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Retirement

Is NPS Swasthya Pension Scheme A Substitute For Health Insurance? Key Facts To Know

NPS Swasthya Pension Scheme is a bundled product offering protection against health related expenses and compounding benefits for pension security. However, it may not necessarily be a substitute for health insurance

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NPS Swasthya Pension Scheme Photo: AI
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Summary

Summary of this article

  • The NPS Swasthya Pension Scheme is a bundled product combining a market-linked health corpus with pension savings.

  • It requires a minimum subscription of Rs 25,000.

  • The scheme offers a flexible partial withdrawals for OPD, diagnostics, medicines and hospitalisation.

The Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority (PFRDA) has introduced the NPS Swasthya Pension Yojana beginning this year. Initially, as a pilot under a restrained environment (regulatory sandbox), and after launching a second proof of concept in April 2026, it is set to launch the scheme for all categories of subscribers. This is expected to address a critical gap both in the health expenses-related coverage and pension security.

Recently, PFRDA chairman S. Ramann confirmed that the NPS Swasthya Pension Scheme would be ready for public launch within three months (in the next 60-70 days). The product, which bundles health insurance and pension security in one product, has been approved by the PFRDA board and once the backend integration is complete, it would be available for subscribers for investment.  

This is expected to benefit individuals who cannot afford hefty premiums for a personal health insurance policy amid rising inflation and other more pressing needs.

According to the available scheme information, this scheme requires a minimum subscription amount of Rs 25,000. Non-government subscribers who are over 40 years of age can transfer their 30 per cent funds from their common scheme account to this scheme to avail of the scheme’s benefits without investing any new amount. The scheme allows withdrawal up to 25 per cent of the contribution without any limit on the number of partial withdrawals.

The notable part is that withdrawal need not necessarily be for hospitalisation-related expenses. The scheme allows withdrawal for the outpatient department (OPD), diagnostics, pharmacy purchases, and hospitalisation.

The only condition is that subscribers need to maintain a minimum of Rs 50,000 in the account.

Is NPS Swasthya A Substitute For Health Insurance?

Sumit Shukla, managing director and CEO, Axis Pension Funds, said, “NPS Swasthya should not be viewed as better than health insurance, but as a differentiated and complementary solution.”

He added: “Health insurance provides defined risk protection through a policy, whereas NPS Swasthya works as a self-funded, market-linked corpus within the pension framework. It can help meet expenses, such as co-payments, consumables, medicines, diagnostics, and outpatient care, which may not always be fully covered under standard health insurance policies. Another key distinction is that any unutilised amount can remain invested and may continue to grow over time, thereby supporting both healthcare needs and long-term wealth creation.” 

Typically  health insurance policies do not cover pre-existing diseases from day one, one has to wait for a few years before these are covered. But in the case of the NPS Swasthya Pension Scheme, this condition is not yet clear.

Another notable point is that, until one has accumulated a decent amount under the scheme, the required withdrawal may remain inadequate for a medical emergency. It would be better used as a back-up for smaller medical bills, which typically remain uncovered under health insurance.

On the other hand, for those having a chronic disease, NPS Swasthya may be useful to cover regular consultations, medicines, etc.; however, more clarity is required on this aspect too, as the scheme hasn’t been launched yet.  

“Aspects such as day-one coverage, waiting periods, eligibility and claim processes would be governed by the final terms and conditions communicated at the time of rollout,” said Shukla.

He added: “At a time when medical inflation continues to outpace general inflation, such a structured approach (NPS Swasthya Pension Scheme) can strengthen financial resilience, encourage disciplined savings, and provide individuals and families with greater confidence in managing healthcare expenses over the long term.”

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