Section 80CCF Income Tax Act, 1961
New Section Introduced in Income Tax Act 2011: Section 80CCF was introduced in the
Income Tax Act, 1961 in the budget of February 2010. As per this section investments
made in notified infrastructure bonds are exempt from tax up to maximum of Rs 20,000
per year. Section 80CCF allows individuals to invest Rs. 20,000 in infrastructure
bonds, and reduce this amount from taxable income. This exemption is in addition
to the Rs. 100,000 deduction under section 80C (Investment in instruments like ELSS
Mutual Funds, Life Insurance, Provident Fund etc).
Interest Income is Taxable: The interest income from infrastructure bond is taxable.
The interest will be added to investors taxable income. This means even though the
investment in these bonds is exempt from tax (maximum Rs 20,000). interest income
is not. This means investment under section 80CCF is advisable only after the investor
has completely exhausted Rs One Lakh investment under section 80C. The funds raised
through these bonds will be utilised towards “infrastructure lending” as defined
by the RBI in the regulations issued by it from time to time, after meeting the
expenditures of, and related to the issue. These infrastructure bond issues are
part of the government’s effort to mobilise money to part-fund the massive $1-trillion
infrastructure spend it has planned for the Twelfth Plan.
Tax Benefits: Under section 80CCF of the Income Tax Act, Rs 20,000 per annum paid
or deposited as subscription to long term infrastructure bonds shall be deducted
in computing the taxable income. This is over and above Rs 1,00,000 tax benefit
available under section 80C, 80CCC and 80CCD.
Pros: The limit of Rs 20,000 per annum is in addition to Sections 80C, 80CCC and
80CCD. Hence, it is advisable to consider applying in this issue.
Cons: The bonds are locked in for five years, so there is no exit in case you need
the money midway which restricts liquidity.
Frequently Asked Questions on Infrastructure Bonds