- Article 12: TCS on Foreign Remittance India: LRS Rates, Thresholds, and What Changed in 2024-25
TDS Rate Chart for FY 2025-26: Every Section, Every Rate, and the Changes You Cannot Miss
Introduction: why TDS rates matter more than most people think
TDS is not just the employer deducting from your salary. It is a pervasive mechanism that affects every payment above a threshold — rent, professional fees, contractor work, interest, commission, property purchase. Get the rate wrong and you face a short-deduction demand plus 1% interest per month. Get the section wrong and the deductee cannot claim credit properly. And from FY 2025-26, there are meaningful changes — new sections, revised thresholds, rate cuts — that make updating your reference chart a non-negotiable April ritual.
This article gives you the current FY 2025-26 rates for every major TDS section, the changes that are new this year, and the two overarching rules (PAN requirement and treatment of GST) that affect every section.
Key changes effective from 1 April 2025
| What changed for FY 2025-26 Section 194J threshold: Raised from ₹30,000 to ₹50,000 annually (professional fees, technical services, royalty, director fees). Section 194H: Rate cut to 2% (from 5%), threshold raised to ₹20,000. Applied from 1 October 2024, carried forward. Section 194IB: Rent by non-audit individuals/HUF — rate cut to 2% from 5%, threshold ₹50,000 per month. Effective 1 October 2024. Section 194T (NEW): TDS at 10% on partner remuneration, salary, commission, interest by firms/LLPs above ₹20,000 per partner per year. From 1 April 2025. Section 194A: Threshold for bank/cooperative interest raised to ₹50,000 (general) and ₹1,00,000 for senior citizens. Section 194I (Rent): Threshold clarified at ₹50,000 per month (not per year). Rates unchanged: 2% (plant/machinery), 10% (land/building/furniture). |
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The complete TDS rate chart — major sections for FY 2025-26
Salary and salary-like payments
| Section | Nature of payment | Threshold | Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| 192 | Salary (all employers) | Basic exemption limit | Slab rates (new or old regime) |
| 192A | Premature EPF withdrawal | ₹50,000 | 10% (20% without PAN) |
| 194T (NEW) | Partner remuneration/salary in firm/LLP | ₹20,000 per year per partner | 10% |
Interest income
| Section | Nature of payment | Threshold | Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| 194A | Interest other than on securities — bank/cooperative/post office | ₹50,000 (₹1,00,000 for senior citizens) | 10% |
| 194A | Interest from other sources (e.g., company FDs) | ₹10,000 | 10% |
| 194LC | Interest from Indian company to non-resident under specified bonds | No threshold | 5% |
Contractor and professional payments
| Section | Nature of payment | Threshold | Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| 194C | Payment to contractor — individual/HUF | ₹30,000 single / ₹1,00,000 annual | 1% |
| 194C | Payment to contractor — company/firm | ₹30,000 single / ₹1,00,000 annual | 2% |
| 194J | Professional services (doctor, lawyer, architect, CA, engineer, consultant) | ₹50,000 annual | 10% |
| 194J | Technical services (software support, maintenance, technical testing) | ₹50,000 annual | 2% |
| 194J | Royalty (literary, artistic, scientific) | ₹50,000 annual | 10% |
| 194J | Director fees (non-salary) | No threshold | 10% |
| 194M | Payment by individual/HUF (non-audit) under 194C, 194H, 194J | ₹50,00,000 annual aggregate | 2% |
Rent and property
| Section | Nature of payment | Threshold | Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| 194I(a) | Rent — plant, machinery, equipment | ₹50,000 per month | 2% |
| 194I(b) | Rent — land, building, furniture, fittings | ₹50,000 per month | 10% |
| 194IB | Rent by individual/HUF (not under audit) for residential/commercial | ₹50,000 per month | 2% |
| 194IA | Purchase of immovable property (by buyer) | Property value > ₹50 lakh | 1% |
Commission, brokerage, dividend, and others
| Section | Nature of payment | Threshold | Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| 194H | Commission or brokerage | ₹20,000 annual | 2% |
| 194 | Dividend from domestic company | ₹5,000 annual | 10% |
| 194B | Lottery/crossword winnings | ₹10,000 per transaction | 30% |
| 194BB | Horse race winnings | ₹10,000 per transaction | 30% |
| 194D | Insurance commission | ₹20,000 annual | 5% |
| 194DA | Life insurance maturity payment | ₹1,00,000 per year | 5% (on income component only) |
| 194G | Commission on sale of lottery tickets | ₹20,000 | 5% |
| 194K | Mutual fund income distribution (dividends) | ₹5,000 per year | 10% |
Special payments
| Section | Nature of payment | Threshold | Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| 194N | Cash withdrawal from bank (cooperative society) | ₹3 crore (cooperative); ₹1 crore others | 2% |
| 194N | Cash withdrawal by non-ITR filers (≥3 yr) | ₹20 lakh | 2-5% as applicable |
| 194O | E-commerce operator — TCS on seller sales via platform | ₹5 lakh per seller | 0.1% |
| 194Q | Purchase of goods by buyer (turnover > ₹10 crore) | Goods purchase > ₹50 lakh per seller/year | 0.1% |
| 194R | Benefit or perquisite in business/profession | ₹20,000 per recipient per year | 10% |
| 194S | Transfer of Virtual Digital Asset (crypto/NFT) | No threshold (certain) | 1% |
| 194LA | Compensation for land acquisition (not notified) | ₹5,00,000 per payment | 10% |
| *"The PAN rule is more expensive than the wrong section. A 194J rate error costs 8% extra (10% vs 2%). A missing PAN error costs 20% when the rate is 2%. Collect PAN at onboarding, not after payment."* |
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The two overarching rules that apply to every section
Rule 1: TDS without PAN — Section 206AA
If the deductee does not furnish a valid PAN, TDS must be deducted at the higher of: (a) the applicable rate in the relevant section, (b) the rate in force under the Act, or (c) 20%. In practice, this converts most professional and contractor TDS into a 20% deduction. The deductee can claim this as credit in their ITR, but it creates cash flow pain.
| Section | Normal rate | Rate without PAN |
|---|---|---|
| 194C (contractor, individual) | 1% | 20% |
| 194J (technical services) | 2% | 20% |
| 194J (professional services) | 10% | 20% |
| 194H (commission) | 2% | 20% |
| 194A (interest) | 10% | 20% |
| 194I (rent — building) | 10% | 20% |
Rule 2: No TDS on the GST component of invoices
CBDT has clarified that TDS under the Income Tax Act should be deducted on the invoice amount excluding GST. If a professional bills ₹80,000 + ₹14,400 GST = ₹94,400, TDS under 194J is calculated on ₹80,000 only (₹8,000 at 10%), not ₹94,400. This assumes the GST amount is separately indicated on the invoice. If the invoice does not break out GST, TDS is deducted on the full amount.
TDS deposit and return due dates for FY 2025-26
| Obligation | Due date |
|---|---|
| Monthly TDS deposit (non-government) | 7th of following month |
| March TDS deposit (all deductors) | 30th April 2026 |
| Q1 TDS return (April–June 2025) — 24Q, 26Q | 31 July 2025 |
| Q2 TDS return (July–September 2025) — 24Q, 26Q | 31 October 2025 |
| Q3 TDS return (October–December 2025) — 24Q, 26Q | 31 January 2026 |
| Q4 TDS return (January–March 2026) — 24Q, 26Q | 31 May 2026 |
| Form 16 (salary TDS certificate) for AY 2026-27 | 15 June 2026 |
| Form 16A (non-salary TDS certificate) | 15 days after quarterly return due date |
Worked example 1: Manisha pays a freelance consultant ₹75,000
Manisha runs a boutique marketing agency in Pune. She pays Arjun, a freelance digital marketing consultant (not a company), ₹75,000 in Q1 FY 2025-26 — his first payment this year. His PAN is on file.
| Step | Value |
|---|---|
| Section applicable | 194J — professional services (marketing/consulting) |
| Threshold for 194J | ₹50,000 per year |
| Year-to-date payments to Arjun before this | ₹0 |
| Does this payment cross ₹50,000? | Yes — ₹75,000 > ₹50,000 |
| TDS rate | 10% (professional services) |
| TDS to be deducted | 10% of ₹75,000 = ₹7,500 |
| Arjun receives | ₹75,000 − ₹7,500 = ₹67,500 |
| Manisha deposits ₹7,500 to government by | 7th of following month |
In Q2, Manisha pays Arjun another ₹40,000. Year-to-date aggregate: ₹1,15,000 — already past the ₹50,000 threshold. TDS: 10% of ₹40,000 = ₹4,000. She deposits this by the 7th of the next month and includes it in her Q2 Form 26Q return (due 31 October 2025).
