TDS Return Filing — Quarterly Compliance, Every Form, Zero Penalty Risk
Every business that pays salary, rent, contractor fees, or professional charges has a TDS obligation — and a quarterly deadline. One missed return under Section 234E costs Rs. 200 every single day. Our CAs handle your complete TDS compliance: deduction, deposit, return filing, and Form 16 / 16A issuance.
What is a TDS Return?
Governed by the Income Tax Act, 1961 — filed quarterly on incometax.gov.in / TRACES
Tax Deducted at Source (TDS) is the mechanism under the Income Tax Act, 1961, where the payer of certain income — salary, rent, contractor fees, professional charges, interest — deducts a percentage of tax before releasing the payment. This deducted amount is deposited with the Central Government, and the details are reported through quarterly statements called TDS Returns.
Think of it this way: a garment exporter in VKI Area paying Rs. 80,000 per month as rent for their warehouse must deduct 10% TDS under Section 194I, deposit Rs. 8,000 to the government by the 7th of the next month, and report this transaction in Form 26Q at the end of every quarter. Their landlord then sees this credit in their Form 26AS and can claim it while filing their own ITR.
For FY 2025-26, TDS return filing continues on the existing framework under the Income Tax Act, 1961, through TRACES (TDS Reconciliation Analysis and Correction Enabling System) and the income tax e-filing portal. The Q4 return covering January–March 2026 is due by 31 May 2026.
2026 Update — New Act Transition: Under the Income Tax Act 2025 (effective 1 April 2026 for FY 2026-27), the entire 194-series (194C, 194J, 194I, 194H, etc.) is being replaced by consolidated Sections 392 and 393. For FY 2025-26 returns (filed in 2026), the old 194-series sections still apply. Businesses must prepare to update their ERP and payroll systems for FY 2026-27 compliance. Our CAs are already tracking this transition.
Who Must File TDS Returns?
TAN (Tax Deduction Account Number) is mandatory for all TDS deductors — apply on tin.nsdl.com via Form 49B
Employers (All Categories)
Any employer paying salary — from a 5-person startup in Tonk Road to a 500-employee manufacturer in Sitapura — must deduct TDS under Section 192 and file Form 24Q every quarter.
Businesses Paying Contractors
Companies, firms, and individuals paying for contract work must deduct TDS under Section 194C when payments exceed Rs. 30,000 per contract or Rs. 1 lakh annually per contractor.
Professional Fee Payers
If you pay fees to doctors, lawyers, CAs, architects, consultants, or any technical service provider above Rs. 50,000 per year, TDS at 10% (or 2% for technical services) applies under Section 194J.
Rent Payers
Businesses paying rent for office, factory, or equipment above Rs. 50,000 per month must deduct TDS under Section 194I. Individuals paying rent above Rs. 50,000/month use Section 194IB via Form 26QC.
Property Buyers
Buyers purchasing immovable property (other than agricultural land) for Rs. 50 lakh or more must deduct 1% TDS under Section 194IA and file Form 26QB within 30 days of the month of payment.
Payers to Non-Residents
Any payment to an NRI or foreign company — interest, royalty, technical fees, or any other income — attracts TDS under Section 195, reported via Form 27Q.
TDS Return Forms — Which Form for Which Payment?
