If you’ve searched for “LIC fixed deposit,” you’ve probably noticed the results don’t quite agree with each other. That’s because LIC doesn’t sell one single product called a fixed deposit — the phrase is commonly used for two genuinely different LIC-backed options, and mixing them up is the easiest way to end up disappointed with your returns.
- What people actually mean by “LIC fixed deposit”
- Option 1: LIC Housing Finance Sanchay Deposit (the “real” LIC FD)
- Option 2: LIC’s 10–20 year guaranteed-return plans (Jeevan Utsav)
- LIC FD options at a glance
- Which one should you actually choose? A quick checklist
- Common myths about “LIC fixed deposit” — busted
- Tax treatment (general overview — not personalised advice)
- Frequently asked questions
- What is the LIC FD interest rate for 10 years?
- Does LIC really offer a fixed deposit scheme?
- Can NRIs invest in an LIC fixed deposit?
- Is an LIC fixed deposit safe?
- What is the minimum investment for an LIC fixed deposit?
- You Should Read : 0% GST on Health Insurance 2026: New IRDAI Rules Guide
- off, especially for you
This guide separates the two clearly, gives you real rate ranges for every tenure people search for — 5, 10, 15 and 20 years — and tells you honestly which one is actually right for a “park my money safely and know exactly what I’ll get” goal.
What people actually mean by “LIC fixed deposit”
There are two distinct products behind this search term:
- LIC Housing Finance’s Sanchay Deposit — a genuine, bank-style fixed deposit. You deposit a lump sum, it earns a fixed rate, and you get it back with interest at the end of the term. Maximum tenure: 5 years.
- LIC’s guaranteed-addition insurance plans (currently sold as Jeevan Utsav and Jeevan Utsav Single Premium) — these are life insurance policies that behave like a long-term guaranteed savings instrument, with premium/lock-in periods that can stretch to 10, 15, or even 16+ years. This is almost certainly what you’re looking for if you searched “LIC fixed deposit for 10 years” or “15 years,” since no true LIC FD runs that long.
Both are legitimate, LIC-backed, low-risk options — they just serve different goals. Here’s each one in detail.
Option 1: LIC Housing Finance Sanchay Deposit (the “real” LIC FD)
This is issued by LIC Housing Finance Ltd (LIC HFL), the housing finance subsidiary of LIC, and it’s rated AAA/Stable by CRISIL — the highest safety rating available for this category.
| Tenure | Indicative rate (general public) | Indicative rate (senior citizens) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 year | ~6.70% p.a. | ~6.95% p.a. |
| 18 months – 2 years | ~6.70%–6.85% p.a. | ~6.95%–7.10% p.a. |
| 3 years | ~6.75%–6.85% p.a. | ~7.00%–7.10% p.a. |
| 5 years | ~6.80%–6.90% p.a. | ~7.05%–7.15% p.a. |
Rates are indicative and revised periodically by LIC HFL — always confirm the current rate card on LIC Housing Finance’s official site or with your advisor before investing.
Key features:
- Minimum deposit typically starts around ₹10,000–₹20,000 depending on the payout option chosen (annual vs. monthly interest)
- Senior citizens generally get an additional ~0.25% p.a. on deposits
- Loan against your deposit is available, usually up to 75% of the deposit value
- You can choose cumulative (interest paid at maturity) or non-cumulative (monthly/annual payout) options
Can NRIs invest? Yes — this is one of the few LIC-linked products genuinely open to NRIs, though tenure for NRI deposits is typically capped at 3 years, shorter than the 5-year maximum available to resident Indians. If you’re an NRI looking for a safe, short-to-medium-term rupee-denominated instrument with a well-rated Indian institution behind it, this is worth comparing against NRE/NRO fixed deposits at banks.
Best for: People who want a straightforward, short-to-medium-term (1–5 year) deposit with a fixed, known return — the closest thing to a “normal” bank FD that carries the LIC name.
Option 2: LIC’s 10–20 year guaranteed-return plans (Jeevan Utsav)
If you’re searching for “LIC fixed deposit for 10 years” or “15 years,” this is what you actually want. Jeevan Utsav and its single-premium variant are non-participating (non-par) whole life insurance plans that combine a guaranteed addition during the premium-paying years with a guaranteed lifelong income afterward.
| Feature | Jeevan Utsav (regular premium) | Jeevan Utsav Single Premium |
|---|---|---|
| Payment structure | Pay premiums for 5–16 years | One-time lump sum |
| Minimum sum assured | ₹5,00,000 (varies by variant) | ₹5,00,000 |
| Guaranteed addition | ₹40 per ₹1,000 sum assured, added yearly during the premium term | ₹40 per ₹1,000 sum assured, added yearly during the guaranteed-addition period |
| Income after term | 10% of sum assured yearly for life (Regular Income), or accumulate at 5.5% p.a. and withdraw later (Flexi Income) | Similar guaranteed lifelong income structure |
| Entry age | 30 days – 65 years | 30 days – 65 years |
| Life cover | Till age 100 | Till age 100 |
Important honesty check: LIC’s marketing for these plans sometimes highlights “10% guaranteed” prominently, which refers to the annual income benefit as a percentage of sum assured — not your effective annual return (IRR) on the money you actually pay in. Because premiums, guaranteed additions, and delayed income all interact, your real effective return is usually meaningfully lower than 10%, particularly if you stop early. Always ask for a benefit illustration showing year-by-year cash flows before deciding, rather than relying on the headline percentage.
