The Public Provident Fund (PPF) and Mutual Funds are both popular long-term investment options in India — but they are built for very different purposes. PPF offers safety and tax-free returns backed by the government. Mutual funds offer market-linked growth with higher return potential. Choosing between them depends on your goals, risk appetite, and investment horizon.

What Is PPF?
PPF is a government-backed savings scheme with a 15-year lock-in period. It currently offers 7.1% per annum interest, compounded annually, and is fully tax-free — contributions qualify under Section 80C, and both interest and maturity proceeds are exempt from tax. You can invest a minimum of ₹500 and a maximum of ₹1.5 lakh per year.
What Is a Mutual Fund?
A Mutual Fund pools investor money and deploys it across stocks, bonds, or both. Returns are market-linked and not guaranteed. Equity mutual funds have historically delivered 12–15% CAGR over 10+ years. You can invest via SIP starting at ₹500/month, with no upper limit, and there is no mandatory lock-in except for ELSS funds (3 years).
Head-to-Head Comparison
Returns PPF offers a fixed 7.1% per annum, set by the government quarterly. Since PPF is tax-free, the effective yield is higher — for someone in the 30% tax bracket, it is equivalent to a ~10.2% taxable return. Equity mutual funds have historically delivered 12–15% CAGR over the long term, though returns are not guaranteed.
Risk PPF carries zero risk — it is sovereign-backed. Your principal and interest are fully protected by the Government of India. Equity mutual funds carry market risk and can fall sharply in the short term. Over long periods (10+ years), the risk reduces considerably, but it never disappears entirely.
Liquidity PPF has a strict 15-year lock-in. Partial withdrawals are permitted from the 7th year onwards, and loans against the balance are available from year 3–6. Mutual funds (except ELSS) offer full liquidity — you can redeem anytime, with money credited within 1–3 business days.
Taxation PPF follows the EEE (Exempt-Exempt-Exempt) model — contributions are deductible under 80C, interest earned is tax-free, and the maturity amount is completely tax-free. Equity mutual funds held over 1 year attract 10% LTCG tax on gains above ₹1 lakh. Debt funds are taxed at your income slab rate.
Investment Limit PPF has a maximum annual investment cap of ₹1.5 lakh. Mutual funds have no upper limit — you can invest any amount via SIP or lump sum.
Inflation Protection PPF’s 7.1% return barely stays ahead of India’s long-term average inflation of 5–6%, leaving a modest real return. Equity mutual funds with 12–15% historical returns offer far stronger inflation-beating growth over time.
Section 80C Benefit Both PPF contributions and ELSS mutual fund investments qualify for deduction under Section 80C up to ₹1.5 lakh per year. However, ELSS has a shorter lock-in of just 3 years versus PPF’s 15 years, and has historically delivered higher returns.
When to Choose PPF
- You want completely risk-free, tax-free, government-guaranteed returns
- You are in the 20–30% income tax bracket and want to maximise the EEE benefit
- You are building a long-term retirement or child education corpus without any market exposure
- You want a disciplined, forced savings mechanism with a locked-in horizon
When to Choose Mutual Funds
- You are investing for aggressive, long-term wealth creation (10+ years)
- You want flexibility — to increase, pause, or withdraw your investment
- You want to invest more than ₹1.5 lakh per year
- You are comfortable with market-linked risk for higher returns
Final Verdict
PPF and mutual funds are not rivals — they serve different roles in a well-rounded portfolio. PPF is the gold standard for safe, tax-free, long-term savings, especially for conservative investors or those in higher tax brackets. Mutual funds are the superior choice for wealth creation, offering compounding at a much higher rate over the same horizon.
The smartest strategy is to use both. Max out your PPF contribution (₹1.5 lakh/year) for guaranteed, tax-free savings, and invest additional amounts in equity mutual funds via SIP for inflation-beating growth. Together, they balance safety with ambition.
PPF builds a safety net. Mutual funds build wealth.
FAQs
Q1. Is PPF better than mutual funds for tax saving?
A: Both qualify under Section 80C. PPF offers EEE tax status, making it unbeatable for tax-free returns. ELSS mutual funds have a shorter lock-in (3 years vs 15) and higher return potential, but gains above ₹1 lakh are taxed at 10% LTCG. For pure tax-free certainty, PPF wins. For better post-tax returns over long periods, ELSS can edge ahead.
Q2. Can I invest in both PPF and mutual funds simultaneously?
A: Yes, and it is highly recommended. PPF provides your risk-free, tax-exempt foundation. Mutual fund SIPs layer wealth-building growth on top. Most financial advisors suggest maxing out PPF first, then investing surplus in mutual funds.
Q3. What happens to PPF after 15 years?
A: After maturity, you can withdraw the full amount tax-free, extend it in 5-year blocks (with or without contributions), or close the account. Many investors extend indefinitely, continuing to earn tax-free compounding returns.
Q4. Is the 7.1% PPF rate fixed forever?
A: No. The PPF interest rate is reviewed by the government every quarter and can change. Historically it has ranged from 7% to 12%. While it has stayed at 7.1% for several years, there is no guarantee it will remain so.
Q5. Which is better for retirement planning — PPF or mutual funds?
A: For retirement planning, a combination is ideal. PPF provides a guaranteed, tax-free corpus — a reliable base. Equity mutual funds, with their higher compounding potential, can build a significantly larger retirement fund if started early. A 25-year-old investing ₹1.5 lakh/year in PPF and ₹5,000/month in equity SIP will retire with both security and substantial wealth.
Q6. Can NRIs invest in PPF?
A: No. NRIs are not allowed to open new PPF accounts. If a resident Indian becomes an NRI after opening a PPF account, they can continue contributing until maturity but cannot extend beyond 15 years.