Worked example 2: Rohan, property owner, rents office space at ₹60,000 per month
Deepak runs a Bengaluru startup that rents 2,000 sq ft of commercial office space from Rohan at ₹60,000 per month. His accounts are audited — so Section 194I applies (not 194IB).
| Step | Value |
|---|---|
| Section applicable | 194I(b) — land and building |
| Monthly rent | ₹60,000 |
| Threshold | ₹50,000 per month — exceeded |
| TDS rate | 10% |
| Monthly TDS | 10% of ₹60,000 = ₹6,000 |
| Amount paid to Rohan | ₹60,000 − ₹6,000 = ₹54,000 |
| Deepak deposits ₹6,000 by | 7th of following month |
| Rohan gets credit in Form 26AS | After Deepak files 26Q quarterly return |
| What Rohan must do Rohan declares ₹7,20,000 (₹60,000 × 12) as rental income in his ITR. He claims ₹72,000 TDS credit (12 months × ₹6,000) from Form 26AS. His tax liability after 30% slab and standard 30% deduction on rent income nets out; TDS already paid reduces final payable. If TDS credit is not reflecting in 26AS, Rohan should check whether Deepak filed the quarterly 26Q returns correctly. |
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Common mistakes deductors make
Mistake 1: Deducting TDS on individual transactions without checking the annual aggregate
Section 194J triggers at ₹50,000 annual aggregate, not per invoice. If you pay a consultant ₹30,000 in April and another ₹25,000 in June (total ₹55,000), TDS should have been deducted from the June payment when the aggregate crossed ₹50,000. Many deductors incorrectly assume each payment is evaluated independently.
Mistake 2: Using 194J for software product purchases
Paying for a SaaS subscription (Zoho, Freshdesk, QuickBooks) is a purchase of goods/software product, not professional services. Historically there was confusion. The current understanding is that payment for pre-packaged software is a royalty under 194J (10%), while customised software development contracts under 194C (1-2%) or 194J for technical services (2%) applies — depending on the nature. Get clarity from your CA on recurring software vendor payments.
Mistake 3: Not deducting 194T on partner remuneration
New from 1 April 2025. Every partnership firm and LLP now must deduct TDS at 10% on salary, remuneration, bonus, commission, or interest paid to a partner above ₹20,000 per year. Many firms missed this in Q1 and discovered the shortfall later. If you are in a firm and received remuneration without TDS deduction since April 2025, ask your firm to comply retroactively — and factor the credit into your advance tax planning.
Mistake 4: Not depositing TDS before the 7th
Interest under Section 201(1A): 1% per month for failure to deduct, and 1.5% per month for failure to deposit after deduction. On a ₹50,000 deduction left undeposited for 3 months, that is ₹2,250 of interest — on top of the original liability. It accumulates faster than most business owners expect.
A practical takeaway: the April update drill
Every April, spend 30 minutes updating your vendor master with the new TDS rate chart. Flag any vendor where the rate changed (194H is now 2%, 194IB is now 2%, 194J threshold is ₹50,000). Validate PANs on the Income Tax portal. And if you are in a partnership firm, set up 194T deduction in your payroll for partner drawings. This one annual hour prevents penalty notices year-round.
Key Takeaways
- Section 194J threshold raised from ₹30,000 to ₹50,000 annually for professional fees, technical services, and royalty — effective 1 April 2025.
- Section 194H (commission and brokerage) rate cut from 5% to 2%, and threshold raised to ₹20,000 — effective 1 October 2024 and continuing into FY 2025-26.
- New Section 194T: TDS at 10% on payments above ₹20,000 per year by partnership firms and LLPs to partners — from 1 April 2025.
- Section 194IB (rent by non-audit individuals/HUF): rate revised to 2% from 5% effective 1 October 2024.
- No PAN rule (Section 206AA): TDS at 20% or double the applicable rate if the deductee does not provide a valid PAN.
- TDS deposit due date is the 7th of the following month; quarterly TDS return (24Q/26Q) due dates are 31 July, 31 October, 31 January, and 31 May.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the TDS rate on professional fees under Section 194J for FY 2025-26?
Under Section 194J, TDS is deducted at 10% on payments for professional services (like legal, medical, architectural, consulting) and at 2% for technical services (like software support, maintenance contracts). The threshold from 1 April 2025 is ₹50,000 per financial year per payee. If the payment or aggregate payments to a single professional in a year cross ₹50,000, TDS must be deducted on the entire amount — not just the excess.
What is the TDS rate for contractor payments under Section 194C?
Section 194C TDS is 1% for payments to individual contractors and HUFs, and 2% for payments to firms and companies. The threshold is ₹30,000 per single contract or ₹1,00,000 aggregate payments in a financial year. If either limit is crossed, TDS applies on the full amount paid in that transaction (not just the excess over the threshold).
What happens if a deductee does not provide PAN?
Under Section 206AA, if the deductee does not provide a valid PAN, TDS must be deducted at the higher of: (a) the rate specified in the relevant section, (b) the rate or rates in force, or (c) 20%. In practice, this means most non-salary TDS sections jump to 20% without PAN. For salaried employees, tax is deducted at slab rates without PAN benefit, which effectively means higher deduction.
What is Section 194T, and who does it affect?
Section 194T was introduced effective 1 April 2025. It requires partnership firms and LLPs to deduct TDS at 10% on any payment to a partner — including salary, remuneration, commission, bonus, or interest — that exceeds ₹20,000 in a financial year. This is new and affects all professional firms, LLPs, and trading partnerships. Partners receiving remuneration from their firm will now have TDS reflected in their Form 26AS.
Is TDS applicable on GST in invoices?
No. TDS under the Income Tax Act is deducted on the payment excluding the GST component. If a contractor bills ₹1,00,000 plus ₹18,000 GST = ₹1,18,000, TDS under Section 194C is calculated on ₹1,00,000 — not ₹1,18,000. The CBDT has clarified this via circular. However, GST TDS under Section 51 of the CGST Act is a separate provision applicable only to government deductors above ₹2.5 lakh per contract, at 2%.
Internal Links
- TDS on Salary: Form 16, Section 192, and Correct Deduction → /tds-on-salary-form-16-section-192
- TDS on Professional Fees Section 194J: Freelancer Guide → /tds-professional-fees-194j-freelancer-guide
- How to File TDS Returns: 24Q and 26Q Guide → /how-to-file-tds-returns-24q-26q
- Form 26AS and AIS: How to Use Them While Filing ITR → /ais-26as-income-tax-filing
- TCS on Foreign Remittance LRS: Rates and Compliance → /tcs-foreign-remittance-lrs-rates
Authoritative External References
- Income Tax Act 1961, Sections 192-206CC (TDS provisions)
- Finance Act 2025 — amendments to TDS thresholds and rates
- CBDT circular on TDS on GST component
- TRACES portal — tdscpc.gov.in (Form 26AS, Form 16A downloads)
Image Briefs
Image 1: Colour-coded reference card: most common TDS sections (194A, 194C, 194H, 194I, 194J) with rate and threshold at a glance. Navy header, white rows, alternating light blue. 1200x900.
