NPS vs UPS: CA Explains Why Most People Get It Wrong—'What Really Matters After 60'

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NPS vs UPS: Retirement planning should include potential risks.  (Source: rawpixel.com on Freepik)
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Summary is AI-generated, newsroom-reviewed
  • Government employees, currently under NPS, face a choice with the new UPS scheme from April 2025
  • UPS guarantees a fixed pension after 10 years of service, roughly 50% of the last salary
  • NPS offers market-linked returns, but requires 40% annuity conversion yielding 6–8% returns
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NPS Vs UPS: Retirement planning requires careful analysis of your financial position and selection of suitable schemes. Choosing an appropriate pension plan can ensure your financial security in your retirement years.

After the newly launched Unified Pension Scheme (UPS), the government employees could be facing a dilemma in choosing a suitable retirement scheme. Currently, the government employees are covered under the National Pension System, which offers market-linked returns. 

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The UPS plan came into effect on April 1, 2025. It offers a guaranteed pension for government employees with at least 10 years of service.

In a recent post on 'X', CA Nitin Kaushik explained what factors should be taken into account when planning for retirement, especially for government employees facing a dilemma over choosing between NPS and the UPS.

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"Choosing between NPS and UPS isn't about the schemes. It's about asking, ‘How will I run my household after 60?," he wrote on X. He suggested that once salary stops, income planning becomes the heart of retirement.

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