Section 80D Medical Insurance Deduction FY 2025-26 — Limits for Self + Family + Parents, Senior Citizen Rules
Section 80D FY 2025-26 (Old Regime): ₹25k/₹50k/₹1L limits, preventive check-up ₹5k sub-limit, senior medical expenditure, payment mode, multi-year proportional.
Why Section 80D matters in FY 2025-26 (Old Regime only)
After Section 80C, Section 80D is the second-most-claimed Chapter VI-A deduction in India. It allows individuals + HUFs to reduce Gross Total Income for health insurance premium paid for self / spouse / dependent children / parents, plus certain related medical expenditure.
The rule that frames everything: Section 80D is available only under the Old Tax Regime. With the Finance Act 2025 raising the new-regime Section 87A rebate to ₹60,000 (zero tax up to ₹12 lakh taxable income → ~₹12.75 lakh gross salary after the ₹75k standard deduction), the regime-choice math has tilted toward the new regime for most middle-income earners.
Section 80D remains operationally relevant for taxpayers stacking it with Section 80C, HRA exemption, Section 80CCD(1B) NPS extra ₹50k, and Section 24(b) home loan interest to make the Old Regime mathematically competitive at higher income levels. For the regime comparison math, see the New vs Old Tax Regime spoke.
What Section 80D covers
Section 80D is available to individuals and Hindu Undivided Families (HUFs) — NOT to companies, partnerships, or LLPs. Four categories of expenditure qualify:
- Health insurance premium — for self / spouse / dependent children / parents
- Contribution to the Central Government Health Scheme (CGHS) or other notified health schemes
- Preventive Health Check-up (PHC) — routine diagnostic tests
- Senior-citizen medical expenditure — actual medical bills for senior citizens (60+) where no health insurance covers them, within a sub-limit
For HUFs, Section 80D allows independent claim for health insurance premium paid for any HUF member, within the same ₹25k / ₹50k thresholds (with senior-citizen uplift).
The 80D limit table — FY 2025-26
A “senior citizen” for tax purposes is anyone aged 60 or above at any time during the relevant FY. The limits (unchanged by Finance Act 2025):
| Beneficiary | Age | Max deduction | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Self + family (spouse + dependent children) | All below 60 | ₹25,000 | Includes PHC sub-limit of ₹5,000 |
| Self + family (any member 60+) | At least one is senior | ₹50,000 | Higher limit applies if self / spouse is senior |
| Parents | Both below 60 | +₹25,000 | Own parents only — not parents-in-law |
| Parents | Either is 60+ | +₹50,000 | Higher limit if even one parent is senior |
| HUF | Premium for any member | ₹25,000 / ₹50,000 | ₹50k if member is senior citizen |
Maximum aggregate scenario: ₹1,00,000 — applicable where the taxpayer (or spouse) is a senior citizen (₹50k limit) AND the taxpayer pays for senior-citizen parents (additional ₹50k limit).
Most common scenario for middle-aged taxpayers: ₹25k self + family + ₹25k parents = ₹50k total. Or ₹25k self + family + ₹50k senior-parents = ₹75k total.
Preventive Health Check-up — the ₹5,000 sub-limit
The PHC sub-limit covers routine diagnostic check-ups (annual blood tests, full-body scans, diagnostic panels) for self / spouse / dependent children / parents:
- Limit: ₹5,000 per FY aggregate
- Sub-limit, NOT additive — it is WITHIN the overall ₹25k / ₹50k / ₹1L cap, not over and above. If insurance premium uses ₹25,000 of the ₹25k cap, the PHC sub-limit is unused; the total claim is still ₹25,000.
- Cash payment allowed — PHC is the single exception to the no-cash rule for Section 80D. Cash payment for PHC within the ₹5k sub-limit is permitted.
