Spend ten minutes on any financial website in India, and you will find monthly income scheme comparisons everywhere. POMIS gives 7.4%. SCSS gives 8.2%. Bank FDs give somewhere in between. Pick the highest rate, and you are done.
Except that is not how it works.
The number that actually matters is not the rate the scheme offers. It is the amount that reaches the bank account after tax has been applied. For someone in the 20% slab, a 7.4% return does not mean 7.4% in hand. It means roughly 5.9%. That difference, compounded across a large corpus, is not small.
Nobody talks about this enough. And most people investing in monthly income schemes are doing it on incomplete numbers.
What the Income Tax Calculator Actually Does Here
An income tax calculator is typically used for one thing. Checking how much salary tax is owed at the end of the year.
But it has a second use that most people miss entirely.
When you add interest income from a monthly income scheme to your existing income and run it through the calculator, it shows you two things:
- Exactly which tax slab does the interest income fall into
- The actual post-tax return you are earning from the scheme
This is the number that makes scheme comparisons honest. Without it, comparing a 7.4% POMIS to an 8.2% SCSS is comparing apples to apples on the surface but oranges underneath.
Here is how to use it properly. Open any free income tax calculator for FY 2026-27. Enter your existing annual income first, whether that is salary, pension, or rental income. Then add the expected annual interest from the scheme you are considering. Run both old and new regime options. The calculator shows how much tax the additional interest generates and what your real yield looks like after that deduction.
Do this for each scheme separately. The comparison that emerges is a lot more useful than any rate chart.
The Main Schemes Worth Running Through the Calculator in 2026
A quick look at some of the best monthly income schemes currently available before the tax analysis:
POMIS (Post Office Monthly Income Scheme)
- Rate: 7.4% per annum paid monthly
- Maximum: 9 lakhs single, 15 lakhs joint account
- Tenure: 5 years
- Tax: Interest fully taxable, no TDS deducted at source
- Good for: Anyone needing actual monthly payouts
SCSS (Senior Citizens Savings Scheme)
- Rate: 8.2% per annum paid quarterly
- Maximum: 30 lakhs
- Eligibility: Age 60 and above
- Tax: Interest is fully taxable, but the investment qualifies for 80C deduction under the old regime
- Good for: Retirees wanting higher yield who can manage quarterly rather than monthly payouts
Bank FDs with a monthly payout
- Rate: Generally 6.5 to 7.5%, depending on the bank and tenure
- Tax: TDS kicks in above 40,000 rupees annual interest for general citizens
- Good for: Flexibility and easy access
Systematic Withdrawal Plan from Mutual Funds
- Not a fixed scheme, but a monthly redemption from an existing mutual fund investment
- Equity fund gains above 1 lakh are taxed at 12.5% long term
- Debt fund gains now taxed at slab rate after 2023 rule change
- Good for: Investors comfortable with some market movement
Annuity Plans
- Guaranteed fixed monthly income for life or a set period
- Fully taxable as income
- Good for: Retirees who want total predictability
Three Things the Calculator Reveals That Most People Miss
First: Which regime actually works better for you
The new tax regime makes income up to 12 lakhs effectively tax-free following the 2025 budget. That sounds like a clear winner. But retirees with 80C investments, medical insurance premiums, and home loan interest may still find the old regime reduces their total tax more. The calculator shows both side by side. Picking the wrong regime silently costs money every year.
Second: How multiple income sources stack up
Someone with a 6 lakh pension and two FDs across different banks might assume they are in a comfortable slab. Add up the FD interest from both accounts, plus any other interest income and the total taxable income may have crossed into the 20% bracket without the person realising it. Every additional monthly income scheme adds to this total. The calculator shows the full picture.
Third: The real value of the 80C deduction on SCSS
Under the old tax regime, investing in SCSS gives a deduction of up to 1.5 lakhs from taxable income. For someone in the 20% slab, that deduction is worth 30,000 rupees in actual tax saved. Effectively, the 8.2% gross yield from SCSS costs less than face value as an investment. Running this through the income tax calculator shows the adjusted real return, which is meaningfully higher than what the scheme rate suggests.
Picking the Best Monthly Income Schemes After Honest Comparison
Once every scheme’s post-tax yield is calculated properly, a few practical observations stand out:
- POMIS pays monthly, which genuinely matters for household budgeting, even though the rate is lower than SCSS
- SCSS wins on gross yield and gets better with the 80C deduction, but the quarterly payout is a practical inconvenience for daily expense management
- Debt fund SWPs lost significant tax efficiency after 2023 for investors in higher slabs, and need to be recalculated before assuming they are still the smarter option
- Combining two or three of these schemes rather than putting everything into one distributes tax impact across different income heads and sometimes keeps the effective slab lower
The final number worth calculating is simple. Annual income needed divided by post-tax yield gives the corpus required. Even a 0.6% difference in post-tax yield changes the corpus requirement by several lakhs on a 50 lakh investment. That calculation starts with the income tax calculator, not the scheme brochure.
