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Your complete reference to Tax Deducted at Source — sections, rates, thresholds, and key changes brought in by the Income Tax Act 2025 for Tax Year 2026-27.

What is TDS (Tax Deducted at Source)?

Tax Deducted at Source (TDS) is a mechanism introduced under the Income Tax Act, 1961, by which the person making specified payments — such as salary, rent, interest, commission, or professional fees — is required to deduct a prescribed percentage of tax at the time of payment (or credit, whichever is earlier) and deposit it with the Central Government on behalf of the recipient.

In simple terms: instead of waiting for a taxpayer to pay their tax at the end of the year, the government collects the tax upfront at the source of income. TDS applies to both residents and non-residents, and covers a wide range of transactions across individuals, businesses, and institutions.

0.1%Lowest TDS rate (goods purchase)
30%Highest TDS rate (lottery/winnings)
20%TDS without valid PAN (most cases)
35+Payment categories covered

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Who deducts TDS?

The “deductor” — typically an employer, business, or institution making the payment. They are responsible for deducting the correct amount and depositing it with the government within prescribed timelines.

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Who receives TDS credit?

The “deductee” — the person receiving the payment. They can claim credit for TDS deducted against their final tax liability when filing their Income Tax Return, or claim a refund if excess TDS was deducted.

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How is TDS reflected?

TDS is reflected in Form 26AS (Annual Tax Statement) and the Annual Information Statement (AIS), which can be accessed on the Income Tax e-filing portal using your PAN credentials.

Why TDS is Important

TDS serves multiple purposes for both the government and taxpayers. Understanding these helps clarify why compliance is non-negotiable.

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Steady revenue for government

TDS ensures a continuous, predictable flow of tax revenue throughout the year rather than a lump-sum collection at year-end.

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Wider tax net

It brings transactions into the formal financial system, reducing tax evasion and ensuring that income is captured even when taxpayers might not file returns voluntarily.

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Advance payment of tax

For individuals, TDS means taxes are paid gradually throughout the year, reducing the burden of large advance tax payments or year-end lump-sum settlements.

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Audit trail

Every TDS transaction creates a digital trail via TDS returns (Form 24Q, 26Q, 27Q, 27EQ), making it easier for the Income Tax Department to verify income and detect discrepancies.

Key Changes: Income Tax Act 2025 NEW

The Income Tax Act, 2025 (effective from Tax Year 2026-27) is a comprehensive recodification of the Income Tax Act, 1961. While the substantive tax law largely remains the same, the section numbering has been completely restructured. All TDS and TCS provisions have been renumbered under new sections. Practitioners must now use the new section references in their returns and challans.

Income Tax Act 1961

  • TDS on salary: Section 192
  • TDS on interest: Section 194A
  • TDS on commission: Section 194H
  • TDS on rent: Section 194I
  • TDS on professional fees: Section 194J
  • TDS on dividends: Section 194
  • TDS on goods purchase: Section 194Q
  • TCS provisions: Section 206C

Income Tax Act 2025

  • TDS on salary: Section 392(7)
  • TDS on interest: Section 393(1) [Sl. 5]
  • TDS on commission: Section 393(1) [Sl. 1]
  • TDS on rent: Section 393(1) [Sl. 2(ii)]
  • TDS on professional fees: Section 393(1) [Sl. 6(iii)]
  • TDS on dividends: Section 393(1) [Sl. 7]
  • TDS on goods purchase: Section 393(1) [Sl. 8(ii)]
  • TCS provisions: Section 394(1)

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Important note on section mapping

The rates and thresholds remain largely unchanged under the IT Act 2025 — what has changed is the section numbering. The old sections (e.g. 194A, 194H, 194J) and their corresponding new sections (under 392, 393, 394) are both shown in the rate charts below to facilitate the transition for practitioners filing TDS returns for Tax Year 2026-27.

TDS Rate Chart — Domestic Transactions (Tax Year 2026-27)

The following rate chart covers TDS applicable on domestic payments under the Income Tax Act 2025, mapped from their old section numbers under the Income Tax Act 1961. Rates and thresholds are as updated on 08 April 2026.





