OquiliaOquiliaOquilia — India's Financial Intelligence Platform
Insurance
Calculators
Invest
Tax
Loans
For NRIs
For Business
News
Tools
Learn
Oquilia Advisor
HomeCalculatorsInsuranceNews
View All InsuranceCompare Health PlansBest Term InsuranceHealth Insurance for ParentsCompare PlansCompany ProfilesHospital NetworkClaims Analysis
View All CalculatorsSIP CalculatorEMI CalculatorIncome TaxFD CalculatorPPF CalculatorAll 150+ Calculators
View All InvestBest Mutual FundsBest SIP PlansBest FD RatesEPF vs VPF vs NPS1 Crore in 10 YearsIndex Funds India
View All TaxOld vs New RegimeTax Saving under 80CIncome Tax Slabs 2025Capital Gains TaxSave Tax on SalaryITR Filing Guide
View All LoansCompare Home Loan RatesHome Loan EligibilityBest Personal LoanRent vs Buy HousePrepay Loan or Invest?Education Loan Abroad
View All For NRIsNRI Investment GuideNRI Tax FilingNRI BankingNRI InvestmentsNRI Real EstateNRI Taxation
For Business
View All NewsLatest NewsBlog / GuidesReports
View All ToolsAm I Underinsured?Policy AuditJargon Decoder
View All LearnFinancial GlossaryFAQAbout OquiliaContact
Oquilia Advisor
  1. Home
  2. Calculators
  3. Insurance
  4. Section 80D Calculator
  5. Goa
Insurance

Section 80D Tax Benefit Calculator — Goa

A Goa professional earning Rs 6.0 lakh falls into the 5% tax bracket after standard deduction and Section 80C. By maximising Section 80D deductions — self + family (Rs 25,000) plus senior-citizen parents (Rs 50,000) — you can save up to Rs 3,750 in taxes annually while building comprehensive family health coverage.

Verified Formula|Source: IRDAI|Last verified: April 2026Methodology

Premium Details

₹
₹
₹

Up to ₹5,000 eligible within overall limit (not additional)

Total 80D Deduction

₹40,000

Maximum deductible under Section 80D

Tax Saved (30% Slab)

₹12,480

30% tax + 4% cess = 31.2% effective

Tax Saved (20% Slab)

₹8,320

20% tax + 4% cess = 20.8% effective

Deduction Breakdown

ComponentLimitClaimedEligible
Self/Family Premium (Below 60)₹25,000₹25,000₹25,000
Preventive Health Checkup₹5,000₹5,000₹0
Parents Premium (Below 60)₹25,000₹15,000₹15,000
Total Deduction₹40,000

Section 80D Limits at a Glance

CategoryBelow 6060 and Above
Self, Spouse, Children₹25,000₹50,000
Parents₹25,000₹50,000
Preventive Health Checkup₹5,000 (within overall limit)
Maximum Total₹50,000₹1,00,000

Gotcha Flag

Preventive health checkup of ₹5,000 is NOT additional to the ₹25,000/₹50,000 limit — it is included within it. Many taxpayers mistakenly claim ₹25,000 + ₹5,000 = ₹30,000 for self. The actual limit remains ₹25,000 (or ₹50,000 for senior citizens) inclusive of checkup expenses. Also, 80D only applies under the Old Tax Regime — the New Regime does not allow this deduction.

Health Insurance EstimatorTerm Insurance EstimatorHuman Life Value Calculator

Section 80D Limits — What Counts and What Doesn't

Section 80D allows deduction of health insurance premiums paid for self, spouse, children, and parents. The rules for FY 2025-26:

  • Self, spouse, and children (under 60): deduction up to Rs 25,000/year
  • Self, spouse, and children (60+, senior citizen): deduction up to Rs 50,000/year
  • Parents under 60: additional deduction up to Rs 25,000/year
  • Senior-citizen parents (60+): additional deduction up to Rs 50,000/year
  • Preventive health check-up sub-limit: up to Rs 5,000/year within the overall self-family limit — payable even in cash, no insurance receipt needed

What does NOT qualify: OPD expenses not covered by insurance, medicines purchased without a hospitalisation claim, employer-funded group health insurance premiums, and any premium paid in cash (except the Rs 5,000 preventive check-up sub-limit).

