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TDS and Tax Liability in India – Form 26AS Reconciliation, TDS Refund Claim and New Tax Regime Computation – N D Savla & Associates
Income Tax

TDS and Tax Liability in India –
Form 26AS Reconciliation, TDS Refund Claim & New Tax Regime Computation

TDS is only an advance collection — the actual tax liability India depends on total income, all deductions, and the chosen tax regime. A gap almost always exists between the two, and accurate Form 26AS reconciliation is the only way to close it correctly — generating either a TDS refund claim or a self-assessment shortfall payment.

What Is TDS and How Does It Differ From Tax Liability?

TDS is tax deducted at source by the payer on specified payments — salary, rent, professional fees, interest, and commission. Tax liability, by contrast, is the final tax the taxpayer owes on total annual income after all deductions. The relationship between them is one of advance payment versus final settlement — TDS is collected transaction by transaction, while tax liability is computed annually across all five income heads.

Each TDS section has its own rate and threshold. Section 192 covers salary, Section 194J covers professional fees, Sections 194I and 194IB cover rent, and Section 195 covers NRI payments. The deducted amount appears in the deductee's Form 26AS — which the taxpayer then reconciles against actual tax liability India at ITR filing. Chapter VI-A deductions under the old regime, or lower slab rates under the new regime, determine the final liability for the year.

N D Savla & Associates handles complete TDS and tax liability computation for salaried individuals, professionals, businesses, and NRIs. Our service connects with our TDS Return Filing, Income Tax E-Filing, Lower Tax Deduction Certificate, and Income Tax Notice services.

Key Numbers Every Taxpayer Should Know

₹75,000
Standard deduction under new regime (FY 2024-25 onwards)
3–6 Months
TDS refund claim processing after complete ITR filing
6% p.a.
Section 244A interest on delayed refunds (after 3 months)
TDS on one income head never equals total tax liability: Actual tax liability India is computed after aggregating income under all five heads — salary, house property, business or profession, capital gains, and other sources. Each deductor only deducts on their specific payment, so the TDS vs tax liability gap is almost universal. This gap is resolved at ITR filing — either as a TDS refund claim or as a self-assessment shortfall.

TDS vs Tax Liability — The Two Year-End Scenarios

Every taxpayer falls into one of two scenarios at year-end. Excess TDS generates a refund claim; a TDS shortfall requires additional self-assessment payment. Accurate Form 26AS reconciliation decides which scenario applies — and often surfaces mismatches that must be corrected before submission.

Scenario 1 — Excess TDS

When TDS Exceeds Actual Tax Liability India

Excess TDS happens when the deductor applies a rate higher than the taxpayer's effective tax rate. A professional with substantial business expense claims may have 10% TDS deducted under Section 194J but only 4% effective tax liability. The gap generates a refund — processed within 3 to 6 months of a complete ITR filing, with Section 244A interest at 6% per annum applying after the first three months.

Scenario 2 — Shortfall

When TDS Falls Short of Tax Liability

A shortfall happens when total tax liability exceeds total TDS credited in Form 26AS. This commonly affects taxpayers with multiple income sources — salary plus freelance income plus capital gains. Each deductor deducts only on their payment, but liability aggregates every head. The shortfall must be paid as self-assessment tax before filing, with Section 234B and 234C interest applying where advance tax was not paid in time.

TDS Refund Claim — How the Process Works

Step 1

Report Income & TDS in the Annual ITR

The taxpayer reports total income under all five heads, total TDS credited per Form 26AS, and actual tax liability India under the chosen regime. If TDS exceeds liability, the system computes the refund amount automatically — no separate application is required.

Step 2

PAN-Aadhaar Linking & Bank Pre-Validation

A valid TDS refund claim requires a PAN linked with Aadhaar — an unlinked PAN blocks the refund entirely. The bank account must be pre-validated on the income tax portal. Our Income Tax E-Filing service verifies PAN-Aadhaar linking and bank pre-validation before every submission.

Step 3

Refund Credit & Section 244A Interest

The refund credits to the pre-validated bank account within 3 to 6 months of ITR filing. Section 244A interest at 6% per annum applies where the refund is not processed within three months of return filing — compensating the taxpayer for the delay automatically.

Latest Rules Affecting TDS and Tax Liability in India

Recent amendments have significantly changed how TDS and tax liability interact. Four developments shape every TDS vs tax liability outcome today — and every taxpayer must understand them before the next ITR filing.

Default Regime
NTR

New Tax Regime TDS

The new tax regime is the default for individual taxpayers from FY 2023-24. Employers apply new tax regime TDS unless the employee opts for the old regime in writing. Lower slab rates, ₹75,000 standard deduction, but limited Chapter VI-A deductions.

