Every March, something quietly painful happens across thousands of Indian households. Senior citizens file their income tax returns, dutifully declare the interest they earned from fixed deposits and savings accounts — and pay full tax on every rupee of it. Not because they have to. But because nobody told them they did not have to.
Section 80TTB of the Income Tax Act is one of the most powerful and least-claimed tax benefits available to Indians above 60. Introduced in 2018, it allows resident senior citizens to claim a deduction of up to ₹50,000 on interest income from bank deposits, post office schemes, and cooperative banks — completely shielding that income from tax.
In FY 2025–26, with Budget 2025 and Budget 2026 both introducing pro-senior reforms, the overall tax picture for retirees has improved further. The TDS threshold on interest has been doubled to ₹1 lakh. A single-submission process for Form 15H is being rolled out. And for those with modest incomes, the new tax regime makes income up to ₹12 lakh effectively tax-free.
Yet millions of eligible seniors either do not claim 80TTB at all, claim it incorrectly, or make the single biggest tax decision of the year — old regime vs new regime — without understanding how 80TTB changes that calculus entirely.
This guide changes that. Whether you are 62 or 82, whether you have ₹2 lakh or ₹20 lakh in bank deposits, this is the complete picture of what you are entitled to and exactly how to get it.
| What We Cover in This Guide • What Section 80TTB is and who exactly qualifies • How it differs from Section 80TTA (the benefit for non-seniors) • The old regime vs new regime decision — with real numbers for seniors • TDS rules, Form 15H, and the major 2025–2026 changes that affect you • Step-by-step: How to claim 80TTB when filing your ITR • Real scenarios for different types of senior depositors • Common mistakes that cost seniors thousands of rupees |
What Is Section 80TTB — The Law That Protects Senior Savers
The Problem It Was Designed to Solve
Before Section 80TTB was introduced in the Union Budget 2018, senior citizens and younger taxpayers were treated identically when it came to interest income taxation. Both could claim only ₹10,000 deduction on savings account interest under Section 80TTA — and neither could claim anything on fixed deposit interest at all.
This was particularly harsh for retirees. A 68-year-old former government employee with ₹15 lakh in fixed deposits earning 7% interest would generate ₹1,05,000 in annual interest income. With only ₹10,000 deductible, ₹95,000 was fully taxable. At the 20% tax bracket, that meant paying ₹19,000 in tax on income that was literally their primary means of survival post-retirement.
Budget 2018 changed this permanently. Finance Minister Arun Jaitley introduced Section 80TTB specifically for senior citizens — raising the deduction ceiling fivefold and extending it to cover all types of bank deposits, not just savings accounts.
Section 80TTB: The Exact Legal Provision, Simply Explained
Section 80TTB is located in Chapter VI-A of the Income Tax Act, 1961 — the same chapter as the popular Section 80C and 80D deductions. It works as follows:
| Section 80TTB in Plain Language If you are a resident Indian aged 60 years or above, you may deduct up to ₹50,000 from your Gross Total Income for interest earned during the financial year from: → Savings accounts, Fixed Deposits (FDs), and Recurring Deposits (RDs) held with any scheduled bank → Deposits with co-operative societies engaged in banking (including co-operative land mortgage banks) → Any deposit scheme of a Post Office (including SCSS, MIS, NSC, TD schemes) The deduction is the actual interest earned OR ₹50,000 — whichever is LOWER. This benefit is available ONLY under the Old Tax Regime. It cannot be claimed under the New Tax Regime. |
Who Is a ‘Senior Citizen’ for This Purpose?