Your Tax Bracket and Actual Savings in Goa

For a Goa professional earning Rs 6.0 lakh annually under the old regime, the estimated taxable income after standard deduction (Rs 50,000), Section 80C (Rs 1,50,000), and professional tax (Rs 0/year) is approximately Rs 4,00,000, placing them in the 5% bracket.

  • Self + family premium deduction (Rs 25,000): saves Rs 1,250/year
  • Non-senior parents (Rs 25,000): saves Rs 1,250/year
  • Senior-citizen parents (Rs 50,000): saves Rs 2,500/year
  • Maximum combined saving (self + senior parents, Rs 75,000): Rs 3,750/year

Context: the estimated annual health insurance premium for self + family in Goais Rs 18,900 and for senior parents Rs 42,000 — both exceed the 80D caps, meaning the full deduction limits apply in most cases.

Family Floater vs Individual Policies for 80D Optimisation

A single family floater covering self, spouse, and two children uses one Rs 25,000 deduction slot. Individual policies for each family member still aggregate under the same Rs 25,000 limit — there is no benefit to splitting within the self-family bucket. However, keeping parents on a separate policy is essential:

  • Adding a 60-year-old parent to your family floater pushes the floater premium up dramatically (priced on the eldest member's age)
  • A separate parent policy in Goa costs approximately Rs 42,000/year and qualifies for the additional Rs 50,000 80D deduction
  • Net tax saving from the separate parent policy: Rs 2,500 — effectively reducing the Rs 42,000 premium to Rs 39,500 after tax

The Rs 5,000 Preventive Health Check-Up Sub-Limit

Within the Rs 25,000 self-family 80D limit, up to Rs 5,000 per year can be claimed for preventive health check-ups — even if paid in cash (unlike regular insurance premiums which must be paid digitally). In Goa, preventive health packages at hospitals like Goa Medical College & Hospital and Manipal Hospital Goarange from Rs 2,500 to Rs 8,000.

This sub-limit is particularly valuable for Goa corporate employees who undergo annual health checks — if the employer funds the check-up, you cannot claim it. But if you pay even partially out of pocket for an upgrade or a separate annual check, that amount qualifies. The tax saving: Rs 250 at the 5% bracket on the Rs 5,000 sub-limit.

Section 80D and the New Tax Regime — Critical Decision for Goa Earners

Section 80D is not available under the new tax regime — which became the default from FY 2024-25. Goa professionals who have opted for the new regime (or who remain on it by default) cannot claim this deduction, regardless of how much premium they pay.

For Goa earners considering regime choice: the old regime becomes beneficial when the sum of deductions (80C + 80D + home loan interest + HRA) exceeds the standard deduction advantage of the new regime. At the average Goa income of Rs 6.0 lakh with a home loan in Panaji and senior-citizen parents, the old regime typically wins. Use a full tax comparison before switching regimes.

Does Employer Mediclaim Count for 80D in Goa?

No. If your employer in one of Goa's major sectors — Tourism or Mining — provides group health insurance at zero cost to you, that premium does not qualify for 80D. The deduction is available only for premiums you personally pay. This means:

  • Employer-funded group cover: zero 80D benefit
  • Employee-contributed top-up to group cover: qualifies for 80D
  • Separately purchased individual or family floater policy: fully qualifies
  • Parent insurance paid by you: qualifies for additional 80D deduction

The practical recommendation for Goa professionals: buy a personal family floater even if employer cover exists, both for portability and for the 80D deduction. The city premium of Rs 18,900/year translates to a net after-tax cost of just Rs 17,650/year at the 5% bracket.

Unique Financial Context: Goa

Goa has India's lowest stamp duty at 3.5% (+ 1% registration = 4.5% total) — compared to 10% in Kerala or 8% in Tamil Nadu, buying a Rs 1 crore property in Goa saves Rs 5.5 lakh+ in stamp duty vs Mumbai. Goa has zero professional tax. Goa's tourism-driven rental yield (6–8% gross) is among India's highest for residential property, making it India's premier holiday-home investment destination.