206AB

Section 206AB Higher TDS

Applies to non-filers whose prior-year TDS exceeded ₹50,000. The rate is twice the standard TDS rate or 5%, whichever is greater. Deductors check filer status on the portal before deducting. Regular ITR filing eliminates this exposure.

PAN

PAN-Aadhaar Linking

An unlinked PAN becomes inoperative, triggering TDS at 20% or the standard rate (whichever is higher) under Section 206AA. An inoperative PAN also blocks every TDS refund claim until linking is restored through the portal.

26AS

Form 26AS vs AIS & TIS

Form 26AS shows TDS credited; the Annual Information Statement (AIS) covers broader financial transactions; TIS provides a consolidated view. Mismatches between them and the ITR trigger Section 143(1)(a) adjustment notices.

!

Section 143(1)(a) notices are triggered automatically by data mismatches: The Income Tax Department's systems cross-check every ITR against Form 26AS, AIS, and TIS. Any mismatch — even an accidental one — generates a Section 143(1)(a) adjustment notice proposing additional tax or reduced refund. Therefore, reconciliation before filing is far cheaper than responding after a notice is received.

Common TDS and Tax Liability Scenarios

Different taxpayer categories face different TDS and tax liability patterns. Understanding the applicable scenario lets the taxpayer plan deductions, advance tax, and regime choice accurately — and decide whether a Lower TDS Certificate or advance tax payments would deliver better cash-flow outcomes.

Salaried

Salaried Employees — Monthly TDS & Annual Reconciliation

TDS deducted every month under Section 192, with the employer computing annual liability and dividing it into monthly deductions via Form 24Q. Employees must declare investments, HRA claims, and home-loan interest to the employer in April — otherwise excess TDS is deducted, forcing a year-end refund claim instead of proper monthly cash flow.

Professional

Professionals & Freelancers — Section 194J Multiple Clients

10% TDS under Section 194J on fees above ₹30,000 per contract. Freelancers and consultants serving multiple clients face aggregate TDS frequently exceeding actual tax liability India once business expenses are applied. Professionals with consistent excess TDS should apply for a Lower Tax Deduction Certificate — keeping capital in hand throughout the year instead of waiting for refund.

Property

Property Transactions — Sections 194IA & 195

Resident buyers deduct 1% TDS under Section 194IA on purchases above ₹50 lakh (Form 26QB, Form 16B) — covered by our TDS on Purchase of Property service. NRI sellers face Section 195 TDS at 20%+ on full sale value, though their actual tax liability India is usually far lower after indexation and Section 54 exemptions. Our NRI Tax Filing team coordinates lower-TDS applications and ITR filing.

Rent

Rent Payers — Sections 194I & 194IB

Businesses paying rent above ₹2.4 lakh per annum deduct 10% TDS under Section 194I. Individual tenants paying rent above ₹50,000 per month deduct 2% under Section 194IB — revised from 5% with effect from October 2024. Our TDS on Rent service covers both landlord and tenant compliance.

How to Compute Actual Tax Liability India Correctly

The correct computation of actual tax liability India prevents both overpayment and underpayment. Every taxpayer must follow a structured three-step approach before filing the ITR — aggregating income, applying deductions and choosing the regime, then reconciling against TDS already credited.

The Three-Step Computation — From Income Heads to Final Reconciliation

1

Aggregate All Five Income Heads: Salary, house property, business or profession, capital gains, and other sources. Set off eligible losses against income heads, then arrive at gross total income. TDS may have been deducted on some heads and not others — this is where the TDS vs tax liability gap first appears.

2

Apply Deductions & Choose the Tax Regime: Compute Chapter VI-A deductions — Section 80C for investments, 80D for insurance, 80G for donations, and others. Then compute tax under both old and new regimes. Choose the regime with lower actual tax liability India for that year. The choice is annual for salaried employees but has once-per-lifetime limitations for business income in some cases.

3

Final Reconciliation Against TDS: Subtract total TDS credit per Form 26AS and advance tax paid from computed tax liability. If negative, file a TDS refund claim through the ITR. If positive, pay the balance as self-assessment tax before submitting the return. This step closes the TDS vs tax liability loop for the year.

Framework outcome: A disciplined three-step computation eliminates both overpayment (unnecessary refund claims tying up cash) and underpayment (Section 234B/234C interest). Our Income Tax E-Filing team runs the old-vs-new regime comparison every year to ensure the taxpayer never pays more than required.

Our TDS & Tax Liability Services at N D Savla & Associates

Complete TDS and tax liability services — Form 26AS reconciliation with AIS, actual tax liability India computation under both regimes, TDS refund claim filing, new tax regime TDS planning, Section 206AB higher TDS advisory, and notice response for salaried individuals, professionals, businesses, and NRIs.