Return Code Old Section (1961) Nature of Payment New Section (IT Act 2025) Rate Threshold (₹)
1005 194D Commission or brokerage — insurance 393(1) [Sl. No. 1(I)] 2% (Individual)
10% (Others)
₹20,000
1006 194H Commission or brokerage — others 393(1) [Sl. No. 1(ii)] 2% ₹20,000
1008 194I(a) Rent on machinery etc. — specified person 393(1) [Sl. No. 2(ii).D(a)] 2% ₹50,000/month
1009 194I(b) Rent other than machinery etc. — specified person 393(1) [Sl. No. 2(ii).D(b)] 10% ₹50,000/month
1011 194IC Payment under joint development agreements (Sec. 67(14)) 393(1) [Sl. No. 3(ii)] 10%
1012 194IA Compensation on acquisition of certain immovable property 393(1) [Sl. No. 3(iii)] 10% ₹5 Lakh
1033 194R Benefit or perquisite arising from business / profession 393(1) [Sl. No. 8(iv)] 10% ₹20,000

Return Code Old Section (1961) Nature of Payment New Section (IT Act 2025) Rate Threshold (₹)
1019 193 Interest on securities 393(1) [Sl. No. 5(i)] 10% ₹10,000
1020 194A Interest other than on securities — Senior citizens 393(1) [Sl. No. 5(ii).D(a)] 10% ₹1,00,000
1021 194A Interest other than on securities — Others 393(1) [Sl. No. 5(ii).D(b)] 10% ₹50,000
1022 194A Interest other than on securities (general) 393(1) [Sl. No. 5(iii)] 10% ₹10,000
1013 194K Income from units of specified Mutual Fund / Schedule VII 393(1) [Sl. No. 4(i)] 10% ₹10,000
1014 194LBA Interest from units of a business trust — resident unit holder 393(1) [Sl. No. 4(ii)] 10%
1015 194LBA Dividend from units of a business trust — resident unit holder 393(1) [Sl. No. 4(ii)] 10%
1029 194 Dividends (including preference shares) — Individual resident 393(1) [Sl. No. 7] 10% ₹10,000

Return Code Old Section (1961) Nature of Payment New Section (IT Act 2025) Rate Threshold (₹)
1023 194C Contract payments — Individual/HUF contractor 393(1) [Sl. No. 6(i).D(a)] 1% (Individual)
2% (Others)
₹30,000 (single) or ₹1,00,000 (aggregate)
1024 194C Contract payments — Non-Individual/HUF contractor 393(1) [Sl. No. 6(i).D(b)] 1% (Individual)
2% (Others)
₹30,000 (single) or ₹1,00,000 (aggregate)
1026 194J(a) Fees for technical services; royalty (films); call centre operations 393(1) [Sl. No. 6(iii).D(a)] 2% ₹50,000
1027 194J(b) Fees for professional services; Sec. 26(2)(h) payments 393(1) [Sl. No. 6(iii).D(b)] 10% ₹50,000
1028 194J(b) Remuneration/fees/commission to a director (non-salary) 393(1) [Sl. No. 6(iii).D(b)] 10%
1067 194T Salary, remuneration, commission, bonus or interest to a partner of a firm 393(3) [Sl. No. 7] 10% ₹20,000

Return Code Old Section (1961) Nature of Payment New Section (IT Act 2025) Rate Threshold (₹)
1030 194DA Life insurance policy payout (taxable portion only) 393(1) [Sl. No. 8(i)] 2% ₹1 Lakh
1031 194Q Purchase of any goods 393(1) [Sl. No. 8(ii)] 0.1% In excess of ₹50 Lakh
1035 194O E-commerce: sale of goods/services by participant via platform 393(1) [Sl. No. 8(v)] 0.1% ₹5 Lakh (Individual/HUF)
1037 194S Transfer of virtual digital asset — non-Individual/HUF 393(1) [Sl. No. 8(vi)] 1% ₹10,000
1038 194SP Transfer of virtual digital asset (in kind or partly in kind) 393(1) [Sl. No. 8(vi)] 1% ₹10,000
1064 194N Cash withdrawal — deductee is a co-operative society 393(3) [Sl. No. 5.D(a)] 2% ₹3 Crore
1065 194N Cash withdrawal — deductee is other than co-operative society 393(3) [Sl. No. 5.D(b)] 2% ₹1 Crore
1066 194EE NSS (National Savings Scheme) withdrawal — Sec. 80CCA(2)(a) 393(3) [Sl. No. 6] 10% ₹2,500

Return Code Old Section (1961) Nature of Payment New Section (IT Act 2025) Rate Threshold (₹)
1058 194B Winnings from lottery, crossword puzzle, card games, gambling/betting 393(3) [Sl. No. 1] 30% ₹10,000 (per transaction)
1059 194B Same as above — consideration in kind; tax paid before release 393(3) [Sl. No. 1] Note 2 30% ₹10,000 (per transaction)
1060 194BA Winnings from online games 393(3) [Sl. No. 2] 30%
1061 194BA Online game winnings — in kind; tax paid before release 393(3) [Sl. No. 2] Note 2 30% ₹10,000 (per transaction)
1062 194BB Winnings from any horse race 393(3) [Sl. No. 3] 30% ₹10,000 (per transaction)
1063 194G Commission/prize on lottery ticket sales 393(3) [Sl. No. 4] 2% ₹20,000

TDS Rate Chart — Foreign / Non-Resident Transactions

The following rates apply to payments made to non-residents and foreign entities under Section 393(2) of the IT Act 2025 (old: Sections 194E, 194LB, 194LC, 194LD, 195, 196B, 196C, 196D and related provisions).