Disclaimer: Tax computations are indicative estimates under the old tax regime for FY 2025-26. Actual tax liability depends on total income, deductions, surcharge, and cess. The new tax regime does not allow Section 80D deductions. This is not tax advice. Consult a Chartered Accountant for personalised tax planning.

FAQs — Section 80D in Goa

How much Section 80D can I claim if I have both self and senior-citizen parents in Goa?

You can claim up to Rs 25,000 for premiums paid for self, spouse, and children, plus up to Rs 50,000 for premiums paid for senior-citizen parents (60+) — a total of Rs 75,000. At the 5% bracket applicable to the average Goa earner, this translates to a tax saving of Rs 3,750/year. Both deductions are available simultaneously — they are separate buckets, not combined into a single limit.

Can I claim 80D for a health policy paid for by my HUF in Goa?

Yes. A Hindu Undivided Family (HUF) can claim Section 80D deduction for health insurance premiums paid for HUF members, up to Rs 25,000 under the old regime. If the HUF includes senior-citizen members, the limit extends to Rs 50,000. This is particularly relevant in Goa where HUF structures are common among business families in Tourism and trade sectors. The HUF and individual claims are separate — an individual can claim 80D personally and the HUF can claim separately.

Is preventive health check-up at a corporate health camp in Goa eligible for 80D?

Only if you personally bear the cost. If your employer or Goa company fully funds the health camp, you cannot claim it under 80D. However, if you pay for an upgraded comprehensive check-up package beyond the basic employer-provided check, the incremental amount you pay qualifies — up to Rs 5,000 within the 80D limit. Keep the receipt as documentary evidence. The Rs 5,000preventive sub-limit is the only portion of 80D where cash payments are accepted.

I am under the new tax regime. Can I still claim 80D for my Goa health insurance?

No. Section 80D is not available under the new tax regime. If you are on the new regime — which became the default from FY 2024-25 — there is no deduction for health insurance premiums, regardless of how much you pay. The only way to access 80D is to switch to the old tax regime for that financial year. For Goa professionals evaluating which regime to choose: if your total deductions (80C + 80D + home loan interest) exceed approximately Rs 4–5 lakh, the old regime typically results in lower tax. With typical Goa home loan interest on properties in Panaji, most homeowners with senior parents are better off in the old regime.

Goa's Section 80D landscape reflects the state's unique demographic blend of government employees, tourism-sector workers, NRI returnees, and a significant senior citizen population retiring from the Gulf and UK. The state's small size (1.6 million people) means fewer large employers but a higher-than-average proportion of government and defence employees who access CGHS — reducing private health insurance expenditure and, consequently, 80D deductions for this segment. For the rest — hotel workers, self-employed tourism operators, and NRI returnees — 80D represents a meaningful tax planning tool, particularly given Goa's relatively high private healthcare costs tied to its tourist economy.

Key Insight — Goa

Goa's most important 80D insight involves the NRI returnee who has spent 15–25 years abroad and is returning to Goa in their late 40s or early 50s. This person typically has no Indian health insurance history, is no longer covered by employer insurance (having left the Gulf/UK job), and is entering the Indian insurance market with a pre-existing condition history that makes premiums higher. For a 48-year-old Goa returnee purchasing a Rs 15L family floater (self + spouse) at Rs 28,000/year and a Rs 10L senior citizen plan for parents at Rs 40,000/year: total premium Rs 68,000, fully deductible as Rs 25,000 (self/family) + Rs 43,000 of the Rs 50,000 senior citizen ceiling = Rs 68,000 total deduction. At the 20% tax bracket (typical for a returnee with rental income in Goa): tax saving Rs 13,600/year. The health insurance is not just a tax tool — it is the most urgent financial protection for someone who has lost employer-provided international health coverage and is now in India's private healthcare market.

