Every time a salary lands in your bank account, the number is smaller than what your employment contract says. Every time a bank pays interest on a fixed deposit, it hands you a little less than the gross amount credited. Every time a company distributes dividends to a foreign investor, a slice goes to the government before it ever leaves the country.

That slice is withholding tax. It is one of the oldest and most reliable tools in a government's revenue arsenal — and understanding how it works explains a lot about how tax collection actually functions in practice, both domestically and across borders.

This article walks you through the mechanics, the rationale, India's TDS framework, the cross-border dimension, and how to make sure you are getting credit for every rupee withheld on your behalf.

What Is Withholding Tax?

Withholding Tax A tax deducted at source from income by the payer before payment reaches the recipient, which is then remitted directly to the government on the recipient's behalf.

The name says exactly what it is: the payer withholds a portion of what they owe you and sends it to the tax authority rather than handing you the full amount. You receive the net amount. The withheld portion is treated as a tax advance — a prepayment of your eventual tax liability for the year.

Think of your salary payslip. Your employer knows your gross salary — say ₹80,000 per month. But the amount credited to your account is ₹71,000. The difference is not a mistake and it is not a service fee. Your employer has calculated the estimated income tax on your annual salary, divided it across twelve months, and deposited that amount directly to the Income Tax Department before paying you. You are getting paid net of tax. That is withholding in its simplest form.

The same principle applies when a bank pays interest on a fixed deposit, when a company distributes dividends, when a business pays a contractor, or when a foreign investor receives royalties from an Indian company. In every case, the deductor (the payer) takes responsibility for calculating, deducting, and depositing the tax. The deductee (the payee) receives the net amount and gets a tax credit for what was withheld.

Withholding Tax, TDS, and PAYE — Same Concept, Different Names

In India, withholding tax on domestic income is called TDS (Tax Deducted at Source) and TCS (Tax Collected at Source). In the UK, the employer equivalent is called PAYE (Pay As You Earn). In the US, it is simply called federal income tax withholding. Globally, the cross-border version is usually called withholding tax or WHT. The mechanics are the same across all these systems.

How Withholding Tax Works

Withholding tax inserts a third party — the payer — into the tax collection process. Instead of waiting for the taxpayer to self-report and pay at year-end, the government collects the revenue at the moment income is earned or paid. This is a deliberate design choice, not an administrative convenience.

The flow of a withholding tax transaction works like this:

1

Income becomes payable

The deductor (employer, bank, company, or platform) owes income to the deductee — a salary, interest payment, dividend, contractor fee, or royalty.

2

Deductor calculates tax at the applicable rate

The payer determines the withholding rate — which depends on the type of income, the deductee's tax status (resident or non-resident), and any applicable treaty provisions. The calculation is done before the payment is made.

3

Deductor pays the net amount to the deductee

The deductee receives gross income minus the withheld amount. For example, ₹50,000 in contractor fees minus 10% TDS means the contractor receives ₹45,000.

4

Deductor deposits the tax with the government

The withheld amount is remitted to the relevant tax authority by the due date — typically the 7th of the following month under India's TDS rules. Late deposits attract interest at 1.5% per month.

5

Deductor files a TDS return and issues Form 16 / 16A

The deductor reports all deductions in quarterly TDS returns (Form 24Q for salary, 26Q for non-salary). The deductee receives a TDS certificate — Form 16 for salary income, Form 16A for other income — as proof of deduction.

6

Deductee claims the credit when filing ITR

The withheld tax shows up in the deductee's Form 26AS (Annual Tax Statement) and AIS (Annual Information Statement). When the deductee files their income tax return, this amount is credited against their final tax liability. If TDS exceeds the actual tax due, a refund is issued.

Why does the government bother with this multi-step process rather than just waiting for year-end self-assessment? Because year-end self-assessment requires trust, and governments do not build revenue systems on trust alone. Withholding ensures collection happens the moment income is created — and because the legal obligation falls on the deductor (a business or institution with assets), the government has a reliable, high-compliance counterparty rather than millions of individual taxpayers.

Types of Income Subject to Withholding

Not all income is subject to withholding. Generally, withholding applies to income that flows from an identifiable payer to a specific payee and where the payer can be held legally accountable. Capital gains from selling shares in the open market, for example, are not subject to TDS because there is no single deductor — the stock exchange cannot identify the buyer and seller in advance. That income must be self-reported.