Return Code Old Section (1961) Nature of Payment New Section (IT Act 2025) Rate
1039 194E Income referred to in section 211 (non-resident sportsmen/entertainers) 393(2) [Sl. No.1] 20%
1040 194LC Interest on foreign currency borrowings (infrastructure bonds: 01 Jul 2012 to 01 Jul 2023) 393(2) [Sl. No. 2] 5%
1041 194LD Interest on rupee-denominated bonds issued before 01 Jul 2023 393(2) [Sl. No. 3] 5%
1042 194LC Interest on long-term bonds listed on IFSC exchange (issued 01 Apr 2020 – 01 Jul 2023) 393(2) [Sl. No. 4.E(a)] 4%
1043 194LC Interest on long-term bonds listed on IFSC exchange (issued on or after 01 Jul 2023) 393(2) [Sl. No. 4.E(b)] 9%
1044 194LB Interest from Infrastructure Debt Fund — non-resident 393(2) [Sl. No. 5] 5%
1045 194LBA(a) Distributed income from business trust — nature of interest (Sch V [Sl. No. 3.B(a)]) 393(2) [Sl. No. 6.E(a)] 5%
1046 194LBA(b) Distributed income from business trust — nature of dividend (Sch V [Sl. No. 3.B(b)]) 393(2) [Sl. No. 6.E(b)] 10%
1047 194LBC Distributed income from securitisation trust (Sch V [Sl. No. 4]) 393(2) [Sl. No. 7] 35% (NR Company)
30% (Other NR)
1051 196B Income in respect of units referred to in section 208 393(2) [Sl. No. 11] 10%
1052 196B Long-term capital gains from units under section 208 393(2) [Sl. No. 12] 12.5%
1053 196C Interest or dividends on bonds/GDRs (section 209) 393(2) [Sl. No. 13] 10%
1054 196C Long-term capital gains on bonds/GDRs (section 209) 393(2) [Sl. No. 14] 12.5%
1055 196D Income in respect of securities — section 210(1) 393(2) [Sl. No. 15] 20%
1050 195 Income from Mutual Fund units or specified company 393(2) [Sl. No. 10] 20% or agreement rate (lower)
1057 195 Any other interest or sum chargeable under the Act (not salary) 393(2) [Sl. No. 17] Average rate as applicable

TCS Rate Chart — Tax Collected at Source (Tax Year 2026-27)

Tax Collected at Source (TCS) is the counterpart of TDS — here, the seller collects tax from the buyer at the time of sale and deposits it with the government. TCS is governed by Section 394(1) under the IT Act 2025 (old: Section 206C).

Return Code Old Section (1961) Nature of Transaction New Section (IT Act 2025) Rate
1068 206C-A Sale of alcoholic liquor for human consumption 394(1) [Sl. No. 1] 2%
1069 206C-I Sale of tendu leaves 394(1) [Sl. No. 2] 2%
1070 206C-B Sale of timber obtained under a forest lease 394(1) [Sl. No. 3] 2%
1071 206C-C Sale of timber by any mode other than forest lease 394(1) [Sl. No. 3] 2%
1072 206C-D Sale of other forest produce (not timber or tendu leaves) 394(1) [Sl. No. 3] 2%
1073 206C-E Sale of scrap 394(1) [Sl. No. 4] 2%
1074 206C-J Sale of minerals — coal, lignite, or iron ore 394(1) [Sl. No. 5] 2%
1075 206C-L Sale of motor vehicle (above threshold) 394(1) [Sl. No. 6.D(a)] 1%
1076–1085 206C-MA to MJ Sale of luxury goods: wrist watches, antiques, collectibles, yacht/helicopter, sunglasses, handbags, shoes, sportswear, home theatre, polo horses 394(1) [Sl. No. 6.D(b)] 1%
1086 206C-T LRS remittance for education or medical treatment (above ₹10 lakh) 394(1) [Sl. No. 7.D(a)] 2%
1087 206C-Q LRS remittance for purposes other than education/medical (above ₹10 lakh) 394(1) [Sl. No. 7.D(b)] 20%
1088 206C-O Overseas tour programme package — up to ₹10,00,000 394(1) [Sl. No. 8.D(a)] 2%
1089 206C-O Overseas tour programme package — above ₹10,00,000 394(1) [Sl. No. 8.D(b)] 2%
1090 206C-F Use of parking lot for business 394(1) [Sl. No. 9] 2%
1091 206C-G Use of toll plaza for business 394(1) [Sl. No. 9] 2%
1092 206C-H Use of mine or quarry for business (excluding mineral oil) 394(1) [Sl. No. 9] 2%

PAN Furnishing Rule & Higher TDS / TCS

Under Section 397(2) of the IT Act 2025 (old: Section 206AA for TDS / 206CC for TCS), every person entitled to receive a payment subject to TDS or TCS must furnish their valid PAN to the deductor/collector. Failure to do so results in tax being deducted or collected at a significantly higher rate.

