💰 EPF Calculator - Rs. 80,000 basic
Lead / Principal - Monthly PF breakdown and retirement corpus
| Contribution | Monthly | Annual |
|---|---|---|
| Your contribution (12% of basic) | Rs. 9,600 | Rs. 1,15,200 |
| Employer EPF (3.67%) | Rs. 8,350 | Rs. 1,00,200 |
| Employer EPS (8.33%, capped Rs. 1,250) | Rs. 1,250 | Rs. 15,000 |
| Total going to your PF account | Rs. 17,950 | Rs. 2,15,400 |
At 10 years (no increment)
Rs. 32.77 lakh
Interest: Rs. 11.23 lakh
At 20 years (no increment)
Rs. 1.05 Cr
Interest: Rs. 62.10 lakh
At 30 years (no increment)
Rs. 2.65 Cr
Interest: Rs. 2.01 Cr
Customize - add VPF, increment, current balance
EPF Corpus
₹2.73 Cr
Your Contribution
₹54.98 L
Employee + VPF
Employer's Share
₹51.23 L
Interest Earned
₹1.67 Cr
Projected EPS monthly pension at retirement: ₹5,357/month(Pensionable salary ₹15,000 x 25 yrs / 70)
EPS pension is capped at ₹15,000 pensionable salary. Higher salary does not increase pension beyond this cap.
EPF corpus growth over 25 years
EPF corpus growth for Rs. 80,000 basic
| Years of service | Flat basic (no increment) | With 5% annual increment |
|---|---|---|
| 10 years | Rs. 32.77 lakh | Rs. 40.43 lakh |
| 20 years | Rs. 1.05 Cr | Rs. 1.57 Cr |
| 30 years | Rs. 2.65 Cr | Rs. 4.57 Cr |
| 35 years | Rs. 4.07 Cr | Rs. 7.45 Cr |
Both columns assume the current 8.25% EPF rate. The gap between them shows why increments matter so much: a 5% annual raise roughly 1.7×s your 30-year corpus versus a flat salary, because your 12% contribution grows every year.
Boost with VPF
Adding just Rs. 5,000/month of VPF grows your 30-year corpus by
Rs. 73.86 lakh
extra — reaching Rs. 3.39 Cr. VPF earns the same 8.25% tax-free and counts toward 80C.
Your EPS pension
The employer's 8.33% EPS share (capped at Rs. 1,250/month) funds a lifelong pension of about
Rs. 7,500/mo
after 35 years of service, from age 58 — separate from your EPF corpus above.
FAQs - EPF for Rs. 80,000 basic
What is the EPF contribution for Rs. 80,000 basic basic salary?▾
For Rs. 80,000 basic basic salary: you contribute Rs. 9,600/month (12% of basic = Rs. 1,15,200/year). Your employer also contributes 12% of basic, which splits into Rs. 8,350/month to EPF (12% minus the EPS share) plus Rs. 1250/month to EPS (pension, the EPS slice is 8.33% capped at Rs. 1,250). So Rs. 17,950/month goes into your EPF account in total.
How much EPF corpus will I accumulate with Rs. 80,000 basic salary?▾
At Rs. 80,000 basic with no increment and the current 8.25% rate, your EPF corpus is about Rs. 32.77 lakh at 10 years, Rs. 1.05 Cr at 20 years, and Rs. 2.65 Cr at 30 years. With a realistic 5% annual increment, 30 years grows to roughly Rs. 4.57 Cr — increments matter enormously because later contributions are larger.
How much extra will VPF add on Rs. 80,000 basic salary?▾
Adding a Voluntary Provident Fund (VPF) top-up of Rs. 5,000/month on top of your mandatory PF would grow your 30-year corpus by about Rs. 73.86 lakh (to Rs. 3.39 Cr). VPF earns the same 8.25% tax-free return and qualifies for 80C — one of the best risk-free options if you have surplus after other 80C investments.
What pension will I get from EPS?▾
The employer's EPS share (8.33%, capped at Rs. 1,250/month) funds your EPS pension, which is separate from the EPF corpus. Pension ≈ (pensionable salary × service years) ÷ 70, with pensionable salary capped at Rs. 15,000. After 35 years of service that works out to about Rs. 7,500/month for life after age 58.
Is EPF taxable, and when can I withdraw it?▾
EPF has EEE status — contributions (80C), interest, and maturity are all tax-free, provided you complete 5 years of continuous service. Withdrawing before 5 years is taxable. You can withdraw the full balance after 2 months of unemployment, or take partial advances for a house, medical needs, marriage, or education while employed.
Is VPF or PPF better on Rs. 80,000 basic salary?▾
VPF currently earns 8.25% versus PPF's lower rate, and both are EEE and 80C-eligible — so VPF usually gives a higher return. PPF's advantage is that it is not tied to your employer and has a Rs. 1.5 lakh/year cap, making it useful for the self-employed or as a separate long-term bucket. Many people use both.