Image 2: Timeline graphic showing key TDS changes effective 1 April 2025 and 1 October 2024. Horizontal timeline with callout boxes for each change. 1600x900.
Image 3: Flowchart: "What section applies? → Is it salary? → 192. Is it professional? → 194J. Is it rent? → 194I. Is it contractor? → 194C." Decision tree style. 1080x1920.
Schema Markup Specification
Article schema with datePublished, dateModified, author, publisher, image. FAQPage for the FAQ section. Consider adding a Table schema for the rate chart (search engines may show this as a featured snippet).
Author Bio
Written by a Chartered Accountant with direct practice in TDS compliance, return filing (24Q and 26Q), and TRACES reconciliation for businesses across sectors. Rates and thresholds are verified against Finance Act 2025 and CBDT notifications current as of April 2026.
Newsletter CTA
| Never miss a compliance deadline TDS rate changes, new sections, CBDT circulars, and TRACES updates — every change that affects what you deduct and what you report, decoded promptly. One email per month. |
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Compliance Disclaimer
| *This rate chart is for reference purposes only. TDS rates and thresholds are subject to change via Finance Acts and CBDT notifications. Always verify the applicable section and rate against the current Income Tax Act or with a Chartered Accountant before deducting. Short deduction or non-deduction attracts interest and penalty.* |
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Freshness Commitment
Last verified on 25 April 2026 against the Finance Act 2025 and CBDT notifications. Rates effective from 1 April 2025 are fully reflected. This article is updated within seven days of any CBDT notification or Finance Act amendment affecting TDS rates, thresholds, or procedures.
TDS on Salary India: Section 192, Form 16 Explained, and How to Avoid Short Deduction
Who should read this
You are a salaried employee puzzled by how your company decided to deduct ₹12,000 per month from your salary as TDS — or you are an HR professional responsible for payroll and want to confirm your TDS computation is correct. This guide explains the mechanics of Section 192, the employer declaration form (Form 12BB), how regime choice affects deduction, and exactly what Form 16 tells you.
Introduction: why salary TDS is different from every other TDS
Every other TDS section works the same way: a payment is made, a flat percentage is deducted. Section 194C: 1%. Section 194J professional: 10%. Done. Section 192 — salary TDS — does not work like that. There is no fixed rate. The employer estimates what you will earn for the full year, computes the tax on that estimate using your chosen regime and declared deductions, and spreads that annual tax across the remaining months of the year.
This design makes salary TDS both more accurate (it tracks your actual liability) and more complex (it has to be recomputed every time your CTC changes, your deductions change, or you switch regimes mid-year). Understanding this mechanics prevents nasty surprises when you file — either a large tax demand because your employer under-deducted, or a needlessly delayed refund because they over-deducted.
How employers compute monthly TDS: the annual averaging method
Here is the exact process Section 192 requires:
- Estimate the employee's total income for the year — salary from all employers, any other income declared by the employee, exempt allowances removed.
- Apply the regime (new or old) as declared by the employee. Under the new regime: subtract ₹75,000 standard deduction. Under the old regime: subtract ₹50,000 standard deduction plus declared deductions (80C, 80D, HRA, home loan interest, etc.) from Form 12BB.
- Compute the total tax on the net taxable income using the applicable slabs, including Section 87A rebate if applicable, plus 4% cess.
- Subtract any TDS already deducted in earlier months of the same financial year.
- Divide the remaining tax liability by the number of months left in the financial year (including the current month).
- Deduct that monthly amount from salary. Recompute when deductions or income changes.
Worked example 1: Kavita's TDS computation — new regime, ₹18 lakh CTC
Kavita joins a Bengaluru tech company in April 2025 at ₹18,00,000 CTC. Her employer's HR asks for regime choice. She opts for the new regime with no 80CCD(2) employer NPS. HR computes monthly TDS in April:
| Step | Amount (₹) |
|---|---|
| Gross annual salary (estimated) | 18,00,000 |
| Less: Standard deduction (new regime) | (75,000) |
| Net taxable income | 17,25,000 |
| Tax on ₹0-4L: Nil | 0 |
| Tax on ₹4-8L @ 5% | 20,000 |
| Tax on ₹8-12L @ 10% | 40,000 |
| Tax on ₹12-16L @ 15% | 60,000 |
| Tax on ₹16-17.25L @ 20% | 25,000 |
| Total tax before cess | 1,45,000 |
| Add: 4% cess | 5,800 |
| Annual tax liability | 1,50,800 |
| Monthly TDS (₹1,50,800 ÷ 12) | ₹12,567 per month |
HR deducts ₹12,567 every month. By March 2026, Kavita has had ₹1,50,804 deducted (close enough to ₹1,50,800 — rounding differences are handled in the last month).
Worked example 2: Sunil — old regime, mid-year home loan, TDS revision
Sunil earns ₹14,40,000 per year at a Delhi company. He opts for the old regime in April 2025 and submits Form 12BB with ₹1,50,000 Section 80C and ₹25,000 Section 80D. HR computes initial TDS.
April to September 2025 (initial deduction)
| Step | Amount (₹) |
|---|---|
| Gross annual salary | 14,40,000 |
| Less: Standard deduction (old regime) | (50,000) |
| Less: Section 80C | (1,50,000) |
| Less: Section 80D | (25,000) |
| Net taxable income | 12,15,000 |
| Tax (old regime slabs) | 1,66,500 |
| Add: 4% cess | 6,660 |
| Annual tax | 1,73,160 |
| Monthly TDS (÷ 12) | ₹14,430 |
In October 2025, Sunil buys a house. His home loan EMI has ₹2,00,000 annual interest. He submits a revised Form 12BB in October claiming Section 24(b) home loan interest of ₹2,00,000.
October 2025 onwards — revised TDS after home loan claim
| Step | Amount (₹) |
|---|---|
| Net taxable income (revised with ₹2L home loan interest deducted) | 10,15,000 |
| Tax (old regime) | 1,14,500 |
| Add: 4% cess | 4,580 |
| Revised annual tax | 1,19,080 |
| TDS already deducted (April–September: 6 months × ₹14,430) | (86,580) |
| Remaining tax to be spread over Oct–March (6 months) | 32,500 |
| Revised monthly TDS | ₹5,417 |
Sunil's TDS drops from ₹14,430 to ₹5,417 per month from October — a ₹9,013 monthly increase in take-home pay. This is the benefit of submitting the revised Form 12BB promptly rather than waiting for the ITR refund.
Form 12BB: the declaration that drives your TDS
Form 12BB is the statement of claims by an employee for the purpose of TDS. You submit it to HR at the start of the financial year (April) and revise it whenever deductions change significantly.
| Section of Form 12BB | What you declare |
|---|---|
| Part A | Regime choice: new or old (tick one) |
| Part B — HRA | Name and address of landlord, rent amount, PAN of landlord (if rent > ₹1 lakh/year) |
| Part B — LTA | Estimated Leave Travel Allowance claim with travel details |
| Part B — Home loan | Name and address of lender, interest amount, property details |
| Part C — Chapter VI-A | Section 80C (amount and instrument), 80D (premium amount), 80CCD(1B), etc. |
| Part D — Other income | Any other income (rental, interest) you want employer to factor in for TDS |
| Important: employer must accept only reasonable declarations The CBDT requires employers to make reasonable enquiries into declarations. If an employee declares ₹1.5 lakh 80C but has no supporting documentation by year-end, the employer may deduct TDS without that deduction in the last month. Employees who inflate declarations face short-deduction and interest liability at ITR filing. |
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Form 16: what each part tells you
Form 16 Part A — generated from TRACES, employer cannot edit
Part A is the official TDS certificate. It contains:
- Employer TAN and employee PAN
- Period of employment (or full year if continuous)
- Quarter-wise TDS deducted and deposited (from Form 24Q)
- Challan details (BSR code, date, amount)
- Whether TDS was deposited without a challan (government deductors)
Due date for Form 16 issuance: 15 June 2026 for FY 2025-26. Employers who issue Form 16 after this date face a penalty of ₹100 per day under Section 272A.
