You are not just protecting your family — you are also reducing your taxable income. The premium you pay for your term insurance policy qualifies for a deduction under Section 80C. Here's everything you need to know.
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Section 80C of the Income Tax Act, 1961 allows resident individuals and Hindu Undivided Families (HUFs) to claim deductions from their gross total income on specified investments and expenses, up to a maximum of Rs. 1,50,000 per financial year. This deduction reduces your taxable income — which means lower tax liability.
Example: If your annual income is Rs. 12 lakhs and you invest Rs. 1.5 lakhs under 80C, your taxable income reduces to Rs. 10.5 lakhs — saving you Rs. 15,000 to Rs. 45,000 in taxes depending on your tax slab.
The premium paid for a life insurance policy — which includes term insurance — is eligible for deduction under Section 80C, subject to certain conditions.
| Condition | Details |
|---|---|
| Who can claim? | Individual taxpayer or HUF |
| For whose policy? | Self, spouse, or dependent children |
| Maximum deduction | Rs. 1,50,000 per year (combined for all 80C investments) |
| Premium cap rule | Premium must not exceed 10% of sum assured (for policies issued after April 1, 2012) |
Good News for Term Plans: Since term insurance premiums are already very low relative to the sum assured (e.g., Rs. 10,000 premium for Rs. 1 crore coverage = just 0.01% of sum assured), you will almost never hit the 10% cap. The entire premium qualifies for deduction.
The tax benefits do not stop at the premium. The death benefit received by your nominee is also completely tax-free under Section 10(10D) of the Income Tax Act.
This means: if your family receives Rs. 1 crore from your term insurance policy, they pay zero tax on it. The entire amount is in their hands.
Important: Section 10(10D) is applicable provided the premium does not exceed 10% of the sum assured. For standard term plans, this condition is almost always met.
| Tax Benefit | Section | What It Covers | Applicable To |
|---|---|---|---|
| Premium Deduction | Section 80C | Premium paid up to Rs. 1.5L deducted from income | Policyholder |
| Death Benefit Exemption | Section 10(10D) | Entire death benefit is tax-free | Nominee/Beneficiary |
| Annual Income | Tax Slab | Annual Premium | Tax Saved (approx.) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rs. 8–10 Lakhs | 20% | Rs. 10,000 | Rs. 2,000 |
| Rs. 10–15 Lakhs | 30% | Rs. 12,000 | Rs. 3,600 |
| Above Rs. 15 Lakhs | 30% | Rs. 15,000 | Rs. 4,500 |
While the absolute tax savings may seem modest, remember: the primary purpose of term insurance is protection, not tax saving. The 80C benefit is a bonus — not a reason to buy.
Important Update: Under the New Tax Regime (made the default from FY 2023-24), Section 80C deductions — including on term insurance premiums — are NOT available. You can claim 80C benefits only if you opt for the Old Tax Regime.
| Feature | Old Tax Regime | New Tax Regime |
|---|---|---|
| Section 80C Deduction | Available (up to Rs. 1.5L) | Not available |
| Section 80D (Health Ins.) | Available | Not available |
| Best For | Those with high deductions | Those with fewer investments |
Premium paid for health insurance qualifies for deduction under Section 80D, separate from Section 80C. This gives you additional tax savings over and above the Rs. 1.5 lakh limit.