The Income Tax Act defines a senior citizen as a resident individual who is 60 years of age or more at any time during the relevant previous year (financial year). This means:
- If you turn 60 on any date during FY 2025–26 (April 1, 2025 to March 31, 2026), you qualify for the entire year
- A person turning 60 on April 1, 2026 is considered a senior citizen for FY 2025–26 (AY 2026–27) — the first day of the assessment year counts
- Super senior citizens (aged 80 and above) are also covered — and get additional benefits like a higher basic exemption limit of ₹5 lakh under the old regime
- Non-Resident Indians (NRIs) above 60 do NOT qualify, even if they earn interest from Indian banks
- HUFs (Hindu Undivided Families) do not qualify, even if the Karta is above 60
80TTB vs 80TTA — Understanding the Upgrade
The Key Differences at a Glance
| Section 80TTA (For non-seniors) | Section 80TTB (For senior citizens aged 60+) |
| Maximum deduction: ₹10,000 | Maximum deduction: ₹50,000 |
| Covers ONLY savings account interest | Covers savings accounts + FDs + RDs + Post Office |
| Available to all resident individuals | Available ONLY to resident senior citizens |
| Fixed deposit interest is NOT covered | Fixed deposit interest IS fully covered |
| Smaller benefit — limited protection | 5x larger benefit — comprehensive protection |
| Senior citizens CANNOT claim 80TTA | Seniors get 80TTB instead — cannot claim both |
The critical rule: senior citizens cannot claim both 80TTA and 80TTB. You get the bigger benefit automatically. If you are 60+, you file under 80TTB — 80TTA is no longer applicable to you.
The Real-World Impact: A Side-by-Side Comparison
Let us compare two taxpayers — both 63 years old, both earning identical income. The only difference is whether they know about Section 80TTB.
| Income Component | Rajan (Does NOT Claim 80TTB) | Sunita (Claims 80TTB) | Difference |
| Pension income | ₹2,40,000 | ₹2,40,000 | — |
| FD interest income | ₹80,000 | ₹80,000 | — |
| Savings a/c interest | ₹8,000 | ₹8,000 | — |
| Total Gross Income | ₹3,28,000 | ₹3,28,000 | — |
| 80TTB Deduction | ₹0 | ₹50,000 | ₹50,000 saved |
| Net Taxable Income | ₹3,28,000 | ₹2,78,000 | — |
| Tax Payable (Old Regime) | ₹1,400 | ₹0 | Rajan pays ₹1,400 extra |
In this example, Sunita pays zero tax while Rajan pays ₹1,400 — purely because of a single deduction claim that takes five minutes to enter in the ITR form. For higher interest earners, the savings are dramatically larger.
| Maximum Possible Tax Saving from Section 80TTB At the 20% tax bracket: ₹50,000 × 20% = ₹10,000 saved per year At the 30% tax bracket: ₹50,000 × 30% = ₹15,000 saved per year Plus 4% Health & Education Cess: effective saving of up to ₹15,600 per year Over 20 years of retirement: potential cumulative saving of ₹2,00,000–₹3,12,000 |
What's Covered, What's Not — The Fine Print That Matters
Interest Income That Qualifies Under 80TTB
The following interest income can be included when calculating your 80TTB deduction:
- Savings account interest from any scheduled commercial bank (SBI, HDFC, ICICI, PSU banks, SFBs, cooperative banks)
- Fixed Deposit (FD) interest from banks and post offices
- Recurring Deposit (RD) interest from banks and post offices
- Post Office Monthly Income Scheme (POMIS) interest
- Senior Citizen Savings Scheme (SCSS) interest — this is explicitly covered
- National Savings Certificate (NSC) accrued interest
- Post Office Time Deposits (POTD) interest
- Interest from co-operative societies engaged in the banking business
Interest Income That Does NOT Qualify
Several popular investment vehicles pay interest but are NOT eligible for 80TTB deduction:
- Company Fixed Deposits (e.g., Bajaj Finance FD, Mahindra Finance FD) — these are corporate deposits, not bank deposits
- Non-Convertible Debentures (NCDs) and corporate bonds
- Interest on loans given to family members or friends
- Interest on income tax refunds
- Interest from NBFCs (Non-Banking Financial Companies)
- Interest earned by NRI senior citizens on NRE/NRO accounts
| ⚠️ Important Alert: Company FDs Are Not Covered Many seniors invest in company FDs for their higher rates (often 7–8%). While these are relatively safe, the interest they pay does NOT qualify for Section 80TTB deduction. If you earn ₹60,000 from a company FD and ₹30,000 from a bank FD, only the ₹30,000 from the bank FD qualifies for 80TTB. Plan your deposit allocation accordingly. |
The Old Regime vs New Regime Decision — The Most Important Tax Call of the Year
Why Section 80TTB Makes This Decision More Complex for Seniors
Since April 2023, the New Tax Regime has been the default regime for all taxpayers in India. If you do not actively choose the Old Regime when filing your ITR, the New Regime is applied automatically.
