PPF vs RD: Which Will Make You Richer If You Invest ₹1 Lakh Annually for 10 Years?
- Tenure: 15 years (extendable in 5-year blocks)
- Interest Rate: Compounded annually (currently around 7–7.5% p.a.)
- Tax Benefits: Contributions, interest earned, and maturity amount are tax-free under Section 80C
- Flexibility: Partial withdrawals allowed after 5 years; loans against PPF possible
- Tenure: Typically 12–120 months (1–10 years)
- Interest Rate: Compounded quarterly (around 6–7% p.a., depends on bank)
- Tax Benefits: Principal eligible for Section 80C, but interest is taxable
- Flexibility: Premature withdrawal is allowed but may incur penalty
- Compounding Effect: Annual contributions earn interest on previous years’ interest
- Tax-Free Growth: The entire maturity amount is tax-free, unlike RD
- Long-Term Wealth Creation: Extending PPF after 15 years can further multiply your corpus
- Choose PPF: If you aim for long-term wealth and tax-free returns
- Choose RD: If you want short-term savings with fixed interest and access after 10 years
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