Filed quarterly on incometax.gov.in using RPU (Return Preparation Utility) from NSDL Protean portal
TDS Rate Chart — FY 2025-26 (Key Sections)
Rates apply on net payment to resident payees; higher rate of 20% applies under Section 206AA if PAN not provided
| Section | Nature of Payment | Threshold | TDS Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| 192 | Salary | Above basic exemption limit | Slab rates |
| 194A | Interest (Banks, FDs) | Rs. 50,000 (senior citizens) / Rs. 40,000 (others) | 10% |
| 194C | Contractor / Sub-contractor | Rs. 30,000 per contract / Rs. 1 lakh annual | 1% (individual) / 2% (company) |
| 194H | Commission / Brokerage | Rs. 15,000 per year | 2% (reduced from 5%) |
| 194I(a) | Rent — Plant & Machinery | Rs. 50,000 per month | 2% |
| 194I(b) | Rent — Land / Building / Furniture | Rs. 50,000 per month | 10% |
| 194IB | Rent by Individuals (Sec 194IB) | Rs. 50,000 per month | 2% |
| 194IA | Purchase of Immovable Property | Rs. 50 lakh | 1% |
| 194J | Professional Fees (doctors, lawyers, CAs) | Rs. 50,000 per year | 10% |
| 194J | Technical Services / Call Centre / Royalty | Rs. 50,000 per year | 2% |
| 194Q | Purchase of Goods (by buyer) | Rs. 50 lakh per year per seller | 0.1% |
| 194T | Salary / Commission to Partners | Rs. 20,000 per year | 10% (new section FY 2024-25+) |
| 206AA | No PAN provided by payee | Any deductible payment | 20% or applicable rate (higher) |
Important — Section 194H Rate Change: The TDS rate on commission and brokerage under Section 194H was reduced from 5% to 2% effective October 2024. If your accounting software or challan format still shows 5%, it needs to be corrected. Incorrect rates in TDS returns invite notices under Section 271H.
TDS Return Due Dates — FY 2025-26 (All Quarters)
Applies uniformly to Form 24Q and Form 26Q for non-government deductors
April – June 2025
TDS deposit: 7th of next month
Return Due: 31 July 2025July – September 2025
TDS deposit: 7th of next month
Return Due: 31 Oct 2025October – December 2025
TDS deposit: 7th of next month
Return Due: 31 Jan 2026January – March 2026
TDS deposit: 30 April 2026
Return Due: 31 May 2026TDS Deposit Deadline: TDS deducted must be deposited with the government by the 7th of the following month. For March deductions, the deposit deadline is 30 April. Government deductors who deposit TDS by book entry (without challan) treat the date of deduction itself as the deposit date. Late deposit attracts interest at 1.5% per month under Section 201(1A).
Documents Required for TDS Return Filing
Compile this data before each quarter's due date — from your accounting records and TRACES
Step-by-Step TDS Return Filing Process
Filed using RPU (Return Preparation Utility) from NSDL Protean — uploaded via incometax.gov.in
Obtain / Verify TAN
Every deductor must have an active TAN (Tax Deduction Account Number). Apply through Form 49B on tin.nsdl.com. Salary TDS returns cannot be filed without it.
Compile Quarterly Data
Gather all payment records, deductee PAN details, challan receipts (BSR code, serial number, date, amount), and nature of payment codes. Verify challan details against TRACES payment history.
Prepare Return in RPU Utility
Download the Return Preparation Utility (RPU) from NSDL Protean portal. Fill deductor details, challan details, and deductee/payee details. Validate using the File Validation Utility (FVU) to generate the .FVU file.
Upload on Income Tax Portal
Log in to incometax.gov.in with TAN credentials. Navigate to e-File → Income Tax Forms → TDS/TCS Returns. Select the correct form (24Q or 26Q), upload the FVU file, and submit using DSC or EVC.
Receive PRN Acknowledgement
After successful upload, the portal generates a Provisional Receipt Number (PRN). Save this as official proof of filing. The return status updates on TRACES within 24–48 hours.
Issue Form 16 / 16A to Deductees
Download Form 16 Part A (salary) from TRACES after Q4 filing. Generate and issue Form 16A for non-salary deductions within 15 days of the return due date. Deductees need these to file their own ITR accurately.
