As the financial year draws to a close, March 31 becomes a make-or-break date for small savers using Public Provident Fund (PPF), Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana (SSY) and National Pension System (NPS). Minimum deposits and planned tax-saving contributions must reach these accounts before the deadline, or investors risk account freeze, penalties, or losing valuable Section 80C and 80CCD(1B) deductions for FY 2024–25.

Many taxpayers assume that initiating an online transfer on March 31 is enough, but banks and post offices treat the actual credit date as decisive for both account status and tax eligibility. With year-end workloads, technical delays and payment cut-off times, relying on last-minute transactions can be risky, especially for salaried individuals counting on deductions already reflected in their Form 16.
March 31 deadline for PPF minimum deposit and tax benefits
For PPF, each financial year requires at least one deposit of ₹500 to keep the account active and avoid it being marked as “discontinued”. If no deposit is made by March 31, the account remains safe but cannot accept new contributions until revived, and the investor loses the ability to claim Section 80C benefits for that year on any missed contribution opportunity within the ₹1.5 lakh limit.
Existing PPF deposits continue to earn interest even if the account becomes discontinued, but fresh deposits are blocked and revival involves paying a penalty with arrear deposits. Tax rules treat PPF contributions on a receipt basis, so the amount must actually be credited to the PPF account by March 31 of the relevant financial year if the investor wishes to claim the deduction in that year’s income tax return.
SSY accounts: yearly deposit rules for girl child scheme
Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana requires a minimum annual deposit of ₹250 to keep the account in active status, with a maximum of ₹1.5 lakh eligible under Section 80C. If no deposit is credited by March 31 for a financial year, the SSY account is treated as defaulted, and although it continues to earn interest, fresh deposits may require regularisation as per post office or bank rules.
Parents often use SSY as their main 80C avenue, so missing the deadline can directly reduce their total deductions available for that year. As with PPF, the decisive factor is the date on which money reaches the SSY ledger, not the date the parent initiates a transfer, which makes timing crucial for those paying through net banking, UPI or offline instruments.
NPS year-end contributions for extra tax deduction
For NPS, the March 31 deadline is especially important for taxpayers targeting the additional ₹50,000 deduction under Section 80CCD(1B) beyond the Section 80C limit. Contributions made after March 31 will count only for the next financial year’s tax benefit, even if an investor was planning to bridge a shortfall based on their current year’s taxable income projections.
Many salaried individuals have employer contributions flowing into NPS, but the personal voluntary contribution is what unlocks the extra deduction. To claim this for FY 2024–25, the contribution must be successfully credited to the NPS Permanent Retirement Account Number (PRAN) by March 31, and investors should download the NPS transaction statement or contribution receipt as supporting evidence.
Bank timings, UPI, IMPS and NEFT cut-offs to watch
While UPI and IMPS are marketed as instant, year-end congestion or maintenance windows can delay credits, especially when routing funds from a bank account to a PPF or SSY maintained with a different bank or post office. NEFT and RTGS have defined batch or business-day rules, so initiating a transfer late on March 31 may push the credit to the next working day, costing that year’s tax eligibility.
Experts suggest completing high-value year-end transfers at least one working day before March 31 and using IMPS or UPI only as a backup rather than the primary option. Customers should also check their bank’s cut-off for same-day posting to linked PPF or NPS accounts, since some institutions have internal deadlines even if payment rails themselves operate beyond regular banking hours.
Proof of payment checklist for tax and dispute resolution
Investors should not rely solely on SMS alerts when large year-end contributions are at stake. A prudent approach is to save PDF versions or screenshots of bank transaction confirmations showing reference number, date, time and amount, and separately download account statements from PPF, SSY or NPS portals after a few hours to confirm that the credit has reflected correctly.
If a payment remains pending or reversed, having detailed records makes it easier to raise a service request with the bank, post office, or the Central Recordkeeping Agency for NPS. These documents also serve as supporting evidence during income tax scrutiny, especially when claimed deductions are large and aligned with last-day transactions that might attract closer examination from assessing officers.
Key minimum deposit and deduction limits at a glance
| Scheme | Minimum yearly deposit | Maximum eligible deduction | Relevant section |
|---|---|---|---|
| PPF | ₹500 | ₹1.5 lakh | Section 80C |
| SSY | ₹250 | ₹1.5 lakh | Section 80C |
| NPS (own contribution) | No formal minimum | Up to ₹50,000 extra | Section 80CCD(1B) |
For urban and Tier-2 savers juggling busy month-end schedules, treating March 31 as a hard operational cut-off rather than a symbolic date can prevent unexpected loss of tax relief. Planning deposits a day earlier, choosing the right payment mode, and preserving robust proof of credit help keep PPF, SSY and NPS accounts active, compliant and fully tax-efficient for the new financial year.
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