I’ve seen it happen more than once. A senior executive, mid-40s, comes in for a retirement review. We’re going through assets. And then: “I also opened a child ULIP plan for my daughter 5 years ago. My agent told me it was the best option for her education.”
We open the statement. Surrender value after 5 years of Rs. 60,000 annual premium: Rs. 2.1 lakh. Total premiums paid: Rs. 3 lakh. Negative returns in 5 years — in a rising equity market.
This is exactly what Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana (SSY) was designed to replace. Not mutual funds, not endowments — but the overpriced, opaque insurance-linked child plans that had captured the market for daughter planning.
⚡ Quick Answer
SSY offers 8.2% p.a. tax-free returns (current rate, Q1 FY2026), government guarantee, Section 80C deduction, and a structure specifically designed for a daughter’s higher education and marriage. It is the best pure debt instrument available for this specific goal. Its limitations — illiquidity and a fixed Rs. 1.5 lakh annual cap — mean it should be paired with equity mutual funds for inflation-beating growth over 15+ year horizons.
SSY 2026: Key Numbers at a Glance
Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana — Current Parameters (2026)
Interest Rate
8.2%
p.a., tax-free
Max Annual Deposit
₹1.5L
80C deductible
Maturity
21 Yrs
from account opening
Partial Withdrawal
50%
after girl turns 18
Rate as of Q1 FY2026. Reviewed quarterly by Ministry of Finance. Always verify current rate at indiapost.gov.in.
How SSY Works — The Complete Framework
Who can open it: Parent or legal guardian of a girl child who is below 10 years of age. One account per girl child. Maximum 2 accounts per family — unless the second birth produces twins or triplets.
Where to open: Any post office, SBI, HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, PNB, Bank of Baroda, and other authorised banks. The process takes 15-20 minutes with basic documents.
Deposit rules: Minimum Rs. 250 per year, maximum Rs. 1,50,000 per year. Deposits must be made for 15 years from the date of account opening — not 15 years from the child’s birth. You can deposit monthly, quarterly, or annually. Online NEFT transfers are now accepted at most banks.
Account maturity: The account matures 21 years from the date it was opened — not from the child’s 21st birthday. If you opened an account when your daughter was 3, it matures when she is 24, not 21. Plan accordingly.
Partial withdrawal at 18: Once the girl completes 18 years, up to 50% of the balance at the end of the previous financial year can be withdrawn — as lump sum or in annual instalments over 5 years. This must be for higher education expenses. Original admission or fee receipts required.
Premature closure: Permitted at 21-year maturity or on the girl’s marriage after age 18 (not before). Also permitted in case of the account holder’s death.
The Real Math: What SSY Actually Builds
Let’s use a concrete example for a senior executive who opens SSY when his daughter is born and deposits Rs. 1.5 lakh every year for 15 years, assuming an average rate of 8.2% throughout (in practice, the rate fluctuates but has stayed between 7.6-8.5% for the past several years):
Total deposit over 15 years: Rs. 22.5 lakh
Estimated corpus at maturity (21 years from opening): Approximately Rs. 69-72 lakh — the money continues compounding at the prevailing SSY rate for 6 years after deposits stop.
That Rs. 69-72 lakh is entirely tax-free. No TDS, no income tax at withdrawal.
💡 Why SSY Beats a Child Insurance Plan — Every Time
A child ULIP with Rs. 1.5 lakh annual premium loses 2-4% to charges annually. Over 21 years, that cost drag can reduce your corpus by Rs. 15-25 lakh compared to SSY. The insurance component in a child ULIP is typically Rs. 15-20 lakh sum assured — which costs far less than what you’re paying in the ULIP structure. Separate life insurance + SSY always wins on numbers.
SSY’s Limitations — Be Clear-Eyed
The annual cap is real. At Rs. 1.5 lakh per year for 15 years, SSY can build Rs. 69-72 lakh in 21 years. At 7% inflation, Rs. 25 lakh today in education costs could easily be Rs. 1 crore+ in 20 years. SSY alone won’t fund a high-quality professional education at current trajectory. It’s a foundation, not the complete structure.
Illiquidity is built-in. You cannot access the full corpus before 21 years — only 50% after the girl turns 18. If you need the money for any other reason, it’s locked. This is a feature for discipline-challenged investors and a friction for those who have genuinely structured finances.
Rate is not guaranteed for the full 21 years. The government sets the rate quarterly. It has stayed reasonably competitive — between 7.6% and 8.5% over the past decade. But it is not contractually locked like a fixed deposit for the full term.
How to Use SSY Intelligently
The right structure for a senior executive with a daughter under 10 is not SSY alone:
Foundation layer (SSY): Rs. 1,00,000-1,50,000 per year. Builds the tax-free debt corpus for education expenses — the predictable, certain component of her future needs.
Growth layer (equity mutual funds via SIP): Rs. 3,000-10,000 per month in a diversified equity fund. This handles inflation-beating growth over the 15-18 year horizon. A 15-year equity SIP at 12% on Rs. 5,000/month builds roughly Rs. 25 lakh — above and beyond the SSY corpus.
What to avoid: Child ULIPs, child endowment plans, “education plans” from insurance companies. The numbers never work in your favour. Always separate insurance from investment.
Opening an SSY Account in 2026
Online account opening is now available through SBI YONO, HDFC NetBanking, and ICICI iMobile — linked to your existing savings account. No need to visit a branch for most customers.
Documents required: Girl child’s birth certificate, parent/guardian’s Aadhaar and PAN, one passport-size photo of the child. Process takes 15-20 minutes online.
The account application form is available directly on your bank’s website or at any post office. The form is simple — there is no separate download needed.
Planning for your daughter’s future alongside retirement?
The two goals compete for the same monthly savings. The right structure ensures you don’t sacrifice one for the other.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the SSY interest rate in 2026?
The Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana interest rate for Q1 FY2026 is 8.2% per annum, compounded annually, tax-free. The rate is announced quarterly by the Finance Ministry. Verify current rate at indiapost.gov.in before depositing.
What is the maximum deposit in SSY per year?
The maximum annual deposit is Rs. 1,50,000, qualifying for Section 80C deduction. Minimum is Rs. 250. Deposits must be made for 15 years from account opening. The account matures after 21 years from opening.
Can I withdraw from SSY before maturity?
Once the girl turns 18, up to 50% of the balance (as at end of previous financial year) can be withdrawn for higher education. Full withdrawal is permitted only at maturity (21 years) or on marriage after age 18. Premature closure is allowed only in case of death.
Is SSY better than PPF for a girl child?
SSY offers 8.2% vs PPF’s 7.1% currently — a meaningful 110 basis point advantage, both tax-free. For a dedicated daughter planning goal, SSY is the better instrument. PPF offers more withdrawal flexibility but a lower rate.
Who can open an SSY account?
Parent or legal guardian for a girl child below 10 years of age. One account per girl, maximum 2 per family. Available at post offices, SBI, HDFC, ICICI, PNB, and other authorised banks. Online opening available on most major bank apps.
Rs. 1.5 lakh per year. 15 years. 8.2% compounding. Tax-free. No agent commissions. No surrender value shock. That is what SSY offers. It won’t fund her entire future — but it’s the most honest start you can give it.
Start early. Stay invested. Don’t mix insurance with it.
💬 Your Turn
Do you have an SSY account open for your daughter? How old is she and at what age did you start? Share below — or ask if you’re wondering whether it still makes sense to open one for an older child.


