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Form 26Q – TDS Return for Non-Salary Payments to Residents | NDS Avla

Form 26Q – Quarterly TDS Return for Non-Salary Payments to Residents

Complete Form 26Q Filing for Contractors, Rent, Professional Fees, Interest & All Non-Salary TDS

Form 26Q is the quarterly TDS return filed by deductors for reporting TDS deducted on all non-salary payments to resident Indians. This is the most widely used TDS return form — covering payments under Section 194A (interest), 194B (lottery/game winnings), 194C (contractors and sub-contractors), 194D (insurance commission), 194G (lottery ticket commission), 194H (commission and brokerage), 194I (rent), 194J (professional and technical fees), 194K (mutual fund income), 194LA (compensation on compulsory acquisition), 194Q (purchase of goods above ₹50 lakh), and many other sections applicable to resident payees.

The volume of transactions in Form 26Q can range from a handful for small businesses to thousands for large corporates with extensive vendor networks. Accuracy in reporting — correct PAN, correct section, correct TDS rate, and correct challan matching — determines whether deductees receive proper Form 26AS/AIS credit for TDS. Our team handles complete Form 26Q preparation and filing, along with TDS return filing across all forms and TDS return preparation services.

Key Sections Reported in Form 26Q

SectionPayment TypeThresholdTDS Rate
194AInterest (other than on securities)₹40,000/yr (banks); ₹5,000 (others)10%
194CPayment to contractors / sub-contractors₹30,000 per contract / ₹1,00,000 aggregate1% (Individual/HUF); 2% (others)
194HCommission and brokerage₹15,000 per year5%
194I(a)Rent — plant, machinery, equipment₹2,40,000 per year2%
194I(b)Rent — land, building, furniture₹2,40,000 per year10%
194JProfessional/technical fees, royalty, director fees₹30,000 per year10% (professional); 2% (technical)
194QPurchase of goods from resident₹50,00,000 per year0.1%

Our Form 26Q Services

Complete Form 26Q Preparation

Data collection from accounts, verification of all non-salary transactions attracting TDS, PAN validation of payees, section code assignment, and complete FVU file preparation for quarterly filing.

Section Identification Advisory

Advisory on which TDS section applies to each payment — distinguishing 194C vs. 194J for technical services, 194H vs. 194J for agency agreements, and 194I vs. 194IA for property-related payments.

Lower Deduction Certificate Compliance

Incorporation of lower TDS certificates obtained by payees under Section 197 into Form 26Q — ensuring the reduced rate is correctly applied and the certificate details are reported in the return.

High Volume Transaction Handling

Efficient preparation of Form 26Q for large deductors with hundreds or thousands of vendor transactions — using automated data extraction from accounting software and batch validation.

Challan Reconciliation

Matching each payment challan (ITNS 281) to the correct deductions in Form 26Q — reconciling multiple challans across months within the quarter to ensure zero challan mismatch errors.

Corrections & Demand Response

Correction return filing for errors in previously filed Form 26Q — PAN corrections, section code changes, amount corrections — and response to Section 200A/201 demand notices.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between Section 194C and Section 194J for TDS?
Section 194C covers payments for "work" (including advertising, broadcasting, catering, manufacturing to order, transport) at 1% (individual/HUF) or 2% (others). Section 194J covers fees for professional services (legal, medical, engineering, accounting, architectural), technical services, royalty, and director fees at 10% (professionals) or 2% (technical services post 2020 amendment). The distinction matters because payments to many service providers (IT companies, management consultants, HR agencies) may fall under either section depending on the nature of service. Incorrectly applying 194C instead of 194J results in short-deduction demands.
Does Form 26Q need to be filed if no TDS was deducted in the quarter?
If a deductor has a TAN and made payments in the quarter that were below the TDS threshold, technically no TDS was deductible and the deductor may file a "nil return." However, the TRACES system requires deductors to actively mark the quarter as nil using the online nil return filing option. Simply not filing is treated as a late filing default and attracts Section 234E fees. Deductors who have a TAN but genuinely made no payments at all in the quarter should file a nil return within the due date to avoid being classified as defaulters.
What is Section 194Q TDS on purchase of goods?
Section 194Q (effective July 1, 2021) requires a buyer to deduct TDS at 0.1% on purchase of goods from a resident seller if the buyer's turnover exceeds ₹10 crore in the preceding year and the total purchase from the seller exceeds ₹50 lakh in the financial year. This TDS is reported in Form 26Q under Section 194Q. Note that Section 194Q and Section 206C(1H) (TCS on sale of goods) are mutually exclusive — if TDS under 194Q is applicable, the seller is exempt from collecting TCS. Section 194Q does not apply to imported goods or to transactions where GST is charged as a tax collected by the seller.
What happens if TDS is deducted but not deposited within the due date?
If TDS is deducted but deposited late (after the 7th of the following month), interest under Section 201(1A) accrues at 1.5% per month from the date of deduction to the date of deposit. This interest is mandatory and cannot be waived. Additionally, disallowance of the underlying expense under Section 40(a)(ia) applies in the deductor's income tax assessment for amounts where TDS was not deducted, or deducted but not deposited by the year-end. The combination of interest, disallowance, and Section 234E late filing fee makes timely TDS deposit and return filing critical for businesses.

Need Complete Form 26Q TDS Compliance? We Handle Every Section.

Our team manages quarterly Form 26Q preparation and filing for all non-salary payments — from contractors to professionals to rent — ensuring accurate section coding, challan matching, and deductee PAN verification.

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F.A.Q.

It includes all yearly requirements such as filings, actuarial valuation, audits, and maintaining proper records.

Yes, regular compliance is required to maintain approval and tax benefits.

It helps determine the exact gratuity liability and required funding for the trust.

 

Yes, trusts must file necessary returns and maintain financial records as per regulations.

Non-compliance can lead to penalties, loss of tax benefits, or cancellation of approval.

Trustees and the employer are responsible for ensuring proper compliance.