The New Regime offers lower tax rates and a higher basic exemption (₹4 lakh in FY 2025–26). Under Budget 2025, income up to ₹12 lakh is effectively tax-free for most people through the enhanced rebate under Section 87A.
However, Section 80TTB is not available under the New Tax Regime. This is the central trade-off that every senior citizen must evaluate.
Tax Regime Comparison: Old vs New for Senior Citizens (FY 2025–26)
| Feature | Old Tax Regime | New Tax Regime (Default) | Who It Favours |
| Basic Exemption | ₹3,00,000 (60–79 yrs) ₹5,00,000 (80+ yrs) | ₹4,00,000 (all ages) | Depends on age |
| Section 80TTB (FD interest) | ✅ ₹50,000 deduction | ❌ Not available | Old Regime |
| Section 80C | ✅ Up to ₹1,50,000 | ❌ Not available | Old Regime |
| Section 80D (Health Ins.) | ✅ Up to ₹50,000 | ❌ Not available | Old Regime |
| Standard Deduction (pension) | ₹50,000 | ₹75,000 | New Regime |
| Tax-free threshold via 87A | ₹5,00,000 (with rebate) | ₹12,00,000 (with rebate) | New Regime |
| Tax rates | Higher slab rates | Lower slab rates | New Regime |
When the Old Regime Is Better for a Senior Citizen
The Old Regime with Section 80TTB wins when your total deductions (80TTB + 80C + 80D + Standard Deduction) are large enough to bring your taxable income below what the New Regime would compute. This is often the case for seniors who:
- Have significant FD/savings interest income (₹30,000 or more per year)
- Continue to invest in PPF, life insurance premiums, or other 80C instruments
- Pay substantial health insurance premiums qualifying under 80D
- Earn pension income above ₹5 lakh where slab-rate differences matter
When the New Regime Is Better for a Senior Citizen
The New Regime wins when you have fewer deductions and moderate income — particularly now that income up to ₹12 lakh is effectively tax-free:
- Total income (pension + interest + rent) is below ₹12 lakh — zero tax under new regime
- You do not invest significantly in 80C instruments and have no health insurance premium
- Your interest income is modest (under ₹30,000 per year) making the 80TTB advantage small
- You are a super senior citizen (80+) with income between ₹5–12 lakh where new regime rates are dramatically lower
| 📊 Real Scenario: Ramesh, 67, Retired Bank Manager Income: Pension ₹4,80,000 | FD Interest ₹1,20,000 | Total ₹6,00,000 Old Regime: Gross Income ₹6,00,000 − Standard Deduction ₹50,000 − 80TTB ₹50,000 − 80D ₹30,000 = Taxable ₹4,70,000 Tax (Old): 5% on ₹1,70,000 = ₹8,500 + 4% cess = ₹8,840 New Regime: Gross ₹6,00,000 − Standard Deduction ₹75,000 = Taxable ₹5,25,000 Tax (New): 5% on ₹1,25,000 = ₹6,250 + 4% cess = ₹6,500 Verdict: New Regime saves Ramesh ₹2,340. But if he also claims 80C (₹1,50,000), Old Regime wins by ₹12,500+. Key lesson: Always run the numbers for your specific situation. Do not assume either regime is always better. |
TDS Rules for Senior Citizens — Major 2025 Changes You Need to Know
The Old TDS Problem That Frustrated Retirees
For years, banks automatically deducted TDS (Tax Deducted at Source) on FD interest once it exceeded ₹50,000 per year — even for seniors whose overall income was below the taxable threshold. This created a frustrating cycle: money was deducted, seniors had to file ITRs to claim refunds, and refunds sometimes took months.
The situation was made worse by Form 15H — the declaration form seniors must submit to each bank to prevent TDS deduction. A senior citizen with FDs at five banks had to remember to submit Form 15H to each bank at the start of every financial year. Missing one submission meant TDS deducted, even if the income was fully non-taxable.