Here is how common income types compare across key withholding regimes:

Income Type India TDS Rate (Resident) India TDS Rate (Non-Resident) Key Section
Salary Per slab rates (estimated annually) Per slab rates Section 192
Interest on FD / bank 10% (if PAN furnished) 30% + surcharge + cess Section 194A
Dividends 10% (above ₹5,000/year) 20% + surcharge + cess Section 194
Contractor / professional fees 2% (contracts), 10% (professionals) 10–40% depending on nature Sections 194C / 194J
Rent (above ₹50,000/month) 5% (individuals), 10% (others) 30% Sections 194I / 194IB
Royalties and fees for technical services 10% 10–25% (or treaty rate) Section 194J / 195
Winnings from lotteries / games 30% 30% Section 194B
No PAN = Higher TDS

If you fail to furnish your PAN to the deductor, TDS is deducted at 20% or the applicable rate, whichever is higher — regardless of what the normal rate would be. Providing your PAN is not optional; it is a direct financial interest. The same principle applies to non-residents who must provide their Tax Identification Number (TIN) or risk the maximum rate.

TDS: India's Withholding Tax System

India's Tax Deducted at Source (TDS) framework is one of the most comprehensive withholding systems in the world. Spread across Sections 192 to 196D of the Income Tax Act 1961, it covers virtually every significant income flow in the economy — from employer-employee salary payments to e-commerce operators paying sellers.

The system operates through three foundational rules:

Threshold-based deduction: TDS is not triggered unless the payment crosses a specified threshold. Interest on a bank fixed deposit, for example, attracts TDS only when the annual interest exceeds ₹40,000 (₹50,000 for senior citizens). Below that, you receive the full amount. This prevents the compliance burden from crushing small transactions while ensuring large ones are captured.

Deductor liability: The legal obligation rests with the deductor, not the deductee. If an employer fails to deduct TDS from salary and the employee then defaults on tax, the employer faces interest, penalties, and prosecution — not just the employee. This creates strong institutional incentives for compliance.

Form 26AS as the reconciliation backbone: Every TDS deduction made against your PAN is visible in Form 26AS, which you can access through the income tax portal. When you file your ITR, the pre-filled data pulls from 26AS. If the deductor has correctly deposited the tax, it appears as a credit against your liability automatically. If it does not appear, you need to follow up with the deductor before filing.

"TDS is not a tax in itself — it is an advance collection mechanism. Every rupee deducted is a credit against your actual tax liability, not an additional charge."

Lower or Nil Deduction Certificates

If your estimated tax liability for the year is lower than what standard TDS rates would produce, you can apply to the Assessing Officer for a Lower Deduction Certificate under Section 197. Once issued, you provide this certificate to every deductor, who then deducts at the lower rate specified in the certificate rather than the standard rate.

This is particularly useful for individuals who have significant business losses, carry-forward losses from previous years, or deductions that substantially reduce their effective tax rate. Without a certificate, you would receive excessive TDS refunds at year-end — which ties up your cash unnecessarily until the refund processes.

Worked Example: TDS on Salary and Interest

Let us walk through a realistic scenario to see how TDS operates in practice and how it nets against final tax liability.

The situation: Priya is a salaried employee earning ₹14,40,000 per year (₹1,20,000/month). She also has a fixed deposit with SBI earning ₹68,000 in interest annually. She has invested ₹1,50,000 in ELSS mutual funds under Section 80C.

Priya's TDS and Tax Liability — FY 2025-26 (New Tax Regime)
Gross Income Computation
Salary income (annual)₹14,40,000
Interest income (FD)₹68,000
Gross Total Income₹15,08,000
Deductions (New Regime)
Standard deduction (salary)− ₹75,000
Net Taxable Income₹14,33,000
Tax on ₹14,33,000 (New Regime Slabs)
₹0 – ₹3,00,000 @ 0%₹0
₹3,00,001 – ₹7,00,000 @ 5%₹20,000
₹7,00,001 – ₹10,00,000 @ 10%₹30,000
₹10,00,001 – ₹12,00,000 @ 15%₹30,000
₹12,00,001 – ₹14,33,000 @ 20%₹46,600
Tax before cess₹1,26,600
Health & Education Cess @ 4%₹5,064
Total Tax Liability₹1,31,664
TDS Already Deducted
TDS by employer (Sec 192)₹1,19,000
TDS by SBI on FD interest @ 10% of ₹68,000 (Sec 194A)₹6,800
Total TDS Credit₹1,25,800
Balance Tax Payable (Self-Assessment)₹5,864

Priya pays ₹5,864 as self-assessment tax when filing her ITR. Without TDS, she would have had to pay the full ₹1,31,664 at once — and the government would have had no certainty of receiving it. The system works because ₹1,25,800 was already collected throughout the year before Priya filed a single return.

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Always Check Form 26AS Before Filing ITR

If any TDS deducted by your employer or bank does not appear in Form 26AS, it means the deductor has not yet deposited it or has quoted the wrong PAN. You cannot claim credit for TDS that has not been deposited. Contact the deductor immediately and ask them to correct it. Filing ITR with unmatched TDS credits can trigger a demand notice.