Goa's Financial Context and Section 80D Calculator

Goa 80D deduction limits: self/family Rs 25,000 | Parents below 60: additional Rs 25,000 | Senior citizen parents (60+): additional Rs 50,000 | Maximum Rs 75,000 | Preventive health checkup sub-limit: Rs 5,000 | New tax regime: zero 80D benefit | CGHS coverage: Indian Navy Goa, Coast Guard, and central government employees access CGHS — reducing private insurance premium and 80D base | Goa state government health scheme (DDSSY — Dayanand Social Security Scheme): covers BPL residents; not relevant for income tax filers | Goa's private hospital costs: elevated due to medical tourism and expatriate pricing at Apollo Panaji, Manipal Goa | ESI: applies to formal sector tourism workers earning below Rs 21,000/month

CGHS vs Private Insurance for Goa's Defence and Government Employees

The Indian Navy and Coast Guard have major bases in Goa — INS Hansa (Dabolim), INS Mandovi, and several smaller establishments. For serving personnel and their families, CGHS (Central Government Health Scheme) provides comprehensive cashless healthcare at empanelled hospitals including INM Goa and Manipal Goa. Since defence families pay CGHS contributions (deducted from salary) rather than private insurance premiums, their 80D deductible amount is the CGHS contribution — typically Rs 6,000–12,000/year depending on pay level. This is much lower than private insurance premiums, so their 80D benefit is constrained by the low CGHS contribution amount. However, CGHS coverage for retired defence personnel requires a different structure: retired defence families in Goa often augment CGHS with a private top-up policy for Rs 10–20L, especially as CGHS reimbursement rates are sometimes lower than private hospital charges. The top-up premium — Rs 6,000–12,000/year for a retired Colonel or Captain — is 80D deductible in addition to the CGHS contribution, giving a combined deduction of Rs 15,000–22,000 per year. Goa's civilian central government employees (INAS civilian staff, port trust workers) are in a similar position — CGHS coverage limits private premium outflow and consequently limits 80D deduction.

Tourism Sector and Self-Employed Goa Workers — 80D Under the Old Regime

For hotel workers, restaurant owners, water sports operators, and other self-employed Goan tourism professionals who file ITR under the old regime, Section 80D is one of the most accessible tax deductions — requiring only payment of health insurance premiums, which they should be buying regardless of tax benefits. At Rs 12,000/year (individual policy, age 30) + Rs 15,000/year (parents' policy, parents below 60): total Rs 27,000 deductible against the Rs 50,000 combined ceiling (Rs 25,000 self + Rs 25,000 parents). At the 20% tax bracket: saving Rs 5,400/year. The new regime adoption question: many Goa self-employed individuals default to the new tax regime without calculating whether 80D (combined with HRA, 80C) tips the balance in favour of the old regime. At Rs 8L income, Rs 1.5L 80C (ELSS/PPF) + Rs 27,000 80D + standard deduction Rs 50,000: total deductions Rs 2.27L. Old regime taxable: Rs 5.73L, tax Rs 31,500. New regime tax on Rs 8L: Rs 30,000 (after Rs 75,000 rebate... wait: Rs 8L income, new regime tax = Rs 0–3L: 0, Rs 3–7L: 5% = Rs 20,000, Rs 7–8L: 10% = Rs 10,000 = Rs 30,000 total). Old regime: similar. At Rs 8L, regimes are nearly identical. Above Rs 10L, model carefully before choosing.

More Questions — Section 80D Calculator in Goa

I'm a 35-year-old hotel operations manager in North Goa (Rs 9L CTC, old tax regime). I don't have health insurance and my parents (aged 58 and 56) also have none. What should I buy and what 80D will I save?

Goa hotel manager, Rs 9L CTC, no existing health insurance, parents below 60 — 80D planning: Immediate priority: buy health insurance for all three. Recommendations: (1) Self: Rs 10L individual health plan at Rs 10,500–13,000/year (age 35, Goa metro zone). (2) Parents (58 and 56, both below 60): Rs 15L family floater for parents at Rs 22,000–28,000/year. Both parents below 60 means parent ceiling is Rs 25,000 — check if the plan chosen costs more or less. 80D deductions: self premium Rs 12,000 (within Rs 25,000 ceiling) + parents premium Rs 24,000 (within Rs 25,000 ceiling) = Rs 36,000 total deduction. At 20% tax bracket (Rs 9L income, old regime): tax saving = Rs 36,000 × 20% = Rs 7,200/year. Two years from now when either parent turns 60 (if your father is 58, he turns 60 in 2026): parent ceiling doubles to Rs 50,000. If their premium by then is Rs 30,000–35,000 (it will increase as they age), the entire premium becomes deductible. Tax saving increases to Rs 47,000 × 20% = Rs 9,400/year. Start now: don't wait for parents to turn 60. Buying health insurance now, before any health events, ensures lower premiums and no pre-existing condition exclusions. Parents at 56–58 are in the last window of relatively healthy underwriting. Act now.