01

Form 26AS & AIS Reconciliation + ITR Filing

We reconcile Form 26AS, AIS, and TIS against the taxpayer's records before every ITR submission — catching deductor errors, duplicate credits, and missing entries that otherwise trigger Section 143(1)(a) notices. Our Income Tax E-Filing service then files the return with complete TDS credit claimed, PAN-Aadhaar status verified, and bank account pre-validated for refund.
02

TDS Refund Claim Processing & Lower TDS Certificates

For taxpayers with consistent excess TDS — particularly professionals, freelancers, and NRIs — we process refund claims end-to-end. Where the pattern is recurring, we apply for a Lower Tax Deduction Certificate under Section 197, authorising deduction at a reduced rate prospectively. This keeps capital in the taxpayer's hands instead of tied up with the department waiting for refund.
03

New Tax Regime vs Old Regime Planning & Advance Tax Advisory

We compute tax liability under both regimes every year, factoring in Chapter VI-A deductions, HRA, home-loan interest, and the ₹75,000 standard deduction. For taxpayers with multiple income sources, we build quarterly advance tax schedules to avoid Section 234B and 234C interest. Regime choice is revisited annually for salaried employees to ensure the taxpayer never pays more than required.
04

Section 206AB, PAN-Aadhaar & Notice Response

We verify Section 206AB non-filer status before high-value payments and advise deductors on higher TDS application. For taxpayers, we ensure PAN-Aadhaar linking is current so refunds are not blocked. Where notices arrive — Section 143(1)(a) mismatches, TDS credit denials, or demand notices — our Income Tax Notice team prepares the complete response with supporting reconciliation and documentation.

Complete TDS & Tax Liability Services — Form 26AS Reconciliation, TDS Refund Claim, New Tax Regime Planning & Notice Response.

Form 26AS and AIS reconciliation, actual tax liability India computation under both regimes, TDS refund claim filing, new tax regime TDS planning, Section 206AB higher TDS advisory, advance tax planning, and notice response — for salaried individuals, professionals, businesses, and NRIs.

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F.A.Q.

TDS is tax deducted at source by the payer on specific payments — salary, professional fees, rent, interest, or commission. Actual tax liability India is the total tax owed on total annual income after all deductions and the chosen regime. The TDS vs tax liability gap is reconciled at ITR filing. If TDS exceeds liability, the taxpayer files a TDS refund claim. Our tax advisory handles the complete TDS and tax liability computation.

Form 26AS reconciliation matches the TDS credited in Form 26AS against TDS claimed in the ITR. The taxpayer also checks the Annual Information Statement (AIS) for any additional transactions. Any mismatch between Form 26AS, AIS, and ITR triggers a Section 143(1)(a) notice. Our Form 26AS reconciliation service catches mismatches before submission — preventing rejections and TDS refund claim delays.

A TDS refund claim is filed through the annual ITR on the income tax portal. The taxpayer reports total income, total TDS as per Form 26AS, and actual tax liability India. If TDS exceeds liability, the system computes the refund amount automatically. The refund credits to the pre-validated bank account within 3 to 6 months. Our Income Tax E-Filing service processes every TDS refund claim with accuracy.

Section 206AB higher TDS applies to taxpayers who did not file ITRs for the specified relevant preceding period when their prior TDS exceeded ₹50,000. The higher rate is twice the standard TDS rate or 5%, whichever is greater. The deductor checks non-filer status on the income tax portal before deducting. Therefore, regular ITR filing directly reduces Section 206AB higher TDS exposure on future payments.

The new tax regime is the default for salaried employees from FY 2023-24. Employers compute new tax regime TDS automatically unless the employee opts for the old regime in writing at the start of the year. The new regime has lower slab rates but limited Chapter VI-A deductions. The standard deduction for salary income is ₹75,000 from FY 2024-25. Employees should compute liability under both regimes before selecting.

If TDS is less than actual tax liability India, the shortfall must be paid as self-assessment tax before filing the ITR. Interest under Section 234B applies if 90% of the liability was not paid through TDS and advance tax by year-end. Section 234C interest applies on quarterly advance tax shortfall. Therefore, taxpayers with multiple income sources should pay advance tax proactively and reconcile the TDS vs tax liability position every quarter.

Form 26AS reconciliation prevents TDS credit denial by the Income Tax Department. It matches the taxpayer’s TDS claim against the deductor’s deposit records. Any mismatch reduces the refund or creates additional tax demand through a Section 143(1)(a) notice. Furthermore, AIS reconciliation catches income the taxpayer may have missed. Our team handles both reconciliations as part of every Income Tax E-Filing engagement.