TDS without PAN (Sec. 397(2) / 206AA)

  • At the rate specified in the relevant provision, or
  • At the rate or rates in force, or
  • 5% where TDS applies to goods purchase [Sl. No. 8(ii)] or e-commerce [Sl. No. 8(v)], or
  • 20% in any other case — whichever is higher

TCS without PAN (Sec. 397(2) / 206CC)

  • At twice the rate specified in the relevant provision, or
  • At the rate of 5% — whichever is higher
  • Total TCS rate shall not exceed 20%

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Always verify PAN before processing payments

  • Ensure the PAN is valid and active — an invalid or deactivated PAN is treated the same as no PAN.
  • Link PAN with Aadhaar if not already done, as unlinked PANs are treated as inoperative for TDS purposes.
  • Deductors can verify PAN validity at incometax.gov.in before processing payments.

TDS Compliance — Key Obligations

For deductors (those who deduct TDS)

1

Obtain TAN (Tax Deduction Account Number)

Every deductor must have a valid TAN issued by the Income Tax Department. TAN is mandatory for all TDS/TCS transactions and must be quoted on challans and returns.

2

Deduct TDS at the correct rate and on time

TDS must be deducted at the time of payment or credit to the payee’s account, whichever is earlier. Apply the correct rate based on the nature of payment and residency status of the deductee.

3

Deposit TDS with the government

TDS deducted must be deposited by the 7th of the following month (for March: by 30 April). Use Challan ITNS 281 for TDS/TCS deposits via the IT portal or authorised bank.

4

File quarterly TDS returns

TDS returns must be filed quarterly: Q1 (April–June) by 31 July; Q2 (July–September) by 31 October; Q3 (October–December) by 31 January; Q4 (January–March) by 31 May. Forms: 24Q (salary), 26Q (domestic non-salary), 27Q (foreign), 27EQ (TCS).

5

Issue TDS certificates to deductees

Issue Form 16 (for salary) or Form 16A (for non-salary) to deductees within prescribed timelines after filing TDS returns. This allows deductees to claim TDS credit in their income tax returns.

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Penalties for non-compliance

  • Late deduction or non-deduction: Interest @ 1% per month from the date on which TDS was deductible to the actual deduction date.
  • Late deposit after deduction: Interest @ 1.5% per month from the date of deduction to the date of actual deposit.
  • Late filing of TDS return: Fee of ₹200 per day under Section 234E until the return is filed (subject to TDS amount limit).
  • Incorrect filing: Penalty of ₹10,000 to ₹1,00,000 under Section 271H for furnishing incorrect information in TDS statements.

Common Questions on TDS

Can TDS be avoided or reduced?

Yes. A deductee with no taxable income can submit Form 15G (for non-senior-citizens) or Form 15H (for senior citizens) to the deductor to request NIL TDS deduction on interest income. These declarations are valid for one financial year and must be renewed annually. Note that submitting a false declaration attracts penalties.

What if excess TDS is deducted?

If more TDS is deducted than your actual tax liability, you can claim a refund by filing your Income Tax Return (ITR). The excess TDS credit visible in Form 26AS / AIS will be set off against your tax liability, and any surplus will be refunded by the Income Tax Department — typically along with interest under Section 244A.

What is the difference between TDS and advance tax?

TDS is deducted by the payer at the source of income and applies to specific categories of payment. Advance tax, on the other hand, is paid directly by the taxpayer in instalments during the financial year on all types of income — it applies when the estimated annual tax liability exceeds ₹10,000 and is not fully covered by TDS.

Is TDS applicable to individuals making payments?

Generally, individuals and HUFs are not required to deduct TDS on payments (other than salary to employees). However, individuals and HUFs whose accounts are subject to tax audit under Section 44AB of the Income Tax Act are required to deduct TDS on certain payments such as professional fees, rent, and contractual payments.

📄 Source reference: TDS & TCS Rate Chart, Tax Year 2026-27 — published by TDSMAN / PDS Infotech Pvt Ltd, updated 08 April 2026. Section references are as per the Income Tax Act, 2025. Old section references are from the Income Tax Act, 1961.

Disclaimer: This article is for general informational and educational purposes only. Tax rates, sections, and thresholds are subject to change through government notifications, circulars, and amendments. Always verify the latest provisions on the official Income Tax portal (incometax.gov.in) or consult a qualified chartered accountant or tax professional for advice specific to your situation.

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