Summary of this article
Section 80D allows Rs 50,000 medical expense deduction for seniors
Benefit applies when no health insurance premium is paid
Senior citizen parents’ medical bills can also qualify for deduction
Old tax regime taxpayers should keep bills and payment proofs ready
Many senior citizens either do not have health insurance or find it difficult to buy a policy later in life because of age, illness history or high premiums. For them, medical bills can become a major annual expense. The tax law recognises this situation and allows some relief if the senior citizen is not covered by a health insurance policy.
Under Section 80D, a resident senior citizen can claim a deduction of up to Rs 50,000 in a financial year for medical expenditure, provided no health insurance premium has been paid for that person during the year. The benefit is available only under the old tax regime. Those who opt for the new tax regime cannot claim this deduction.
Who Can Claim This Deduction
The deduction can be claimed by a senior citizen for his or her own medical expenses. It can also be claimed by a taxpayer who pays medical bills for senior citizen parents, as long as the parents are resident in India and are not covered by a health insurance policy.
The limit is Rs 50,000 for the year. This means the claim cannot exceed the actual amount spent. If the medical expenditure is Rs 35,000, the deduction will be Rs 35,000. If the bills add up to Rs 80,000, the deduction will still be capped at Rs 50,000, according to a recent report by Moneycontrol.
The rule also means that one cannot claim the same expense twice. If a son pays the hospital bill for his father and claims the deduction, the father cannot claim the same bill again in his own return.
What Expenses May Be Covered
The law does not restrict the deduction only to hospitalisation. Consultation fees, medicines, diagnostic tests, treatment bills and other genuine medical expenses may form part of the claim, as long as they relate to the senior citizen for whom the deduction is being claimed.
However, the claim must be backed by records. Taxpayers should preserve doctor bills, pharmacy invoices, diagnostic test receipts, hospital bills and payment proof. These documents are not usually uploaded with the income tax return, but they may be needed if the return is later checked.
Payment Proof Matters
For most medical expenditure claims under this provision, cash payment should be avoided. It is safer to pay through banking channels, cards, UPI, or other traceable modes. This helps establish that the taxpayer actually incurred the expense.
There is a separate relaxation for preventive health check-ups, where cash payment is allowed, but that comes within a smaller overall limit. For regular medical expenditure of uninsured senior citizens, proper bills and traceable payments are the safer route.
For families supporting elderly parents, this deduction can reduce taxable income to some extent. It will not cover the full burden of rising healthcare costs, but it can still soften the tax outgo where health insurance is absent.
FAQs
1. What has changed for Section 80G deduction claims in ITR?
Taxpayers may now need to give payment details such as transaction reference number and bank IFSC while claiming donation deduction.
2. Is a donation receipt enough to claim Section 80G deduction?
No. Taxpayers should also check whether the organisation is approved under Section 80G and keep the payment record ready.
3. What happens if the 80G details are incomplete or wrong?
Incomplete or incorrect details may lead to processing delays, clarification requests or disallowance of the deduction.















