The ₹1.5 lakh a year ceiling on the Public Provident Fund (PPF) is one of the most discussed numbers in Indian personal finance—often bundled with “crore” maturity screenshots and EEE (exempt–exempt–exempt) shorthand. This article separates what the limit actually does, how it interacts with other Section 80C choices, and the planning mistakes families make when they chase headline corpuses without reading the footnotes.
For how monthly timing and the 5th-of-the-month rule affect interest, see our companion piece on PPF monthly contributions and compounding. Numbers below are illustrative; verify current notified rates and scheme rules from official India Post / Ministry of Finance sources.
What “₹1.5 lakh” really caps
PPF allows aggregate deposits up to ₹1,50,000 per financial year per eligible account, subject to scheme rules. That cap is not “extra return”—it is a contribution ceiling. Crossing it can create operational headaches (reversal, interest adjustment) depending on how your bank or post office handles excess credits.
Crucially, the same taxpayer’s 80C basket includes EPF/VPF, ELSS, tuition fees, home loan principal (within conditions), NSC, and more. PPF is often the largest line item in that basket, which means “maxing PPF” and “maxing 80C” are related but not identical decisions.
EEE in one paragraph (and where people over-read it)
At a high level, PPF enjoys tax-exempt accrual and tax-exempt maturity within the scheme’s statutory framework—subject to law and your own facts (e.g., large withdrawals, other income). “EEE” is a mnemonic, not a substitute for reading notifications or consulting a chartered accountant when your situation is non-trivial (NRI phase, multiple accounts, business income).
Why “₹1 crore from PPF” posts disagree with each other
Headline corpuses diverge because modellers hide different levers:
- Annual contribution path (flat ₹1.5L vs lumpy vs missed years).
- Rate path (constant 7.1% vs quarterly resets vs stress tests).
- Extensions after the first 15-year block (with/without fresh contributions per rules in force).
- Partial withdrawals that shrink the compounding base mid-course.
Two investors both “doing PPF” can end up with very different balances if one treats the account as set-and-forget and the other uses partial withdrawals for liquidity shocks.
After 15 years: extensions and liquidity
PPF’s long lock-in is a feature for discipline and a bug if you lack emergency liquidity elsewhere. After the initial block, the scheme allows extensions in blocks (verify current option wording in official FAQs). Planning mistake: funding short-term goals from PPF because “it’s there,” then discovering the withdrawal windows and tax angles do not match the expense timeline.
Child PPF and the combined limit mental model
If you also run a minor’s PPF, contribution limits and guardian documentation matter for both operations and scrutiny hygiene. Our guide on child PPF rules and guardians walks through the one-account-per-child frame and why “two full ₹1.5L flows” into the same household’s small-savings layer needs a deliberate map.
PPF as income floor vs retirement cash flow
A fat PPF maturity is not the same as a stable monthly pension. For how to translate lumps into sustainable drawdowns (SWPs, inflation, other sleeves), read PPF and monthly retirement income framing and retirement savings through inflation and longevity.
Small-savings comparison without tribalism
KVP and NSC sit in different liquidity and tax boxes than PPF. Use KVP basics when you want a post-office comparator, not a Twitter poll.
Bottom line
Treat the ₹1.5 lakh PPF ceiling as a planning constraint inside a wider 80C + liquidity + horizon map—not as a magic “crore button.” Automate contributions, avoid excess deposits, and re-read official notifications whenever rates or rules refresh.
Educational only—not investment, legal, or tax advice. Verify PPF rules, limits, and tax treatment with official sources and a qualified professional for your facts.

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