It’s the fourth week of December. It is the last and final chance to look at your financial to-do list for 2025.A pension scheme you picked years ago pops up with a deadline. A tax return you meant to revise “next weekend” is now starting on December 31.
And in the background, PAN-Aadhaar compliance still trips up people who assumed it was “already done.
”TL;DR: Driving the newsThis isn’t a “get rich in 2026” story. This is the boring, powerful stuff: File what must be filed, switch what must be switched, and keep your IDs clean so you don’t spend January fighting portals, penalties, and paperwork.
Then there is the issue of a policy nudge toward DIY investingMiss one, and you could lose money, tax breaks - or even get locked out of your own financial records.
For most subscribers, the National Pension System is “set and forget.” That is precisely why a recent notice from the Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority matters.If you’re one of the 1.7+ crore Indians investing via the National Pension System (NPS), this affects a small - but vulnerable - segment of investors.
What’s happeningPFRDA is merging Scheme A (under Tier I, Active Choice) with other broader schemes. Why? Because Scheme A, which had exposure to “alternative” instruments like REITs, InvITs, AIFs, and structured debt, has a small corpus and limited diversification.
The PFRDA says the merger will “improve liquidity, diversification and risk-adjusted outcomes” by pooling it with Schemes C and E - those focused on corporate debt and equities.Why you should careUnless you act by December 25, your allocation will be moved for you. But till then, you can voluntarily switch your portfolio without any additional cost.This is rare: Regulators don’t usually give a “free switch” window. And given that alternative investments can behave very differently during market stress, this is a chance to reset your retirement planning on your own terms.What to do
One-liner to remember:You don’t want to wake up in January and find that your pension money moved into a scheme you didn’t pick - just because you missed logging in before Christmas.
Applies to: Belated or revised ITRs for Assessment Year 2025–26 (FY 2024–25)Why this is a big dealThis isn’t a soft “recommended by” deadline. This is the last legally permitted date to fix tax filings if you:Missed the original due date (file belated return)Need to correct past errors (revise return)
According to Section 139(1) of the Income Tax Act, these losses are only allowed to be carried forward if the original return was filed on time or within this final window. Exception alert: But if you’re sitting on short-term stock losses, crypto red ink, or business write-offs, you can’t just say, “I’ll fix it later.”What happens if you miss December 31?You enter the ITR-U zone: So yes, there's a door - but it comes with a heavy price tag.Your action plan (for regular salaried taxpayers):Set aside 60–90 minutes before year-end.
Don’t forget e-verification. Many miss this last step and assume the return is complete when it isn’t.
Applies to: PAN holders who got their PAN using Aadhaar Enrolment ID (application before October 1, 2024)What CBDT says:If your PAN was issued on the basis of an Aadhaar Enrolment ID - not the Aadhaar number itself - you must intimate your Aadhaar before the end of 2025.This is separate from the June 30, 2023 linking deadline, which applied to everyone else.
One December development looks minor until viewed in context.Answering a question in the Lok Sabha on December 15, 2025, minister of state for finance Pankaj Chaudhary said that commissions for small savings agents were reviewed keeping in view the government’s shift toward digital transactions.He also disclosed that commission outgo to MPKBY and SAS agents rose from Rs 2,324.15 crore in 2010–11 to Rs 4,149.77 crore in 2023–24, according to reported figures.The consumer takeaway is not that agents are villains. In many regions, they remain the primary interface for savers without easy digital access. The signal is simpler: distribution has a cost, and policy increasingly prefers self-service where possible.For savers, the practical question is whether they are using an agent out of necessity or inertia.
By December 25:NPS → Log in → If Scheme A → Decide and switch (no-cost window)By December 31:Tax return (belated or revised) → File and e-verifyAadhaar–PAN → Check if you fall into the Enrolment ID group → Link if neededOngoing:Small savings via agent? → Collect paperwork, prefer digital next timeCheck if your PAN is inoperative - fix immediately to avoid ripple effects
This December isn’t about FOMO trades or tax-saving hacks.
It’s about quiet, powerful actions that clean up your financial pipes before the New Year.“Financial health isn’t just about chasing returns - it’s about stopping avoidable losses, blocked access, and regret-filled Januarys.”If you do nothing else this week: Sometimes, staying financially strong isn’t about what you gain. It’s about what you don’t lose.