The Employees’ Provident Fund Organisation (EPFO) has made it easier for members to access their savings.
The new rules reduce 13 different withdrawal categories into three broad groups—Essential Needs, Housing Needs, and Special Circumstances—so members clearly know when and how they can withdraw money.
In addition, withdrawals will soon be possible via UPI or ATM, making the process more convenient than ever.
Full and Partial PF Withdrawals
Under the revised rules, members can withdraw up to 100% of their PF balance in specific cases such as:
Retirement or reaching the age of 58
Voluntary retirement
Permanent disability or inability to work
Moving abroad for permanent settlement
Managing PF During Unemployment
If a member loses their job, they can withdraw 75% of their PF balance immediately.
The remaining 25% becomes available after 12 months of continued unemployment, helping members manage expenses while keeping some savings intact.
Partial Withdrawals for Everyday Needs
Partial withdrawals are now simpler and more flexible:
Up to 75% of PF balance can be used for illness, education, marriage, or housing after completing 12 months of service.
Education withdrawals: up to 10 times during service
Marriage withdrawals: up to 5 times, higher than previous limits
Medical and Housing Withdrawals
Members can withdraw PF for medical treatment of themselves, spouse, children, or parents.
It covers serious illnesses such as cancer or tuberculosis and can be done up to three times a year.
For housing needs, withdrawals are allowed for:
Buying a house
Construction or renovation
Repaying a home loan
The property can be in the member’s name, spouse’s name, or jointly owned.
Housing withdrawals are allowed up to five times during service.
Key Points and Savings Protection
Full withdrawal is allowed at retirement, age 58, voluntary retirement, permanent disability, unemployment, or permanent settlement abroad
During unemployment, 75% of PF can be withdrawn immediately, with the rest after 12 months
Partial withdrawals have 75% limits for common needs with specific usage limits
To ensure savings continue to grow, members must maintain at least 25% of their total PF contributions in the account, which continues to earn 8.25% interest per year under the current EPFO rate.