Budget 2025: TDS Threshold Doubled to ₹1 Lakh
In a significant step forward, Budget 2025 doubled the TDS threshold for senior citizens under Section 194A from ₹50,000 to ₹1,00,000 per financial year per bank. This change took effect from April 1, 2025.
What this means practically:
- If your total interest from a single bank is ₹1,00,000 or less in FY 2025–26, the bank will NOT deduct any TDS
- This threshold is computed per bank — not across all your banks combined
- A senior with ₹90,000 FD interest at SBI and ₹90,000 at HDFC Bank pays zero TDS at either bank
- This improves monthly cash flow significantly for retirees on fixed income
| Before vs After: TDS Threshold for Senior Citizens Before Budget 2025: TDS deducted if annual interest at a bank exceeded ₹50,000 After Budget 2025 (from April 1, 2025): TDS deducted only if annual interest at a bank exceeds ₹1,00,000 Important: A higher TDS threshold does NOT mean the income is tax-free. You must still report all interest income in your ITR and pay tax if applicable. The threshold only determines when the bank automatically deducts TDS — not your final tax liability. |
Budget 2026: Form 15H Goes Centralised
Budget 2026 introduced a landmark compliance relief effective April 1, 2026: senior citizens can now submit a single Form 15H through the NSDL or CDSL portal, and it will automatically apply across all linked bank accounts, fixed deposits, demat accounts, and SCSS investments.
Previously, submitting Form 15H meant visiting or uploading separately to each bank, company, or post office where you held deposits. Missing one meant TDS deductions and refund hassles. The new centralised system eliminates this fragmentation entirely.
Additionally, seniors whose income has consistently been below the taxable threshold can now receive automatic Nil or lower TDS certificates generated from their past ITR filings — reducing the need for manual applications entirely.
Form 15H: Who Should File It and When
Form 15H is a self-declaration that instructs your bank NOT to deduct TDS on interest income. You should file it if:
- You are a resident Indian aged 60 or above
- Your estimated total income for the financial year is below the basic exemption limit (₹3,00,000 for 60–79 years; ₹5,00,000 for 80+ years) under the Old Regime
- OR you are in the New Regime and your income is below ₹4,00,000
With the centralised system from April 1, 2026, file once through the NSDL portal. For FY 2025–26 (before the centralised system was in place), file separately at each bank.
Step-by-Step Guide — How to Claim Section 80TTB in Your ITR
Step 1: Gather All Your Interest Income Documents
Before filing, collect the following:
- Interest certificates from all banks (usually available in the bank's net banking portal or on request at the branch)
- Form 26AS and Annual Information Statement (AIS) from the income tax portal — these show TDS already deducted and interest income the bank has reported
- Post Office passbook or SCSS passbook showing quarterly interest credits
- Form 16A (TDS certificates) from banks if TDS was deducted
Step 2: Calculate Your Total Eligible Interest
Add up all interest earned from qualifying sources (bank savings accounts, bank FDs, bank RDs, post office deposits, SCSS, NSC accrued interest). Do NOT include interest from company FDs or NCDs.
If your total eligible interest is ₹50,000 or less, your entire interest income is covered by 80TTB — your taxable interest is zero.
If your total eligible interest is above ₹50,000, your deduction is capped at ₹50,000. The remaining amount is taxable as 'Income from Other Sources.'
Step 3: Report in Your ITR
- Report the complete interest income under 'Income from Other Sources' — do NOT skip this step even if the full amount is covered by 80TTB
- Under Chapter VI-A deductions in your ITR form, enter the 80TTB deduction amount (up to ₹50,000)
- The system will automatically compute your net taxable interest after the deduction
- Do NOT claim both 80TTA and 80TTB — you can only claim one, and 80TTB is the correct one for seniors
Step 4: Decide on the Tax Regime
This is the most consequential decision. The 80TTB deduction is only available in the Old Regime. Before filing, use the income tax portal's built-in comparison tool or a trusted tax calculator to run both scenarios with your actual numbers.
| Quick Decision Rule for Most Seniors If (80TTB + 80C + 80D + Standard Deduction) total is MORE than ₹3–4 lakh → Old Regime likely wins If your total income is under ₹12 lakh and deductions are minimal → New Regime likely wins If you are above 80 with income ₹5–10 lakh → Run both carefully; super senior basic exemption helps Old Regime When in doubt, consult a CA. The regime decision is irreversible once the ITR is filed for that year. |
7 Costly Mistakes Senior Citizens Make With 80TTB
Mistake 1: Not Claiming 80TTB at All
This is the most common error. Thousands of seniors correctly report their interest income but simply do not enter the deduction in the 80TTB field — either because they do not know it exists or because their tax preparer missed it. The result: paying tax on income that was legally deductible.
