In a major step toward strengthening retirement income security in India, the Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority (PFRDA) has constituted a high-level advisory committee to design guidelines and regulations for introducing assured payout options under the National Pension System (NPS). The move is aimed at providing greater certainty and stability to post-retirement income for millions of NPS subscribers.
The initiative is in line with provisions of the PFRDA Act and supports the broader national vision of Viksit Bharat 2047, which seeks to ensure financial independence, dignity, and long-term security for citizens during their retirement years.
The newly formed committee will be chaired by M. S. Sahoo, Founder of Dr. Sahoo Regulatory Chambers and former Chairperson of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India (IBBI).
The panel consists of 15 members drawn from diverse domains, including:
Law
Actuarial science
Finance
Insurance
Capital markets
Academia
To ensure comprehensive and practical inputs, the committee has also been authorised to invite external experts, intermediaries, and stakeholders as special invitees during consultations.
According to PFRDA, the committee will function as a standing advisory body on structured pension payouts. Its primary responsibility is to create a regulatory framework for assured payout products under NPS, including options proposed in the regulator’s consultation paper released on September 30, 2025.
This marks a significant policy evolution. At present, NPS largely depends on:
Market-linked investment returns
Mandatory annuity purchases at retirement
The proposed framework aims to introduce mechanisms that can offer greater predictability and assurance of income, addressing long-standing concerns around post-retirement financial uncertainty.
One of the committee’s key focus areas will be ensuring a smooth and transparent transition from the accumulation phase to the payout or decumulation phase.
The panel will study how this transition can be simplified to:
Reduce procedural complexity
Improve clarity at retirement
Boost subscriber confidence
It will also assess market-based structures capable of providing legally enforceable assurances, including:
Use of novation mechanisms
Settlement-based payout structures
These tools could help support guaranteed or semi-guaranteed pension income streams.
The committee’s mandate goes well beyond product conceptualisation. Its Terms of Reference (ToR) include defining the broader operational and regulatory framework needed to support assured payouts.
Key aspects under review include:
Lock-in periods
Withdrawal limits
Pricing mechanisms
Fee structures for service providers
To safeguard subscriber interests over long horizons, the panel will recommend:
Robust risk management norms
Capital adequacy requirements
Solvency standards for institutions offering assured payouts
These measures are intended to ensure that payout providers remain financially stable throughout the pension lifecycle.
Another crucial area of focus is legal and tax certainty. The committee will examine the tax treatment of assured payouts, especially in scenarios where subscribers:
Do not exit the NPS ecosystem
Continue within the NPS architecture during the payout phase
Clear taxation rules are expected to reduce ambiguity and encourage wider adoption of structured pension products.
Consumer protection will form a central pillar of the new framework. The committee has been tasked with developing:
Standardised disclosure norms
Clear communication around the nature of assurances
Subscribers must clearly understand whether payouts are:
Fully guaranteed
Market-linked with conditional protections
By improving transparency and managing expectations, PFRDA aims to build long-term trust in assured pension products.
Alongside the assured payout initiative, PFRDA has issued a fresh circular detailing how subscriber information will be shared under the Multiple Scheme Framework (MSF) for non-government NPS subscribers.
As per the circular dated January 12, 2026, operational clarity on data-sharing protocols will be provided to:
Central Recordkeeping Agencies (CRAs)
Pension Funds (PFs)
This will be implemented after the MSF rollout scheduled for September 2025.
The MSF allows pension funds to:
Design and manage multiple NPS schemes
Operate under their own brand identity
The objective is to improve:
Innovation
Outreach
Subscriber engagement
Under the new guidelines:
CRAs will share subscriber data with PFs using a common prescribed template
Data will be shared only at mutually agreed intervals
Information will be shared only for subscribers enrolled in schemes managed by the respective PFs under MSF
Importantly:
Data of subscribers invested solely in common schemes will not be disclosed
PFRDA has stressed that subscriber data can be used only for:
Scheme design
Distribution
Outreach
Value creation
Servicing
Any unauthorised use or disclosure may invite regulatory and legal action.
The circular mandates strict adherence to:
Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023
Information Technology Act, 2000
Existing CRA and PF regulations
CRAs and PFs are also required to:
Align internal systems
Maintain detailed audit trails
Ensure end-to-end compliance
The formation of a high-level advisory committee on assured NPS payouts signals a structural transformation in India’s pension ecosystem. By moving toward predictable and regulated retirement income solutions, PFRDA is addressing one of the most critical gaps in long-term financial planning.
Combined with reforms under the Multiple Scheme Framework and stronger data governance norms, the initiative reflects a balanced approach—encouraging innovation while safeguarding subscriber interests. If implemented effectively, assured payout options could significantly enhance confidence in the NPS and play a vital role in achieving the goals of Viksit Bharat 2047.