Form 16 Part B — employer-prepared, the tax computation annexure
Part B is the detailed salary and tax computation. Verify it carefully against your expectations:
| Field in Part B | What it means |
|---|---|
| Gross salary | Your total CTC-based salary including all allowances |
| Exempt allowances | HRA exemption, LTA, etc. (old regime only) |
| Net salary | Gross minus exempt = income from salary |
| Income from house property | Home loan interest benefit (old regime) or nil (new regime) |
| Gross total income | Sum of all income heads |
| Deductions under Chapter VI-A | 80C, 80D, etc. (old regime only) or 80CCD(2) (both regimes) |
| Net taxable income | After all deductions |
| Tax on net taxable income | Based on slabs — verify by computing yourself |
| Rebate under 87A | If applicable |
| Tax payable after rebate | Plus 4% cess |
| Tax deducted by employer | Should equal total TDS from Part A |
| Balance tax payable or refund | This is what you carry into ITR |
| *"If the tax computation in Part B does not match your own manual calculation, fix it before filing ITR — not after. A wrong Form 16 accepted blindly is a common reason for post-filing demand notices."* |
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What happens when TDS is short-deducted
Short deduction can happen when: you claimed deductions in Form 12BB that you did not actually make; your income from other sources is higher than declared; or the employer made a computation error. The consequences:
- The employee must pay the balance tax as self-assessment tax when filing ITR (via Challan 280 on the e-filing portal).
- Interest under Section 234B applies at 1% per month on the shortfall from 1 April of the assessment year to the date of payment.
- If advance tax was also unpaid for the intermediate quarters, Section 234C interest applies separately.
- The employer may receive a short-deduction demand from the Income Tax Department if the error is significant, plus 1.5% per month interest under Section 201(1A).
Worked example: Preet's short-deduction scenario
Preet declared ₹1.5 lakh 80C investment in Form 12BB in April 2025 but invested only ₹60,000 by year-end. Her employer deducted TDS factoring in ₹1,50,000 deduction. Net under-deduction:
| Particulars | Amount (₹) |
|---|---|
| Declared 80C deduction in Form 12BB | 1,50,000 |
| Actual 80C investment by year-end | 60,000 |
| Excess deduction assumed by employer | 90,000 |
| Tax impact (30% slab): additional tax on ₹90,000 | 27,000 |
| Plus 4% cess on ₹27,000 | 1,080 |
| Total additional tax due at ITR filing | 28,080 |
| Interest under 234B (say 4 months from April to July) | ~₹1,124 |
| Total Preet pays at filing | ~₹29,204 |
Preet could have avoided this by submitting a revised Form 12BB in January or February when she realised she was not going to meet the ₹1.5 lakh 80C target. The employer would have increased monthly TDS for the remaining months, spreading the adjustment.
Common mistakes employers and employees make
Employer mistake 1: Not recomputing TDS after mid-year salary revision
If an employee gets a promotion and pay hike in October, the annual income estimate changes. The employer must recompute TDS from October onwards using the updated salary, spreading the remaining liability across the remaining months.
Employer mistake 2: Issuing Form 16 with wrong PAN or TAN
A Form 16 with the employee's PAN incorrectly quoted means the TDS credit does not show up in the employee's Form 26AS — they cannot claim credit and face a refund delay or demand. Verify all PANs before issuing Form 16.
Employee mistake 1: Not declaring other income sources in Form 12BB
If you have rental income of ₹3 lakh or FD interest of ₹80,000 that you forget to disclose in Form 12BB, your employer only computes TDS on your salary. At ITR filing, the additional tax on ₹3.8 lakh income comes due with 234B interest. Declare all significant income sources in Form 12BB so the employer calibrates TDS correctly.
Employee mistake 2: Assuming Form 16 is always correct
Form 16 Part B is prepared by the employer, not by the IT Department. It reflects what the employer computed — which may include incorrect HRA calculations, wrong deduction amounts, or missed 80CCD(2) claims. Always verify the tax computation in Part B independently before accepting it as your ITR basis.
A practical takeaway for salaried employees
Do three things before 30 April every year: submit Form 12BB with accurate deduction estimates (not aspirational ones); verify that your employer's regime matches your chosen regime; and check that your previous year's Form 16 TDS amounts match what shows in Form 26AS on the e-filing portal. These three habits together prevent the most common salary TDS surprises.
Key Takeaways
- Under Section 192, employers deduct TDS from salary based on the estimated tax liability for the full financial year, divided equally across months — not at a flat rate.
- The employee declares their chosen regime (new or old) and deductions to the employer in Form 12BB at the start of the year; the employer adjusts TDS based on this declaration.
- TDS under the new regime is computed without Chapter VI-A deductions (80C, 80D etc.) and with a ₹75,000 standard deduction; under the old regime, all declared deductions are factored in.
- Form 16 Part A shows the quarterly TDS summary and is generated by the employer from TRACES; Part B shows the salary breakdown, deductions, and tax computation.
- Short deduction of TDS by the employer creates a demand for the employee at ITR filing — the employee must pay the balance plus 1% per month interest under Section 234B.
- Salaried employees can change regime at ITR filing regardless of what was declared to the employer — the TDS adjustment is made in the refund or balance due.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can my employer deduct TDS at a flat 10% or 20% on salary?
No. Section 192 specifically requires TDS on salary to be computed at the average rate based on the full year estimated income and the applicable tax slab. There is no flat percentage for salary TDS. If an employer deducts at a flat rate, it is technically non-compliant. The average rate is: (annual estimated tax) ÷ (annual estimated salary). This rate is then applied to each month's salary.
What is Form 12BB and why must I submit it to HR?
Form 12BB is a self-declaration by the employee to the employer for TDS purposes. You declare the regime you want, your deductions (80C investments, home loan interest, HRA details, medical insurance premium), and any exempt allowances you claim (LTA, etc.). The employer uses Form 12BB to compute monthly TDS. If you do not submit it, the employer defaults to the new regime with only the standard deduction — which may result in excess or short deduction depending on your actual deduction pattern.
My employer deducted too little TDS. Who is responsible?
Under Section 192, the primary obligation to deduct correct TDS rests on the employer. However, if the employer under-deducted because the employee submitted a false or inflated Form 12BB declaration, the employee is responsible for the shortfall. At ITR filing, the employee must pay the balance tax plus interest under Section 234B (1% per month on the shortfall for each month it existed). The employer may also face a demand for short deduction interest under Section 201.
What is the difference between Form 16 Part A and Part B?
Form 16 Part A is the TDS certificate generated by the employer from the TRACES portal. It shows the employer's TAN, the employee's PAN, the quarterly TDS amounts deducted and deposited, and the challan details. It is automatically certified by TRACES. Form 16 Part B is the employer-prepared annexure showing gross salary, exempt allowances, deductions under various sections, net taxable salary, and the tax computation. Part B is the more detailed and useful part for filing ITR.
Can I ask my employer to not deduct TDS if I have other advance tax arrangements?
Not as a general request. Section 192 mandates TDS deduction by the employer based on the estimated liability. However, a salaried employee who also has other income (rental, professional, capital gains) can submit a declaration to the employer including estimated income from other sources — the employer then adjusts TDS to cover the full year liability including those sources. Alternatively, the employee can pay advance tax directly and the difference will reconcile at ITR filing.