I'm an NRI who returned to Goa 2 years ago from Dubai. I have no health insurance in India. I'm 49, wife is 47, parents are 74 and 70. What's my total 80D scenario?

NRI Goa returnee, 49 years old, parents 74 and 70 — comprehensive 80D planning: Your parents at 74 and 70 are senior citizens — the Rs 50,000 ceiling applies. Your own family (you + wife, both below 60) falls under the Rs 25,000 ceiling. Maximum possible 80D deduction: Rs 25,000 + Rs 50,000 = Rs 75,000. Health insurance for you + wife at age 49/47: Rs 10L family floater costs approximately Rs 32,000–40,000/year (older age, Goa rates). Only Rs 25,000 is deductible (ceiling). The excess Rs 7,000–15,000 is not deductible but is still worth paying for the coverage. Health insurance for parents at 74/70: senior citizen health plan (standalone senior plans from Star Health, Niva Bupa Senior First, Care Senior) at Rs 10L each: approximately Rs 35,000–55,000/year combined. Within Rs 50,000 ceiling: Rs 35,000–50,000 is fully deductible. If premium exceeds Rs 50,000: only Rs 50,000 deductible, rest non-deductible but still provides coverage. Total 80D at maximum: Rs 25,000 (self/family) + Rs 50,000 (senior parents) = Rs 75,000. At 30% tax bracket (assuming significant rental/investment income from Dubai savings + Goa property): tax saving Rs 22,500/year. The absolute priority: your parents at 74 and 70 have significant health risk — buy their insurance immediately and pay whatever premium is required. The 80D deduction is secondary; the coverage is primary.

Related Calculators — Goa

Explore other financial calculators with Goa-specific data and insights.

Health Insurance CalculatorinsuranceOld Regime Tax CalculatortaxOld vs New RegimetaxSalary Breakup Calculatortax

Section 80D Calculator — Other Cities

City-specific data — professional tax, HRA classification, property prices, salary benchmarks — changes the output significantly. Compare with other cities.

Metro Cities

MumbaiDelhiBengaluruHyderabadChennaiKolkataGurgaonNoidaAhmedabad

Other Cities

PuneJaipurLucknowChandigarhKochiIndoreCoimbatoreNagpurBhopalThiruvananthapuram
InsuranceCalculatorsInvestTaxLoansNRIMBAHNIAI
Oquilia

150+ calculators · Zero commissions

Oquilia

Intelligent financial analysis. 150+ calculators & unbiased analysis.

Data: IRDAI · RBI · SEBI · AMFI

Calculators

  • SIP
  • EMI
  • Income Tax
  • FD
  • PPF
  • NPS
  • Gratuity
  • HRA
  • ELSS
  • All 150+

Insurance

  • Compare Plans
  • Companies
  • Claims Data
  • Hospitals
  • Health Premium
  • Term Premium
  • Section 80D

Tax & Loans

  • Old vs New
  • Capital Gains
  • TDS
  • Home Loan EMI
  • Car Loan EMI
  • Rent vs Buy
  • Prepayment

More Tools

  • Invest Hub
  • Tax Planning
  • Loan Tools
  • NRI Hub
  • MBA Finance
  • HNI Wealth
  • Glossary
  • News
  • Blog
  • Reports
  • Tools
  • Oquilia Advisor

Company

  • About
  • Contact
  • FAQ
  • Legal Hub
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Disclaimer
  • Cookie Policy
  • Grievance
  • Disclosure

© 2026 Oquilia. Not a licensed financial advisor. All third-party logos and trademarks belong to their respective owners.

PrivacyTermsDisclaimerSitemap