Senior-citizen medical expenditure (where no insurance)
A specific carve-out for cases where health insurance is unavailable for senior citizens (denied due to pre-existing conditions, age limits, or unaffordable premium):
- Limit: ₹50,000 sub-limit, within the parents’-side or self-side senior-citizen cap
- Eligibility condition: the senior citizen MUST NOT be covered by any health insurance policy. If even a basic policy covers them, only the premium is deductible — not the additional medical bills.
- What qualifies: actual medical expenditure — surgery, hospitalisation, medicines, diagnostic tests, hearing aids, follow-up consultations, post-operative care. The expenditure should be incurred BY the taxpayer for the senior citizen.
- Documentation: bills, prescriptions, hospital invoices, pharmacy receipts. Payment must be non-cash (no PHC-style cash exception for medical expenditure).
This sub-limit can apply to self / spouse if they are senior citizens, OR to senior-citizen parents — whichever cohort has no insurance coverage.
Payment mode rules
- Insurance premium + senior-citizen medical expenditure: non-cash only — cheque, demand draft, credit / debit card, NEFT, RTGS, UPI, net banking. Cash payment disqualifies the entire claim.
- Preventive Health Check-up: cash allowed within the ₹5,000 sub-limit.
Cash payment of insurance premium directly to an agent without bank-route evidence is a common error that the IT Department surfaces during scrutiny, leading to disallowance + interest under Section 234B/234C on the resulting tax shortfall.
Multi-year insurance policies — proportionate deduction
Some insurers offer 2-year or 3-year health policies with a single upfront premium (often at a discount). The Finance Act 2018 inserted Section 80D(4A) to clarify the treatment:
- The total single-upfront premium is divided by the number of policy years
- Each year’s proportionate share is claimable in that year, subject to the annual Section 80D cap
Example: ₹60,000 paid in FY 2025-26 for a 3-year policy → ₹20,000 deductible in each of FY 2025-26, FY 2026-27, FY 2027-28 (within the annual cap in each year).
Front-loading the entire ₹60,000 into FY 2025-26 is not permitted; the disallowed excess is added back to income at processing.
How to claim Section 80D in ITR
During the FY (salaried employees)
- Submit health insurance premium receipt + PHC receipt + senior-medical-expenditure proof to employer via Form 12BB at year-end (typically Jan-Feb).
- Employer reduces taxable salary by 80D + adjusts monthly TDS for Q4.
- Final 80D figure reflects in Form 16 Part B — see Form 16 vs Form 16A reference.
At ITR filing
- Old Regime selection is the prerequisite (Form 10-IEA where applicable).
- ITR-1 (Sahaj): Section 80D entered in Part C (Deductions).
- ITR-2 / 3 / 4: declared in Schedule VI-A → Part B → 80D.
- The portal asks dropdown questions: is self / spouse senior citizen? Are parents senior citizens? — answer accurately because the portal uses these to apply the correct ₹25k vs ₹50k caps.
- For ITR-form selection, see the ITR Form Selector Guide.
- For end-to-end filing, see the ITR Filing service.
Missed employer deadline
If proofs were not submitted to the employer, the deduction can still be claimed at ITR filing — the employer’s Form 16 will show no 80D adjustment, but the taxpayer adds it manually in the return and the resulting refund is processed by CPC Bengaluru.
Section 80D vs Section 80DDB — different sections
Taxpayers commonly conflate Section 80D with Section 80DDB:
| Aspect | Section 80D | Section 80DDB |
|---|---|---|
| What | Health insurance premium + PHC + senior medical expenditure (no insurance) | Medical treatment of specified diseases |
| Limit | ₹25k / ₹50k / ₹1L aggregate | ₹40k (₹1 lakh for senior citizens) |
| Documentation | Premium receipts / bills | Form 10-I from a specialist + bills |
| Diseases covered | Any | Specified — malignant cancers, chronic renal failure, neurological diseases (Parkinson’s, dementia), AIDS, hematological disorders |
| Both available? | Yes, for same FY but NOT for same expense | Yes, for same FY but NOT for same expense |
The same medical expense cannot be claimed under both 80D and 80DDB. Choose whichever section applies and whichever yields the higher deduction for that specific expense.