Internal Links
- TDS Rate Chart FY 2025-26: All Sections and New Changes → /tds-rate-chart-fy-2025-26
- New vs Old Tax Regime: Decision Guide for Salaried Indians → /new-vs-old-tax-regime-fy-2025-26-decision-guide
- How to File ITR-1 for AY 2026-27: Step-by-Step → /how-to-file-itr-1-ay-2026-27
- Form 26AS and AIS: How to Use Them While Filing ITR → /ais-26as-income-tax-filing
- Advance Tax: Who Pays It, Calculation, and Due Dates → /advance-tax-calculation-due-dates
Authoritative External References
- Income Tax Act 1961, Section 192
- CBDT circular on Form 16 format (Part A and Part B)
- TRACES portal for Form 16 download — tdscpc.gov.in
- Form 12BB format on Income Tax Department portal
Image Briefs
Image 1: Annotated Form 16 Part B graphic: each section highlighted and labelled (Gross Salary, Allowances, Standard Deduction, 80C, Net Tax, TDS). 1200x900.
Image 2: Infographic: "How employer computes monthly TDS" — annual income estimate → tax on slabs → divide by 12 → monthly deduction. Flowchart style. 1600x900.
Image 3: Side-by-side form comparison: Form 12BB (declaration to employer) vs Form 16 (certificate from employer). Key fields highlighted. 1200x630.
Schema Markup Specification
Article schema with datePublished, dateModified, author, publisher, image. FAQPage schema for the FAQ section. HowTo schema for the **"**how employer computes TDS**"** section.
Author Bio
Written by a Chartered Accountant with direct experience in salary TDS computation, Form 16 preparation, and payroll compliance for companies ranging from 10 to 2,000 employees. Familiar with TRACES portal operations and CBDT circulars on Section 192.
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| Never miss a compliance deadline Form 16 timelines, regime declaration tips, payroll compliance updates — everything a salaried Indian needs to know about TDS before filing season. One email per month. |
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Compliance Disclaimer
| *This guide is for educational purposes. Employer TDS obligations and employee declaration requirements can vary based on employment terms, company policy, and CBDT circulars. Consult your HR department and a Chartered Accountant for case-specific guidance.* |
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Freshness Commitment
Last verified on 25 April 2026 against CBDT circulars on Section 192 and the current Form 16 format. Updated within seven days of any CBDT notification affecting salary TDS computation or Form 16 procedures.
TDS on Professional Fees Section 194J: The Complete Guide for Freelancers and Consultants
Who should read this
You are a freelance developer, designer, lawyer, architect, consultant, trainer, CA, doctor, or any other professional whose corporate clients deduct TDS from your invoice. You want to know: what rate applies, when do they need to deduct, how do you track and claim the credit, and what happens if they deduct the wrong rate. This guide answers all four.
Introduction: the TDS deduction freelancers cannot ignore
Section 194J affects almost every independent professional in India. You invoice a corporate client for ₹1,20,000, and they pay you ₹1,08,000 — keeping ₹12,000 as TDS. You expected the full amount. The ₹12,000 is not gone — it sits as a credit against your annual tax liability — but unless you understand how it works, you either overpay at ITR filing or miss claiming credit you are owed.
This guide covers Section 194J completely: who deducts it, at what rate, when the threshold applies, how to track it, and what to do when clients get it wrong.
Professional services vs technical services: the rate-defining distinction
Section 194J has two rates depending on the nature of services, and the distinction matters enormously.
| Nature of service | TDS rate | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Professional services | 10% | Legal advice, medical consultation, architectural design, engineering design, accounting/audit, consulting, management advisory |
| Technical services | 2% | Software maintenance, IT support contracts, technical testing, equipment calibration, data processing services |
| Royalty (literary, artistic, scientific) | 10% | Copyright licensing, book royalties, music rights, software licensing (royalty model) |
| Director fees (non-executive) | 10% (no threshold) | Sitting fees, board advisory fees paid to directors not in employee capacity |
| The grey zone: software development A software developer building custom software for a client is often classified as technical services (2%). A software consultant providing strategic advisory, architecture review, or technology consulting is professional services (10%). Many companies deduct 2% for all technology work, which under-deducts for the professional/advisory component. CBDT has issued circulars on this; disputes are common. If you receive 2% on what you consider advisory work, you will need to self-pay the balance at ITR time. |
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When does the ₹50,000 threshold work in practice?
The threshold is aggregate payments in a financial year per client (same PAN). It is not per invoice and not per type of service. Once the aggregate of all 194J-eligible payments from a single client in FY 2025-26 crosses ₹50,000, TDS applies from that payment onwards — on the entire amount being paid in that transaction.
Worked example 1: Shriya, freelance architect in Chennai
Shriya does architectural drawings for a real estate developer. She invoices them as follows in FY 2025-26:
| Invoice | Date | Amount (₹) | Cumulative (₹) | TDS applicable? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| INV-001 | April 2025 | 35,000 | 35,000 | No — below ₹50,000 |
| INV-002 | July 2025 | 20,000 | 55,000 | Yes — crossed ₹50,000; TDS on ₹20,000 = ₹2,000 |
| INV-003 | October 2025 | 45,000 | 1,00,000 | Yes — TDS on ₹45,000 = ₹4,500 |
| INV-004 | January 2026 | 50,000 | 1,50,000 | Yes — TDS on ₹50,000 = ₹5,000 |
| Full year summary | Amount (₹) |
|---|---|
| Total invoiced | 1,50,000 |
| Total TDS deducted | 11,500 |
| Net received | 1,38,500 |
| Shriya's TDS credit in Form 26AS | 11,500 |
At ITR filing, Shriya declares ₹1,50,000 professional income. Her total tax (at slab rates, assuming she has no other deductions) is calculated on her total income including this. The ₹11,500 TDS is credited against her tax liability. If her total tax is ₹22,000, she pays only ₹10,500 more.
Worked example 2: Nikhil, IT support engineer — technical services, 2% rate
Nikhil provides on-site IT maintenance and support services to a Hyderabad manufacturing company. Annual contract value: ₹3,60,000 (₹30,000 per month).
| Monthly invoice | TDS @ 2% | Net received |
|---|---|---|
| April 2025: ₹30,000 | ₹600 | ₹29,400 |
| May 2025: ₹30,000 | ₹600 | ₹29,400 |
| ...(same for 12 months) | ... | ... |
| Total annual: ₹3,60,000 | ₹7,200 TDS | ₹3,52,800 received |
Nikhil reports ₹3,60,000 income from technical services. His ITR-4 (presumptive basis at 50% of receipts, since he is below ₹50 lakh) shows ₹1,80,000 deemed profits, on which his tax is computed. The ₹7,200 TDS credit is set off against his liability.
| Nikhil's tax situation If Nikhil opts for Section 44ADA (presumptive scheme for professionals): ₹3,60,000 income × 50% deemed profit = ₹1,80,000 taxable. Tax on ₹1,80,000 under new regime: nil (below ₹4 lakh slab). His ₹7,200 TDS credit generates a full refund. This is the power of the Section 44ADA presumptive scheme for IT professionals with low actual expenses. |
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How to track and claim TDS credit
Step 1: Download Form 26AS every quarter
Log in to the e-filing portal (incometax.gov.in). Go to e-File → Income Tax Returns → View Form 26AS. Download and check Part A (TDS on non-salary) for all 194J deductions. Each deductor (client) should appear with their TAN, your PAN, the amount deducted, and the period.