Can NRIs invest? NRIs can generally buy LIC life insurance plans including Jeevan Utsav, subject to medical underwriting, FEMA compliance, and premium payment through NRE/NRO accounts or FCNR deposits. Rules and required documentation vary by country of residence — this is exactly the kind of case where a quick consultation before applying saves you a rejected or delayed proposal later.
Best for: People planning 10+ years ahead who want a guaranteed (not market-linked) income stream in retirement, combined with life cover — not people who simply want to park a lump sum for a fixed short-term return.
LIC FD options at a glance
| Feature | LIC HFL Sanchay Deposit | LIC Jeevan Utsav (10–16 yr) |
|---|---|---|
| Product type | Fixed deposit | Life insurance (savings + cover) |
| Max tenure | 5 years | Whole life (16-year premium term max) |
| Return type | Fixed interest rate | Guaranteed additions + income benefit |
| Life cover included | No | Yes |
| Liquidity | Loan against FD; premature withdrawal allowed with reduced interest | Surrender allowed after 2 years, but early exit is usually poor value |
| Ideal for | Short-to-medium-term safe parking of funds | Long-term guaranteed income + protection |
| NRI eligibility | Yes, up to 3-year tenor | Yes, subject to underwriting & FEMA rules |
Which one should you actually choose? A quick checklist
- I want my money back with interest in under 5 years, nothing more complex → LIC HFL Sanchay Deposit
- I want guaranteed income starting 10–16 years from now, in retirement → Jeevan Utsav or Jeevan Utsav Single Premium
- I also need life insurance cover alongside my savings → Jeevan Utsav (an FD alone gives you zero life cover)
- I’m an NRI who wants a simple rupee FD with no underwriting → LIC HFL Sanchay Deposit (up to 3 years)
- I’m not sure my “10-year LIC FD” search actually matches what I need → Get a personalised comparison before committing — the products are structured too differently to compare on rate alone
Common myths about “LIC fixed deposit” — busted
Myth: LIC offers a fixed deposit directly, like a bank. False. The only true fixed-deposit product is issued by LIC Housing Finance Ltd, a separate listed subsidiary — not LIC’s insurance arm.
Myth: The “10% guaranteed” figure is your annual return. False. It’s typically the annual income benefit as a percentage of your sum assured, not your return on premiums paid. Your actual IRR depends on age, term, and premium amount.
Myth: You can withdraw anytime without losing money. False for both products. LIC HFL FDs pay reduced or zero interest on early withdrawal within the first few months; Jeevan Utsav’s early surrender value is usually well below what you’d get by staying invested.
Myth: All tenures offer the same rate. False. Both products are tenure-tiered — longer tenures and senior citizen status typically earn a higher rate on the FD side, while the insurance-linked plans depend on your chosen premium-paying term and entry age.
Myth: NRIs can’t invest in any LIC-linked deposit or plan. False. NRIs can access the LIC HFL FD (short tenor) and Jeevan Utsav-type plans (subject to underwriting), though eligibility and payment routes differ from resident Indians — this is worth checking case by case.
Tax treatment (general overview — not personalised advice)
- Interest earned on the LIC HFL fixed deposit is fully taxable as “income from other sources,” and TDS applies once interest crosses the prescribed threshold in a financial year.
- Premiums paid toward Jeevan Utsav-type insurance plans may qualify for deduction under Section 80C, and the maturity/income benefit may be exempt under Section 10(10D), provided the policy meets the prescribed premium-to-sum-assured conditions under current tax law.
- NRIs should also factor in FEMA repatriation rules and any tax treaty position in their country of residence before choosing between the two products.
Tax rules change frequently and depend on your specific situation — treat this as a starting point for a conversation with your advisor, not a final answer.
Frequently asked questions
What is the LIC FD interest rate for 10 years?
LIC Housing Finance’s fixed deposit only runs up to 5 years, so there’s no direct “10-year LIC FD rate.” If you’re looking for a 10-year guaranteed-return option, that’s Jeevan Utsav, which uses guaranteed additions and a post-term income benefit instead of a simple interest rate.
Does LIC really offer a fixed deposit scheme?
Yes, but it’s issued through LIC Housing Finance Ltd (branded “Sanchay Deposit”), not LIC’s insurance division, and it runs for a maximum of 5 years.
Can NRIs invest in an LIC fixed deposit?
Yes. NRIs can invest in the LIC HFL fixed deposit, typically for tenures up to 3 years, and can also apply for Jeevan Utsav-type plans subject to medical underwriting and FEMA-compliant payment routes.
Is an LIC fixed deposit safe?
The LIC HFL deposit carries a AAA/Stable CRISIL rating, indicating very strong safety. Jeevan Utsav’s guaranteed additions and income benefits are guaranteed by LIC as the insurer, subject to the policy remaining in force as per its terms.
What is the minimum investment for an LIC fixed deposit?
For the LIC HFL FD, minimum deposits typically start around ₹10,000–₹20,000 depending on the payout option. For Jeevan Utsav-type plans, the minimum basic sum assured is generally ₹5,00,000, which determines your premium.
Not sure which option actually fits your goals — or whether either one makes sense given your full financial picture? Book a free 15-minute consultation with Naushad Ahmad, LIC advisor and financial consultant, and get a personalised comparison before you commit a single rupee.