A Public Provident Fund (PPF) is a long-term small savings tool popular among various age groups because of its guaranteed returns, tax benefits, fair interest rates, sizable lump sum on maturity, ease of account opening at post offices and banks, etc. A PPF contributor can also avail of a loan facility against the accumulated funds, make partial withdrawals, and opt for premature account closure in case of a dire need for money. But the high point is its compounded annual growth on the interest earned. As per the Finance Ministry’s revised notification, the current interest rate on PPF deposits is 7.1 per cent. Now, let us consider when an individual can withdraw funds from a PPF account. If there is an immediate need for funds, the subscriber can take a loan against the accrued corpus within five years from the end of the first year of opening the account. However, there is a cap. The loan can be taken up to 25 per cent of the balance in the account at the end of the second year immediately preceding the year when the loan is applied. As such, the loan amount is likely to be low. However, after five years, the account holder has two options: a partial fund withdrawal or premature account closure and full withdrawal. Partial Withdrawal: After five years, the account holder can partially withdraw from the PPF account by applying on Form-2. It excludes the year of the investment made; for example, investments in 2020-21 will be allowed for withdrawal only in 2026-27 or later.
- Partial withdrawal is allowed once in a financial year for weddings, house renovation, education, etc.
- The withdrawal amount cannot be more than 50 per cent of the credit balance at the end of the 4th preceding year or the preceding year, whichever is lower. It is subject to the condition that there is no outstanding loan and interest against the PF account; if there is any outstanding amount, it shall be paid by the account holder before availing the withdrawal facility.
- The account holder, spouse, or the dependent children has a life-threatening disease.
- The account holder or the dependent children’s higher education expenses.
- If the account holder’s residential status changes to Non-Resident Indian (NRI).