Step 2: Collect Form 16A from each client
Every client who deducts TDS must issue Form 16A within 15 days of the quarterly TDS return due date. Due dates for Form 16A for FY 2025-26:
| Quarter | TDS return due | Form 16A due |
|---|---|---|
| Q1 (Apr–Jun 2025) | 31 July 2025 | 15 August 2025 |
| Q2 (Jul–Sep 2025) | 31 October 2025 | 15 November 2025 |
| Q3 (Oct–Dec 2025) | 31 January 2026 | 15 February 2026 |
| Q4 (Jan–Mar 2026) | 31 May 2026 | 15 June 2026 |
Step 3: Reconcile Form 16A against Form 26AS
Compare the TDS shown in your Form 16A from each client against what appears in Form 26AS under their TAN. If a client deducted TDS but their Form 26Q return has an error (wrong PAN, challan mismatch), the credit may not appear. Follow up with the client to correct their quarterly return — only they can fix this on the TRACES portal.
Step 4: Claim at ITR filing
File ITR-3 or ITR-4 depending on your income type. In Schedule TDS2, enter each client's TAN, the amount of TDS, and the amount of income. The portal pre-populates from 26AS — verify before accepting. Claim all verified TDS credits.
What to do when clients get the rate wrong
You cannot force a client to deduct TDS at the correct rate after the fact. But you can:
- Send a written note to your client's accounts team clarifying that your services are professional (not technical) and the correct rate is 10%, citing Section 194J.
- Include language in your contract clarifying the nature of services and applicable TDS section.
- If the client deducts 2% and you believe 10% applies, you must pay the 8% difference as self-assessment tax at ITR time plus 234B interest if applicable.
- If you want to prevent TDS entirely on income below a threshold, apply for a lower/nil deduction certificate under Section 197 from your assessing officer. This is issued for a financial year and must be produced to each client.
Common mistakes freelancers make with Section 194J
Mistake 1: Not tracking clients who should be deducting but are not
Small companies (turnover under ₹1 crore, no tax audit) below the tax audit threshold are individually exempt from TDS deduction on some sections — but Section 194J applies to all deductors who have Tax Deduction Account Number (TAN). If a startup paying you ₹2 lakh per year does not have a TAN, they are technically not required to deduct TDS under 194J (they would use 194M if payments exceed ₹50 lakh). Understand your client's status. If no TDS is deducted, pay advance tax on that income directly.
Mistake 2: Forgetting advance tax when multiple clients pay without TDS
If you have multiple small clients none of whom individually cross the TDS threshold, your total income may be substantial with zero TDS. Section 208 requires advance tax payment if your annual liability exceeds ₹10,000. Missed advance tax triggers 234C interest at 1% per month for each quarter it was short. Freelancers with multiple small clients often discover a large advance tax liability in March — by then, even the Q3 payment missed. Pay quarterly: 15 June, 15 September, 15 December, 15 March.
Mistake 3: Not filing ITR-3 or ITR-4 when required
If you have professional income (Section 194J category), you cannot file ITR-1. You need ITR-3 (regular books) or ITR-4 (presumptive basis under Section 44ADA). Many freelancers mistakenly file ITR-1 and get a defective return notice. ITR-4 with Section 44ADA is the simplest option for most solo practitioners earning under ₹75 lakh from eligible professions.
A practical takeaway for Indian professionals
Build a simple TDS register: a spreadsheet with each client, their TAN, and the TDS deducted each quarter. Update it when you receive payment advice. At year-end, reconcile against Form 26AS before filing. For clients who have never given you their TAN, request it — you need it to verify credit and claim it accurately in your ITR.
And if your combined professional income from non-TDS clients is ₹5 lakh or more annually, set an advance tax calendar reminder for 15 June. Starting advance tax in the first quarter is dramatically cheaper than scrambling in March with months of 1% per month interest accrued.
Key Takeaways
- Section 194J covers professional services (10% TDS), technical services (2% TDS), royalty (10%), and director fees (10% with no threshold).
- The threshold from 1 April 2025 is ₹50,000 per financial year per client (aggregate payments). TDS is deducted when total payments cross this limit.
- Clients who are individuals or HUFs not liable to tax audit use Section 194M (at 2%) for combined contractor, professional, and commission payments above ₹50 lakh annually — different threshold, same net effect for most freelancers.
- Form 16A (quarterly TDS certificate) is issued by each client within 15 days of the quarterly TDS return due date — collect it from every client and cross-check with Form 26AS.
- If a client deducts 2% calling it "technical services" but your work is professional services (10%), you may owe the difference at ITR filing. Understand which rate applies to your work.
- High-volume freelancers who exceed ₹1 lakh advance tax threshold must pay advance tax in four quarterly instalments — TDS alone may not cover the full liability.
Frequently Asked Questions
My client deducted 2% TDS instead of 10% on my consulting fee. What do I do?
If your services are professional (requiring specialised knowledge, skill, or expertise — like legal, medical, technical, design, programming), the correct rate is 10%. If they classified your work as "technical services" (which attracts 2%), there may be a mismatch. You still get credit for the 2% TDS deducted. But at ITR filing, your total tax is computed on your income at slab rates, and any shortfall (the 8% difference on your income) becomes your self-assessment tax liability. You are not penalised for the client's under-deduction, but you must pay the difference — plus 234B interest if advance tax was also unpaid.
My total professional income from a single client is ₹42,000. Will they deduct TDS?
No. The Section 194J threshold is ₹50,000 annual aggregate per client. If total payments to you in FY 2025-26 from that client do not exceed ₹50,000, they are not required to deduct TDS. If they pay you ₹30,000 in June and ₹25,000 in August (total ₹55,000), TDS should have been deducted at the August payment when the cumulative crossed ₹50,000 — typically deducted on the full ₹55,000 in the August invoice.
Can I submit Form 15G or 15H to avoid TDS on my professional income?
No. Form 15G/15H is available only for specific types of income — mainly interest income under Section 194A. There is no equivalent self-declaration form for professional fees under Section 194J. To avoid or reduce TDS, you would need to apply to the Income Tax Officer for a lower deduction certificate under Section 197.
How do I claim the TDS deducted by clients when filing my ITR?
TDS deducted by your clients shows up in your Form 26AS and AIS on the e-filing portal — typically after they file their quarterly Form 26Q. When filing ITR (ITR-3 or ITR-4 for most professionals), enter the TDS details in Schedule TDS2 (non-salary TDS). The portal pre-fills this from 26AS. The TDS credit reduces your final tax liability. If total TDS exceeds your tax, you get a refund. Collect Form 16A from each client as proof.
What if a client does not deduct TDS and does not issue Form 16A?
If a client is legally required to deduct TDS but does not, you are not at fault — but the tax is still due. The Income Tax Department expects you to have paid advance tax or self-assessment tax on income for which TDS was not deducted. If you report the income in ITR without corresponding TDS credit, you pay the tax directly. The client who failed to deduct faces interest and penalty under Section 201. Contact your client for compliance.
Internal Links
- TDS Rate Chart FY 2025-26: All Sections and New Limits → /tds-rate-chart-fy-2025-26
- GST Registration for Freelancers and Service Providers → /gst-registration-freelancers-service-providers-india
- Freelancer Finance Playbook: Tax, GST, and Invoicing India → /freelancer-finance-tax-gst-india
- Advance Tax: Who Pays It, Calculation, and Due Dates → /advance-tax-calculation-due-dates
- ITR-3 vs ITR-4: Which Form Should Freelancers Use? → /itr-3-vs-itr-4-freelancers-professionals
Authoritative External References
- Income Tax Act 1961, Section 194J
- Finance Act 2025 — revised 194J threshold to ₹50,000
- CBDT circular on professional vs technical services distinction
- TRACES portal for Form 16A download — tdscpc.gov.in
Image Briefs
Image 1: Two-panel graphic: "Professional Services 10%" (lawyer, doctor, architect) and "Technical Services 2%" (software maintenance, testing). Clear icons and labels. 1200x630.
Image 2: Invoice sample graphic: ₹1,00,000 consulting fee invoice with TDS deduction line shown separately (10% = ₹10,000 TDS, net payment ₹90,000). 1080x1080.