Withholding Tax on Cross-Border Payments

When money flows across borders — dividends from an Indian company to a US investor, royalties from a German licensee to an Indian rights-holder, interest from an Indian bond to a Singapore fund — withholding tax becomes the primary collection tool for the source country.

The logic is straightforward: once the foreign investor receives the money, the source country has very limited ability to enforce its tax laws. The investor is outside its jurisdiction. So instead of relying on the investor to voluntarily file a tax return in India, India requires the Indian company making the payment to withhold tax before remitting anything abroad. The burden of compliance falls entirely on the domestic entity, which can be held accountable.

Standard Rates Under Indian Domestic Law

Under Section 195 of the Income Tax Act, any person making a payment to a non-resident that constitutes "income chargeable to tax in India" must withhold tax. The rates without any treaty protection are:

Payment Type to Non-Resident Base Withholding Rate Effective Rate (with 4% cess)
Dividends 20% ~20.8%
Interest 20% ~20.8%
Royalties 20% ~20.8%
Fees for technical services (FTS) 20% ~20.8%
Long-term capital gains (listed shares, post-budget 2024) 12.5% ~13%
Short-term capital gains (listed shares, STT paid) 20% ~20.8%

These statutory rates are the maximum. In practice, most significant cross-border payments qualify for reduced rates under a Double Tax Avoidance Agreement (DTAA) — and this is where tax planning for international flows genuinely matters.

Double Taxation Treaties and Reduced Rates

The problem with withholding tax in a cross-border context is double taxation. An Indian company pays dividends to a US shareholder. India withholds 20%. The US then taxes the same dividend again as ordinary income. The shareholder has effectively been taxed twice on the same income — once in India at source, once in the US at residence.

Double Taxation Avoidance Agreements (DTAAs) — called tax treaties in most countries — are bilateral agreements that allocate taxing rights between two countries and set maximum withholding rates. India has signed DTAAs with over 90 countries. For most major trading and investment relationships, treaty rates are significantly lower than domestic rates.

Country Treaty Dividend Rate Treaty Interest Rate Treaty Royalty Rate
United States 15% (10% in some cases) 15% 15%
United Kingdom 15% 15% 15%
Singapore 15% 15% 10%
Mauritius 5–15% 7.5% 15%
Netherlands 10% 10% 10%
Germany 10% 10% 10%

To claim a treaty rate, the non-resident must provide a Tax Residency Certificate (TRC) from their home country's tax authority — proof that they are genuinely tax resident in the treaty country. Since 2013, Indian rules also require a Form 10F filing if the TRC does not contain specific mandatory information. Without both documents, the deductor must apply the domestic rate.

Cross-Border Scenario — US Investor Receiving Dividends from an Indian Company

Without treaty protection: An Indian company declares ₹10,00,000 in dividends to its US parent. The Indian company withholds 20% (₹2,00,000), remitting ₹8,00,000. The parent then reports the gross ₹10,00,000 as income in the US, taking a foreign tax credit for the ₹2,00,000 paid in India.

With India-US DTAA (Article 10): The Indian company withholds 15% (₹1,50,000), remitting ₹8,50,000. The parent still claims a foreign tax credit. The difference is ₹50,000 less withheld — and because the US gives credit for foreign taxes, both countries end up with a share and the investor avoids true double taxation.

Key takeaway: The treaty does not eliminate Indian withholding tax — it reduces it to the agreed rate. The investor's home country then credits that withholding against their domestic liability, preventing the same income from being fully taxed twice.

How to Claim Withholding Tax Credits

Withholding tax is a prepayment, not a final tax. Every amount withheld must be credited against your actual tax liability — and if more was withheld than you owe, you are entitled to a refund. But this does not happen automatically unless you take the right steps.

For Domestic TDS (India)

The credit mechanism is built into the ITR filing process. When you file your income tax return:

  1. All TDS credited to your PAN appears in your Form 26AS and Annual Information Statement (AIS).
  2. The ITR pre-fill pulls this data automatically when filing online.
  3. You report your gross income (not net of TDS) — because TDS does not reduce income, it offsets your tax liability.
  4. The system calculates your total tax, subtracts TDS credits, and either shows a balance payable or a refund due.
  5. If a refund is due, it is processed (typically 15–45 days after ITR verification) and credited to your bank account.

The most common error taxpayers make is reporting income net of TDS. If your bank credited ₹57,000 after deducting ₹3,000 TDS on ₹60,000 interest, you must report ₹60,000 as income — not ₹57,000. The ₹3,000 will be credited as a tax payment. Reporting ₹57,000 understates your income and creates a discrepancy with Form 26AS that the tax department's systems will catch automatically.

