|

Post Office Monthly Income Scheme (POMIS) 2026: Rate, Limits & Tax

Last verified: June 2026. Investments carry risk and rates/rules change — small-savings rates are reviewed quarterly. Verify current details before investing. General information, not investment advice.

If you want a fixed monthly income from a government-backed investment, the Post Office Monthly Income Scheme (POMIS) is built exactly for that. It pays interest every month at a sovereign-safe rate. Here is how it works in 2026.

Key features

Feature Detail
Interest rate 7.4% p.a. (Apr–Jun 2026 quarter), paid monthly
Tenure 5 years
Minimum investment ₹1,000 (in multiples of ₹1,000)
Maximum ₹9 lakh (single account); ₹15 lakh (joint)
Risk Government-backed — very low risk

Note: small-savings rates are reviewed every quarter, so confirm the current rate with India Post before investing.

How the monthly income works

You invest a lump sum; the scheme pays interest into your linked post-office or bank account every month. At the end of 5 years you get your principal back in full. Example: ₹9 lakh at 7.4% pays roughly ₹5,550 a month, with the ₹9 lakh returned at maturity.

Who it suits

Retirees and anyone wanting predictable monthly cash flow with capital safety. Senior citizens may also compare it with the Senior Citizens Savings Scheme and bank FDs.

Tax treatment

There is no 80C benefit on POMIS, and the monthly interest is taxable as “income from other sources” at your slab rate. Factor this into your net return.

Premature withdrawal

You can exit after 1 year with a small penalty (a percentage deduction that reduces if you exit later). Read the rules before locking in funds you may need.

FAQs

What is the POMIS interest rate in 2026?

7.4% p.a. for the April–June 2026 quarter, paid monthly. Rates are reviewed quarterly.

What is the maximum I can invest?

₹9 lakh in a single account and ₹15 lakh in a joint account.

Is POMIS interest tax-free?

No. The monthly interest is taxable at your slab rate, and there is no 80C deduction.

What is the tenure?

5 years, with your principal returned at maturity.

Similar Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *