When and how you can access EPF money before retirement without jeopardising your long-term retirement savings.

In Part 4, we saw how EPS turns part of your employer contribution into a lifelong monthly pension, while EPF accumulates as a retirement corpus. But what happens if you need money before retirement?
This part explains EPF withdrawals and advances, why rules exist, and how to access funds without jeopardising your long-term retirement savings.
Two ways to access EPF:
Tip: Think of EPF as a locked savings jar. You can only break it open completely at retirement (final withdrawal), but you can take small portions out for emergencies or life events (advances).
What qualifies for an advance
EPFO allows partial withdrawals for certain life events:
| Purpose | Maximum allowed | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Housing (buying or building a home) | Up to 90% of PF balance | Can include outstanding home loan principal |
| Medical treatment | Full or partial as needed | For serious illness of self or family |
| Marriage of self/children/siblings | Up to 50% of own contribution | One-time per person/event |
| Education | Up to 50% of own contribution | For higher education of self/children |
| Repaying home loan | Up to 90% | Must provide loan documents |
| Unemployment | 75% after 1 year of unemployment | Only once between jobs |
| Retirement | 100% after age 58 | Lump sum including interest |
Key point: Advances are tax-free if conditions are met, and no interest is charged.
Final withdrawal:
Worked example: Housing advance
Suppose Anita earns a basic + DA of Rs 20,000/month:
She can use this for the home while leaving the remaining Rs 30,000 intact to continue earning interest.
Worked example: Medical advance
Suppose Rahul's father needs surgery costing Rs 1,50,000 and his own contribution is Rs 2,00,000:
Things first-time employees should check:
The takeaway
EPF is both a retirement pot and an emergency safety net:
Tip for beginners: Treat EPF as a 'core savings fund': Don't tap into it for minor expenses -- only for major life events or emergencies.
Part 1: Payslip To Pension To Long-Term Wealth: How EPF Works
Part 2: EPF Secrets Revealed: Where Your 12% Goes
Part 3: EPF@8.25%: Is It Really Worth It?
Part 4: How EPS Turns Part Of Your PF Into Lifelong Income
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