Mistake 2: Claiming 80TTA Instead of 80TTB
Some seniors (or their CAs) mistakenly continue claiming the ₹10,000 deduction under Section 80TTA — the provision for non-seniors. This is not allowed once you are 60+, and more importantly, it leaves ₹40,000 of additional deductible income on the table.
Mistake 3: Trying to Claim Both 80TTA and 80TTB
The opposite error — trying to claim ₹10,000 under 80TTA (for savings interest) and an additional ₹50,000 under 80TTB for FD interest. This is explicitly prohibited by the Income Tax Act. Seniors can only use 80TTB, which covers all categories including savings interest.
Mistake 4: Including Company FD Interest in the 80TTB Calculation
A senior who earns ₹40,000 from a bank FD and ₹30,000 from a Bajaj Finance company FD may assume all ₹70,000 is covered under 80TTB. Only the ₹40,000 from the bank qualifies. The ₹30,000 from the company FD is fully taxable.
Mistake 5: Switching to New Regime Without Calculating 80TTB Impact
Since the New Regime became the default, many seniors have unknowingly switched to it during filing — forfeiting 80TTB, 80C, and 80D deductions simultaneously. The New Regime may still be better depending on your income, but the decision must be made consciously with a full calculation.
Mistake 6: Not Filing Form 15H and Waiting for TDS Refunds
A senior with total income below the exemption limit who does not file Form 15H will have TDS deducted on FD interest. While this is recoverable through the ITR process, it blocks cash flow for months. File Form 15H proactively — now easier than ever with the centralised portal from April 2026.
Mistake 7: Not Collecting Interest Certificates From All Banks
Some seniors declare only the FD interest for which they received Form 16A from the bank, missing out on interest from accounts where TDS was not deducted (below ₹1 lakh threshold). The AIS (Annual Information Statement) on the income tax portal shows ALL interest income reported by banks — cross-check this against your own records before filing.
Scenarios for Different Types of Senior Depositors
Scenario A: The Modest-Income Retiree
Profile: Savitaben, 70, retired schoolteacher from Ahmedabad. Pension: ₹1,80,000/year. FD interest: ₹35,000. Savings account interest: ₹4,000.
80TTB applies: Total eligible interest = ₹39,000. Full amount deductible under 80TTB. Total income = ₹1,80,000 + ₹39,000 = ₹2,19,000.
Tax outcome: Under Old Regime, ₹2,19,000 is below ₹3,00,000 basic exemption — zero tax. Under New Regime, ₹2,19,000 is below ₹4,00,000 — also zero tax. Both regimes work. File Form 15H to avoid TDS.
Scenario B: The Mid-Income Interest Earner
Profile: Prakash, 65, retired PSU engineer from Pune. Pension: ₹4,20,000. Bank FD interest: ₹90,000. SCSS interest: ₹41,000. Total: ₹5,51,000.
Old Regime calculation: Gross income ₹5,51,000 − Standard Deduction ₹50,000 − 80TTB ₹50,000 − 80D (health insurance) ₹35,000 = Taxable ₹4,16,000. Tax: 5% on ₹1,16,000 = ₹5,800 + cess = ₹6,032.
New Regime calculation: Gross ₹5,51,000 − Standard Deduction ₹75,000 = Taxable ₹4,76,000. Tax: 5% on ₹76,000 = ₹3,800 + cess = ₹3,952.
Verdict: New Regime saves ₹2,080 here. But if Prakash also has ₹1,50,000 in 80C investments (LIC premium, PPF), Old Regime saves ₹9,880 more. With active investments, Old Regime + 80TTB wins significantly.