Form 16 and Form 16A — TDS Certificates
Mandatory to issue after every TDS return filing — under Section 203 of the Income Tax Act
Filing the return is only half the job. After each quarterly TDS return, you must issue TDS certificates to the deductees. A Jaipur-based IT firm with 30 employees that correctly files Form 24Q but fails to issue Form 16 by 15 June puts every employee at risk of ITR filing errors and delayed refunds — and faces penalties under Section 272A(2)(g) at Rs. 100 per day of default.
| Certificate | For | Covers | Issued By | Due Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Form 16 | Salaried employees | Salary TDS — Form 24Q | Employer | 15 June (after FY end) |
| Form 16A | Non-salary payees (contractors, vendors, landlords) | Non-salary TDS — Form 26Q | Deductor | 15 days from return due date |
| Form 16B | Property seller | Property TDS — Form 26QB | Buyer | 15 days from 26QB due date |
| Form 16C | Landlord (for individual tenant TDS) | Rent TDS — Form 26QC | Tenant | 15 days from 26QC due date |
Form 16 Part A vs Part B: Form 16 has two parts. Part A is downloaded from TRACES and shows TDS amounts, challan details, and the employer's TAN. Part B is prepared by the employer and shows salary breakup, allowances, deductions, and the final tax computation. Both parts together make the complete Form 16 that employees need for ITR filing.
Penalties for TDS Non-Compliance — With Sections
Section 234E (daily fee) + Section 201(1A) (interest) + Section 271H (penalty) + prosecution for serious defaults
| Default | Section | Consequence |
|---|---|---|
| Late filing of TDS return | Sec 234E | Rs. 200 per day from due date until filing — capped at total TDS amount |
| Non-filing or incorrect TDS return | Sec 271H | Penalty Rs. 10,000 to Rs. 1,00,000 — at AO's discretion (in addition to 234E) |
| Late deposit of deducted TDS | Sec 201(1A) | Interest at 1.5% per month from date of deduction to date of payment |
| Failure to deduct TDS at all | Sec 201(1A) | Interest at 1% per month from date of deductibility to payment date |
| TDS deducted but not deposited | Sec 276B | Prosecution — 3 months to 7 years imprisonment with fine |
| Treating deductee as assessee-in-default | Sec 201(1) | Deductor made liable for unpaid TDS + interest + penalty |
| Disallowance of expense (if TDS not deducted) | Sec 40(a)(ia) | 30% of payment disallowed as business expense — increases your taxable income |
| Late / non-issuance of Form 16 / 16A | Sec 272A(2)(g) | Rs. 100 per day of default per certificate |
| Wrong PAN or incorrect details in return | Sec 271H | Penalty Rs. 10,000 to Rs. 1,00,000 even if filed on time |
Section 40(a)(ia) — The hidden cost of missing TDS: If your business pays professional fees, contractor charges, or rent without deducting TDS, 30% of that entire payment gets disallowed as a business expense during income tax assessment. On a Rs. 10 lakh annual professional fee payment, that means Rs. 3 lakh added back to your taxable profit — costing significantly more than the TDS itself.
Why Choose Cess Associates for TDS Return Filing?
Zero Late Fee Record — Proactive Calendar Management
We track all four quarterly deadlines for every client and send document checklists 15 days before each due date. A Rs. 200/day penalty sounds small — but 90 days late on a Rs. 2 lakh TDS means Rs. 18,000 gone. We prevent that.
PAN Verification & Challan Reconciliation
The most common cause of TDS notices is wrong PAN or challan mismatches. We cross-verify each deductee PAN and reconcile every challan on TRACES before filing. This prevents 271H penalty notices before they happen.
Form 16 / 16A Issuance — On Time, Every Year
We generate and distribute Form 16 Part A from TRACES and prepare Part B salary computations for all employees. Form 16A for contractors and vendors is dispatched within 10 days of the return due date — no delays that affect your vendors' ITR filing.
Correction Statements & Notice Response
If you receive a TDS demand notice or need to file a correction statement (for challan mismatch, wrong PAN, or rate errors), we handle it directly on TRACES and the income tax portal — fast resolution, no panic.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q4 TDS Return Due 31 May 2026 — Don't Let Rs. 200/Day Accumulate
Send us your challan details and deductee list — we'll prepare, validate, and file your return on time. Form 16 / 16A issuance included.