Image 3: Form 26AS excerpt mockup showing TDS credit from Section 194J deductions. Annotated with labels. 1200x900.
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Written by a Chartered Accountant who has prepared and reviewed TDS returns for companies paying professional fees, and filed ITRs for over 100 freelancers and independent consultants. Familiar with 194J vs 194C classification disputes and CBDT clarifications.
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| Never miss a compliance deadline TDS changes, advance tax deadlines, Form 16A timelines — every update that affects your professional income. One focused email per month. |
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Compliance Disclaimer
| *This article is educational content, not tax advice. The classification of a payment as professional services or technical services under Section 194J depends on the nature of the specific contract and has been the subject of CBDT guidance and judicial interpretation. Consult a Chartered Accountant for classification disputes or section 197 applications.* |
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Freshness Commitment
Last verified on 25 April 2026 against Finance Act 2025 (revised threshold), CBDT circulars on 194J, and current TRACES procedures for Form 16A. Updated within seven days of any change to 194J rates, thresholds, or classification guidance.
TCS on Foreign Remittance India: LRS Rates, Thresholds, and What Changed in 2024-25
Who should read this
You are booking an international holiday with a travel agent, paying fees for your child's foreign university, or investing in US stocks through an Indian platform — and you notice an extra charge called "TCS" on your bill. Or your bank deducted money above the stated amount when wiring funds abroad. This guide explains the TCS regime, the rates that currently apply, the ₹7 lakh annual exemption, and how to recover the amount through your ITR.
Introduction: the surprise charge that confuses almost every first-time international traveller
You finalised a Europe trip. The travel agent quotes ₹1,80,000. You send a cheque for ₹1,80,000 and they bill you ₹1,89,000 — the extra ₹9,000 is "TCS". Or you wire ₹30 lakh for your daughter's university admission in the UK and your bank deducts ₹1,15,000 before completing the transfer. What is happening?
Tax Collected at Source on LRS (Liberalised Remittance Scheme) remittances is an Indian government mechanism designed to track and tax-at-source money leaving India. It is not a permanent loss — it is a credit you get back when you file your ITR. But the confusion about rates, thresholds, and the education loan exception costs Indians lakhs of rupees in suboptimal decisions every year.
What is the LRS and who does it apply to?
The Reserve Bank of India's Liberalised Remittance Scheme allows resident Indians to remit up to USD 2,50,000 (approximately ₹2.1 crore) per financial year outside India for any permitted capital or current account transaction — travel, education, medical treatment, gifts, investments in foreign stocks, etc. Section 206C(1G) of the Income Tax Act requires the bank or authorised dealer executing the remittance to collect TCS on behalf of the government.
Current TCS rates on LRS remittance for FY 2025-26
| Purpose of remittance | Threshold | TCS rate |
|---|---|---|
| Overseas travel package (tour operator sells) | Nil — applies from first rupee | 5% |
| Education fees (self-funded, no loan) | First ₹7 lakh exempt per year | 5% on amount above ₹7L |
| Education fees (via education loan from bank/NBFC) | First ₹7 lakh exempt per year | 0.5% on amount above ₹7L |
| Medical treatment abroad | First ₹7 lakh exempt per year | 5% on amount above ₹7L |
| Investment in foreign stocks/securities | First ₹7 lakh exempt per year | 5% on amount above ₹7L |
| Gift remittance to relatives abroad | First ₹7 lakh exempt per year | 5% on amount above ₹7L |
| Any other LRS purpose | First ₹7 lakh exempt per year | 5% on amount above ₹7L |
| Gambling, horse racing, lottery abroad | — | 20% (highest rate) |
| The ₹7 lakh threshold is annual and cumulative across purposes If you remit ₹5 lakh for investments in March and ₹3 lakh for a holiday in April (same financial year), your cumulative is ₹8 lakh. The first ₹7 lakh is exempt. TCS applies to ₹1 lakh at 5% = ₹5,000. Your bank tracks your cumulative LRS remittances through the year. Different banks do not coordinate — you must track across banks yourself. |
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Worked example 1: Sanjay and family book Europe holiday package — ₹2,80,000
Sanjay pays a Delhi travel agent ₹2,80,000 for a 12-day Europe holiday package including flights, hotels, and sightseeing for four people. The package is an "overseas tour package" — TCS applies from the first rupee at 5%.
| Particulars | Amount (₹) |
|---|---|
| Package cost | 2,80,000 |
| TCS @ 5% (no threshold exemption for overseas tour packages) | 14,000 |
| Total billed by travel agent | 2,94,000 |
| TCS collected by agent and deposited to government | 14,000 |
| TCS credit in Sanjay's PAN (Form 26AS) | 14,000 |
When Sanjay files his ITR for AY 2026-27 (income earned in FY 2025-26), he claims ₹14,000 TCS credit. If his total tax liability is ₹1,60,000 and TDS from salary is ₹1,55,000, his net payable is ₹5,000. But with the ₹14,000 TCS credit, his net refund is ₹9,000.
Worked example 2: Priya remits ₹38 lakh for daughter's US MBA — with and without education loan
Priya's daughter joins a business school in Boston. Total annual fees and living expenses to be remitted: ₹38,00,000 in FY 2025-26.
Scenario A: Self-funded (no education loan)
| Particulars | Amount (₹) |
|---|---|
| Total remittance | 38,00,000 |
| Exempt threshold (LRS) | 7,00,000 |
| Taxable remittance | 31,00,000 |
| TCS @ 5% | 1,55,000 |
| Total outflow including TCS | 39,55,000 |
Scenario B: Education loan from SBI (eligible institution)
| Particulars | Amount (₹) |
|---|---|
| Total remittance | 38,00,000 |
| Exempt threshold | 7,00,000 |
| Taxable remittance | 31,00,000 |
| TCS @ 0.5% (education loan route) | 15,500 |
| Total outflow including TCS | 38,15,500 |
| Saving vs self-funded | ₹1,39,500 less TCS upfront |
| The education loan advantage Taking an education loan from a scheduled Indian bank or financial institution cuts the TCS from 5% to 0.5%. On ₹38 lakh remittance, that is ₹1,39,500 cash flow saved upfront — even if you plan to repay the loan immediately from savings. Many families take a minimal education loan for the sole purpose of qualifying for 0.5% TCS. The interest cost for a short-term loan is typically far less than ₹1.39 lakh. Ensure the loan is from a bank, NBFC, or approved financial institution under Section 206C(1G) — private lenders may not qualify. |
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Worked example 3: Suresh invests ₹10 lakh in US ETFs through INDmoney
Suresh uses an Indian platform to invest in US-listed ETFs. He remits ₹10,00,000 (approximately USD 11,900) in FY 2025-26. He has no other LRS remittance this year.
| Particulars | Amount (₹) |
|---|---|
| LRS remittance for investment | 10,00,000 |
| Exempt (₹7 lakh threshold) | 7,00,000 |
| Amount above threshold | 3,00,000 |
| TCS @ 5% | 15,000 |
| Net remitted after TCS | 9,85,000 (platform remits this) |
| TCS deposited to govt under his PAN | 15,000 |
Suresh files ITR-2 (since he has foreign investments and capital gains). He claims ₹15,000 TCS credit. His tax on Indian salary and any capital gains on foreign investments is computed; the TCS reduces what he pays.
How to claim TCS credit in your ITR
- Log in to the e-filing portal. Download AIS and Form 26AS (Part C shows TCS details).
- In your ITR (typically ITR-2 for LRS investors), go to Schedule TCS.
- Enter the details of each TCS deductor — typically your bank or travel agent: their TAN, the amount of TCS, and the purpose.
- The portal pre-fills from AIS — verify the pre-filled data against actual documentation.