Scenario C: The High-Interest Senior
Profile: Mrinal, 72, retired businessman from Delhi. No pension. Bank FD interest: ₹1,85,000. Post Office SCSS: ₹82,000. Total interest income: ₹2,67,000.
80TTB applies: Deduction = ₹50,000 (maximum). Taxable interest = ₹2,17,000.
Old Regime: ₹2,17,000 − ₹3,00,000 exemption = below threshold. Zero tax. Old Regime clearly wins here.
New Regime: ₹2,67,000 − ₹75,000 standard deduction − ₹4,00,000 exemption = also zero. Both work, but Old Regime provides larger safety buffer with 80TTB in case income is higher next year.
The Bottom Line: Your Action Checklist
| Before Filing Your ITR This Year — Senior Citizen Tax Checklist ✅ Collect interest certificates from ALL banks and post offices ✅ Check AIS on income tax portal to see all interest reported against your PAN ✅ Total your eligible interest: savings + FD + RD + SCSS + Post Office deposits ✅ Remember: Company FDs are NOT covered under 80TTB ✅ Run both Old and New Regime calculations with your actual numbers ✅ If Old Regime: enter up to ₹50,000 in the 80TTB field (or actual interest if less) ✅ Do NOT claim 80TTA — as a senior, 80TTB replaces it entirely ✅ File Form 15H if your income is below the basic exemption (now centrally via NSDL from April 2026) ✅ If uncertain, consult a qualified CA — the regime choice is irreversible for the year |
Section 80TTB is not a loophole. It is a deliberate government policy to support senior citizens who depend on interest income in retirement. The law is clear, the documentation is minimal, and the process is straightforward. The only requirement is knowing it exists — and now you do.
A ₹10,000 to ₹15,600 annual tax saving may sound modest in isolation. But over twenty years of retirement, with the power of compounding on reinvested savings, it becomes a meaningful addition to the financial security of India's retired generation. Every rupee saved in unnecessary tax is a rupee that continues to earn for you.
Do not leave it unclaimed.
Frequently Asked Questions
No. You must be 60 years or older at any point during the financial year to qualify. If you turn 60 on March 31, 2026, you qualify for FY 2025–26. If you turn 60 on April 1, 2026, you would qualify starting from FY 2026–27.
No. The deduction is available only to the person who earned the interest. If the FDs are in your name, you earned the interest — not your spouse. To claim 80TTB, deposits should be in the senior citizen's own name (or joint accounts where they are the primary account holder).
For joint accounts, interest income is typically attributed to the primary account holder. If you are the primary holder and you are 60+, the full interest income is yours for 80TTB purposes. Clarify with your CA if the joint account arrangement is complex.
Yes. SCSS is a Post Office deposit scheme, and Section 80TTB explicitly covers interest from Post Office deposits. SCSS interest is one of the most commonly held qualifying incomes for this deduction.
Yes. Form 15H and Section 80TTB operate independently. Filing Form 15H prevents TDS from being deducted by the bank. But even if TDS was deducted, you claim the 80TTB deduction in your ITR, and the excess TDS becomes a refund. Do not skip claiming 80TTB just because TDS was already deducted.
The ₹50,000 limit under 80TTB has remained unchanged since its introduction in Budget 2018 — despite inflation eroding its real value. Budget 2025 did raise the TDS threshold (a separate but related reform), and some sources indicate Budget 2026 may have further amended the limit. Always verify the current limit on the official Income Tax India portal before filing.
Primary Sources: Income Tax Act 1961, Section 80TTB | Section 194A (as amended by Finance Act 2025) | Income Tax Department Senior Citizen guide (incometax.gov.in) | Budget 2025 Finance Act | Budget 2026 Finance Act | CBDT Circulars | BusinessToday.in, Business Standard senior citizen tax coverage | ClearTax, Motilal Oswal, Bajaj Finserv tax guides
With over 15 years of experience in Banking, investment banking, personal finance, or financial planning, Dkush has a knack for breaking down complex financial concepts into actionable, easy-to-understand advice. A MBA finance and a lifelong learner, Dkush is committed to helping readers achieve financial independence through smart budgeting, investing, and wealth-building strategies, Follow Dailyfinancial.in for practical tips and a roadmap to financial success!
