuss Corporate NPS from a taxation, compliance, and structuring perspective, including practical tips for employers and employees.
Legal Framework and Tax Provisions
The strength of Corporate NPS is based on a specific provision of the Income Tax Act, 1961, which is also applicable under the new Income Tax Act, 2025. This is under Section 80CCD(2) – Employer Contribution to NPS.
Section 80CCD(2) – Employer Contribution to NPS
- Deduction is available for employer’s contribution to the employee’s NPS account
- Maximum allowable deduction:
- Up to 10% of salary (Basic + DA) under the old tax regime
- Up to 14% of salary (Basic + DA) under the new tax regime
The fact that the tax deductions are available under both old and new tax regimes, Corporate NPS is one of the few avenues for saving taxes under the new regime.
In addition, long-term accumulation is also possible with exit options, and it can also act as a substantial corpus for those who plan for early retirement. Also, there is a provision for partial exemption of capital gains from tax at the time exit from NPS under Section 10(12A).
Why Corporate NPS is Structurally Superior
Unlike retail NPS (where the employee invests post-salary), Corporate NPS operates through salary structuring.
This creates three structural advantages:
- Pre-tax contribution mechanism
- Automatic and disciplined investing
- Higher tax efficiency through employer contribution
Illustration: Tax Savings through Corporate NPS
Let us understand this with a practical example.
Assumptions:
- Basic Salary: ₹20,00,000 per annum
- Employer contributes 14% to NPS = ₹2,10,000
Scenario A: Without Corporate NPS
- Entire salary is taxable
- No structured employer-led retirement contribution
Scenario B: With Corporate NPS (Section 80CCD(2))
- Employer contributes ₹2,10,000 to NPS
- This amount is deductible from taxable income
Tax Saving (New Tax Regime Example):
If employee falls in 30% tax bracket:
- Tax saved = ₹2,10,000 × 30% = ₹63,000
- Plus applicable cess
This benefit is received without requiring any additional investment from employees.
Under New Tax Regime
Since most deductions are not available under the new regime:
Section 80CCD(2) becomes one of the most powerful remaining tax-saving tools
Making NPS a Core Part of Payroll (The “Mandatory Structuring” Approach)
One of the most under-discussed aspects of Corporate NPS is how employers can structurally integrate it into compensation design.
Can NPS be made mandatory?
NPS, as a product, is not legally mandatory.
However:
Employers can design their salary structures to have a part of their CTC allocated to employer NPS contribution
This makes NPS a default part of the compensation structure rather than a mere afterthought.
How this works in practice
- The employee’s CTC includes an employer NPS contribution component
- It is not a deduction from take-home salary, but a reallocation within CTC
- Once accepted in the compensation structure, it becomes part of payroll execution
Why this approach is powerful
- It ensures 100% participation without any action on the employee’s part.
- It also incorporates a sense of forced retirement discipline.
Compliance Considerations
- Must be clearly defined in the offer letter / CTC structure
- Requires employee acceptance at the time of onboarding or restructuring
- Should be implemented via proper payroll reporting under Section 80CCD(2)
- Must not distort statutory obligations like PF calculations
PF or NPS: Which One to Choose?
The question of whether to opt for Employees’ Provident Fund (EPF) or shift attention to NPS is common for both employers and employees.
A More Practical Payroll Perspective
Traditionally, many employers have opted for the following EPF contribution structure:
12% of Basic Salary (Employer + Employee)
Though it promotes disciplined saving, it may not be the best from a taxation perspective, especially under the new tax regime.
The Alternate Approach: Optimizing PF and Introduction of NPS
Employers can also look at optimizing their PF contribution as follows:
- Limit PF contribution at the statutory wage ceiling of ₹15,000/-
- This would translate into an employer contribution of ₹1,800 + Employee contribution of ₹1,800
- Additional contribution for retirement can be made towards Corporate NPS under Section 80CCD(2)
Why this approach is gaining relevance?
1. New Tax Regime Impact
In the new tax regime, we have:
- No tax deduction for employee contribution to EPF
- But employer contribution to NPS under section 80CCD(2) is fully deductible
Clearly, we are looking at a tax arbitrage opportunity
2. Better Tax Efficiency
Instead of putting a major portion of salary into EPF, which is locked in anyway and does not offer any additional tax benefit:
- Part of it can be invested in NPS, which is more tax-efficient
- Also, it would reduce income taxed at source at no additional cost to company
3. Improved Capital Allocation
Employees can benefit from both worlds
- EPF : Fixed income, not much scope for higher growth
- NPS : Market-linked growth, long-term compounding possibilities
A balanced structure allows employees to benefit from both stability and growth Practical Takeaway
For employees under the new tax regime, a structure of:
- Minimum statutory EPF, and
- More allocation to Corporate NPS
has the potential to result in better tax efficiency and wealth creation
It is not a question of replacing EPF but making a clever choice of rebalancing retirement savings.
Organizations that take this opportunity to redesign their payroll structures can potentially result in higher post-tax benefits to employees without any additional cost.
Employer Perspective: Strategic Advantages
a) Cost-Neutral Tax Optimization
Employers have the opportunity to reorganize their compensation structure without additional cost.
b) Improved Financial Wellness
Employees are helped to create a solid retirement nest egg.
c) Stronger Compensation Design
Positions the organization as offering a smart, tax-efficient benefits
Employee Perspective: Long-Term Impact
- Reduced taxable income
- No dependency on active investment decisions
- Long-term compounding through disciplined contributions
- Creation of a dedicated retirement corpus
Common Gaps in Adoption
While the benefits are apparent, the adoption of NPS remains low due to the following factors:
- There is lack of awareness of the tax benefit under Section 80CCD(2)
- NPS is considered to be just another investment product
- The reach of NPS at the payroll level is also low
- The current employees are willing to forgo the current pay in favour of a higher take-home salary
Conclusion
Corporate NPS is not just a tax-saving exercise; rather, it is a financial discipline mechanism driven by payroll and backed by regulatory support.
By harnessing the power of Section 80CCD(2) effectively, organizations can:
- Facilitate long-term wealth creation for their employees
- Improve their compensation structure
- Improve their financial wellness
This has the potential to transform the retirement preparedness of the country’s workforce and bring them closer to achieving India’s vision of a financially ‘Atmanirbhar’ economy.
It is a cause of concern that in India, there are only around 18,000 private sector companies offering corporate NPS to their employees. This translates to merely 1% of the potential corporate base. It is a huge opportunity for the corporate sector to lead and push this into their payroll system.