- TCS credit reduces your net tax payable. If TCS exceeds tax, you get a refund — file promptly for faster processing.
| Who must file ITR to claim TCS credit? Anyone who had TCS collected must file ITR, even if their total income is below the basic exemption limit. A student's parent who is not otherwise required to file can file a nil ITR (ITR-1) to claim TCS refund — the refund will be credited to their bank account. Do not assume TCS auto-credit happens — it requires filing. |
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Common mistakes and misunderstandings
Mistake 1: Confusing TCS with a permanent tax
TCS is a deposit, not a final tax. Many people ask travel agents to find a way to "avoid TCS". There is no need to avoid it — just file ITR and claim it back. The only genuine cash flow issue is if you are not an ITR filer, in which case filing starts making sense.
Mistake 2: Not tracking cumulative LRS across the year
The ₹7 lakh threshold is annual. If you remitted ₹6 lakh for holiday in April, and your child needs ₹5 lakh remitted for educational expenses in August, the ₹7 lakh limit is already nearly exhausted. The August remittance will have TCS on ₹4 lakh (₹6L + ₹5L = ₹11L − ₹7L = ₹4L taxable). Your bank sees cumulative from their own records but may not track remittances at other banks. Keep a personal LRS tracker.
Mistake 3: Missing the education loan TCS advantage
The 0.5% versus 5% difference on large education remittances is enormous in rupee terms. Families planning overseas education should consult a CA about taking a partial education loan — even if they plan to repay it quickly — purely for the TCS benefit.
Mistake 4: Assuming using a forex card avoids TCS
Loading a forex card with foreign currency is a form of LRS remittance if it exceeds the threshold — TCS applies. The card issuer is the TCS collector in this case. The ₹7 lakh exemption and applicable rates apply the same way.
A practical takeaway before your next foreign remittance
Before remitting abroad for any purpose: estimate your total LRS for the financial year (holiday + education + investment combined). If you are approaching or above ₹7 lakh, budget for TCS explicitly. If remitting for education, take an education loan from an approved bank — the 0.5% vs 5% difference pays for the loan interest several times over.
And make filing ITR a non-negotiable if you have any TCS — it is the only way to get the money credited back. A family spending ₹2 lakh in TCS that files ITR promptly gets a refund within 3-6 weeks. The same family that does not file leaves that ₹2 lakh sitting unclaimed.
Key Takeaways
- TCS on foreign remittance applies under Section 206C(1G). Different rates apply depending on purpose: 5% on overseas travel packages, 5% on remittance for investment/other purposes above ₹7 lakh, 0.5% for education funded by loan.
- The ₹7 lakh annual threshold means the first ₹7 lakh of LRS remittance for non-education, non-medical purposes in a financial year is exempt from TCS.
- For overseas education self-funded (without a loan), TCS applies at 5% on amounts above ₹7 lakh.
- For overseas education with an education loan from a specified financial institution, TCS is 0.5% even on amounts above ₹7 lakh — significantly lower.
- TCS collected is not a tax expense — it is a credit against your income tax liability at ITR filing. File your return, claim the TCS, and receive a refund if your tax is lower than the TCS collected.
- The ₹7 lakh threshold is per individual per financial year across all LRS categories. Track your cumulative remittance across all purposes through the financial year.
Frequently Asked Questions
I booked an international flight and hotel package through a travel agent. What TCS applies?
An overseas tour package (flights + hotel + travel insurance, etc.) attracts TCS at 5% under Section 206C(1G). There is no ₹7 lakh threshold exemption for overseas travel packages — TCS applies from the first rupee. If you pay ₹1,50,000 for a Europe package, the agent collects ₹7,500 as TCS. This is credited to your TCS ledger and you claim it when filing ITR.
My child is going to a US university. How much TCS will the wire transfer attract?
If remitting for overseas education: if funded by an education loan from an eligible Indian financial institution (bank, NBFC), TCS is 0.5% above ₹7 lakh — so on ₹40 lakh remitted, TCS = 0.5% × ₹33 lakh (above ₹7L) = ₹16,500. If self-funded (no loan), TCS is 5% above ₹7 lakh — on ₹40 lakh, TCS = 5% × ₹33 lakh = ₹1,65,000. The loan route has dramatically lower TCS. Claim TCS as credit in your ITR.
How do I get the TCS money back?
TCS is not lost. It is credited to your PAN in the government's ledger, visible in Form 26AS. When you file your ITR, the TCS appears as a credit — just like TDS. If your total tax liability is less than the TCS collected, you get a refund. Even if you have zero income tax liability (e.g., no taxable income), you can file an ITR claiming a full TCS refund.
Does TCS apply to using a credit card internationally?
After some back-and-forth, the government clarified that foreign currency transactions on credit/debit cards up to ₹7 lakh per year fall outside the LRS framework for TCS purposes. International credit card spends above ₹7 lakh are within LRS and attract TCS at 20% (for purchases, gambling, etc.) or applicable rates for education/medical. Banks are required to track and collect this. However, the implementation has been delayed multiple times — check the latest CBDT notification for current applicability.
What is the maximum TCS rate on LRS remittance?
The highest rate is 20% on LRS remittance for purposes classified as "any other purpose" (like gambling, lottery, horse racing abroad) above ₹7 lakh, and for credit card foreign spends above ₹7 lakh (once the card-TCS rule is enforced). For most common purposes — education, investment in foreign securities, gifts to relatives — the rates are 5% (above ₹7 lakh) or lower with loan documentation.
Internal Links
- TDS Rate Chart FY 2025-26: All Sections and Key Changes → /tds-rate-chart-fy-2025-26
- NRI Taxation in India: Residential Status and Income Tax → /nri-taxation-india-complete-guide
- How to File ITR-2 for AY 2026-27: Capital Gains and Foreign Income → /how-to-file-itr-2-ay-2026-27
- Investing in US Stocks from India: Taxes, Reporting, and Compliance → /investing-us-stocks-india-tax-reporting
- Advance Tax: Who Pays It, Calculation, and Due Dates → /advance-tax-calculation-due-dates
Authoritative External References
- Income Tax Act 1961, Section 206C(1G)
- Finance Act 2023 — TCS on LRS amendments
- CBDT Circular 10/2023 on TCS applicability
- RBI Master Direction on Liberalised Remittance Scheme
- RBI LRS guidelines at rbi.org.in
Image Briefs
Image 1: Rate table graphic: LRS purpose (travel, education-loan, education-self, investment/other) with threshold and TCS rate in coloured boxes. 1200x630.
Image 2: Infographic: "₹7 lakh LRS threshold flow" — first ₹7L exempt → amounts above attract TCS → TCS credited to PAN → claim in ITR. 1080x1920 vertical.
Image 3: Practical scenario card: family remitting ₹25L for US college fees with education loan — computation showing ₹16,500 TCS. Clear rupee numbers. 1200x630.
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Article schema with datePublished, dateModified, author, publisher. FAQPage for FAQ section. Consider HowTo schema for **"**how to claim TCS credit in ITR**"**.
Author Bio
Written by a Chartered Accountant with advisory experience covering outbound remittances, NRI tax matters, and FEMA compliance. Familiar with CBDT circulars on LRS TCS and RBI remittance regulations as of April 2026.
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Compliance Disclaimer
| *This article covers TCS rules as of 25 April 2026. LRS TCS provisions have been amended multiple times and implementation has been deferred for some categories. Always verify current applicability with your bank, authorised dealer, or a Chartered Accountant before remitting large amounts. Rules for credit cards abroad remain subject to ongoing CBDT notifications.* |
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Freshness Commitment
Last verified on 25 April 2026 against the Finance Act 2023, CBDT Circular 10/2023, and RBI LRS guidelines. This article is updated within seven days of any CBDT notification or Finance Act amendment affecting TCS on LRS remittances.
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