Common Section 80D mistakes
- Claiming Section 80D under New Regime — the portal rejects the claim at processing.
- Cash payment of insurance premium — disqualifies the entire premium amount. Cash is allowed only for PHC within ₹5k sub-limit.
- Claiming for parents-in-law — only own parents qualify. Spouse can claim separately for HER OWN parents in her own ITR.
- Claiming for non-dependent adult children — adult children must be financially dependent on the taxpayer for the premium to qualify under the taxpayer’s 80D limit. Independent adult children should claim their own 80D in their own ITR.
- Front-loading multi-year premium — Section 80D(4A) requires proportionate spread; entire premium in year-1 is partially disallowed.
- Claiming senior-citizen medical expenditure WITH an insurance policy in force — the carve-out applies only where no insurance covers the senior. If insurance exists, only premium is deductible.
- PHC sub-limit treated as additive — PHC is WITHIN the overall ₹25k / ₹50k cap, not over and above.
- Critical illness rider on a life insurance policy — the premium for the critical-illness rider may qualify under 80D if the insurer issues a separate Section 80D certificate distinguishing the health-related component from the life-insurance component (which falls under 80C). Ambiguous certificates trigger scrutiny mismatch.
- Double-counting same expense under 80D and 80DDB — not allowed; choose one section per expense.
For broader Old-Regime deductions context, see the Section 80C spoke and the Income Tax in India overview.
Frequently asked questions
Is Section 80D available under the New Tax Regime in FY 2025-26?
No. Section 80D is one of the Chapter VI-A deductions available only under the Old Tax Regime. The New Regime — default for individuals from FY 2023-24 — does not allow Section 80D. To claim Section 80D, the taxpayer must file Form 10-IEA opting into the Old Regime at return-filing stage.
Can I pay my health insurance premium in cash and claim Section 80D?
No. Health insurance premium and senior-citizen medical expenditure under Section 80D must be paid via non-cash modes — cheque, demand draft, credit/debit card, NEFT, RTGS, UPI, net banking. Cash payment disqualifies the deduction. The single exception is the Preventive Health Check-up sub-limit (up to ₹5,000) — cash payment is allowed for PHC.
What is the maximum aggregate deduction under Section 80D?
The maximum is ₹1,00,000 per FY — achievable when the taxpayer (or family member covered) is a senior citizen (₹50,000 limit for self + family) AND the taxpayer also pays premium / medical expenditure for senior-citizen parents (additional ₹50,000 limit). For non-senior taxpayers with non-senior parents, the maximum is ₹50,000 (₹25k self + family + ₹25k parents).
Can I claim actual medical bills for my parents under Section 80D?
Yes, under a specific carve-out: if your parents are senior citizens (60+) AND no health insurance policy covers them (e.g., insurance was denied due to pre-existing conditions, or the premium was unaffordable), you can claim actual medical expenditure incurred for them — up to the ₹50,000 sub-limit. You cannot double-claim: if there is an insurance policy covering the parent, only the premium is claimable, not the additional medical bills.
Can I claim health insurance premiums paid for my parents-in-law?
No. Section 80D limits the parental deduction to the taxpayer's OWN parents (mother and father). Premiums paid for parents-in-law do not qualify under Section 80D, even if the parents-in-law are financially dependent on the taxpayer. The spouse can separately claim Section 80D for premium paid for HER OWN parents in her own ITR.
How do I claim a 3-year health insurance policy paid upfront in a single year?
Per Section 80D(4A) (introduced by Finance Act 2018), single upfront premium for a multi-year policy is deductible proportionately over the policy years — not in full in the year of payment. For example, ₹60,000 paid for a 3-year policy in FY 2025-26 is claimable as ₹20,000 in each of FY 2025-26, FY 2026-27, and FY 2027-28 — subject to the annual cap applicable in each year.