For Foreign Withholding Tax (India Residents with Foreign Income)

If you are an Indian resident receiving income from a foreign country that has deducted withholding tax at source, you can claim a Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) under Rule 128 of the Income Tax Rules. The process requires:

  • Filing Form 67 on the income tax portal, declaring the foreign income and the tax paid abroad
  • Attaching proof of foreign tax paid — a tax certificate from the foreign country or a statement from the foreign bank / company
  • The FTC is limited to the Indian tax attributable to that foreign income — it cannot produce a net benefit beyond eliminating double taxation
Form 67 Must Be Filed Before or With Your ITR

A common and costly mistake: Indian residents with foreign dividend or interest income forget to file Form 67 along with their ITR. If you file the ITR and then try to claim the FTC in a revised return, the tax department often disallows it. Form 67 is a mandatory prerequisite for claiming foreign tax credit — not an optional attachment.

Common Myths About Withholding Tax

Withholding tax is one of those topics where persistent misconceptions cost people real money. Here are the most common ones — and why they are wrong.

Myth

TDS is a separate, extra tax on top of income tax. Paying TDS means you have paid your taxes and do not need to file an ITR.

Reality

TDS is a prepayment of income tax — not an additional levy. You still need to file an ITR to compute actual liability, claim the TDS credit, and settle any balance. Filing is mandatory if your gross income exceeds the basic exemption limit, regardless of TDS already paid.

Myth

If TDS was deducted at 10% and your tax slab rate is 20%, you owe the difference on that income. So withholding creates extra liability.

Reality

TDS deducted at 10% means only 10% was prepaid — your actual tax on that income is computed at your applicable slab rate. The difference (10% balance) is payable as advance tax or self-assessment tax, but the TDS is fully credited. There is no "extra" tax — just a balance.

Myth

Foreign withholding tax paid on dividends from a US stock is lost money — you cannot get it back.

Reality

Indian residents can claim a Foreign Tax Credit for US withholding tax (typically 25% for NRA withholding, reducible to 15% under the India-US treaty if the proper W-8BEN form is filed). This credit offsets your Indian tax on the same income. File Form 67 along with your ITR and attach proof of tax withheld.

Myth

Withholding tax rates under a DTAA apply automatically — you do not need to do anything to get the lower rate.

Reality

Treaty benefits are not automatic. The non-resident must proactively provide a valid Tax Residency Certificate (TRC), Form 10F (where required), and a declaration of beneficial ownership. Without these documents, the deductor is legally required to apply the higher domestic rate.

Key Takeaways

  • Withholding tax is a prepayment mechanism — tax deducted at source is credited against your final liability, not an additional charge on top of it.
  • The obligation falls on the deductor — employers, banks, and companies are legally responsible for calculating, deducting, and depositing TDS on time. Failure attracts interest and penalties on them, not just you.
  • Always report gross income in your ITR — claim TDS as a credit, not a deduction from income. Reporting net-of-TDS income is a common error that triggers mismatches with Form 26AS.
  • Cross-border withholding rates are governed by domestic law by default — treaty rates require documentation: a valid Tax Residency Certificate and, often, Form 10F. Without these, the domestic (higher) rate applies.
  • Foreign tax credits prevent double taxation — Indian residents can offset foreign withholding against Indian tax on the same income by filing Form 67 alongside their ITR.
  • Lower Deduction Certificates under Section 197 allow taxpayers with low effective tax rates to avoid excessive TDS and unnecessary year-end refund waiting.

Quick Quiz

Four questions to test your understanding of withholding tax. Click an answer to reveal the explanation.

1. Priya's bank deducted ₹4,200 as TDS on her fixed deposit interest of ₹42,000. When she files her ITR, how much income should she report from this FD?

Answer: B. TDS does not reduce the income — it is a tax prepayment. You always report the gross amount (₹42,000) as income, and the ₹4,200 TDS is treated as a tax credit against your final liability. Option A is wrong because reporting ₹37,800 understates income and creates a Form 26AS mismatch. Takeaway: Gross income goes in the income field; TDS goes in the tax credit field — they are different rows in the ITR.

2. Which document must a non-resident provide to an Indian company to claim a reduced withholding tax rate under a DTAA instead of the standard domestic rate?

Answer: C. Treaty benefits require the non-resident to prove they are genuinely tax resident in the treaty country by providing a TRC issued by their home country's tax authority. Form 26AS (A) is an Indian document showing TDS credits — useless for a non-resident making this request. Form 16A (B) is issued by the deductor after the fact. Section 197 certificates (D) are for Indian residents seeking lower rates on domestic income. Takeaway: No TRC = no treaty rate. The deductor is legally obligated to apply the domestic rate if documentation is missing.

3. What is the primary reason governments use withholding tax rather than relying solely on year-end self-assessment?

Answer: C. The core design rationale is compliance assurance. Year-end self-assessment depends on taxpayers voluntarily reporting all income — which historically produces significant evasion, especially for income types with no third-party reporting. Withholding shifts the obligation to the deductor (employer, bank, company) who has assets and can be held legally accountable. Option D is wrong — TDS does not replace ITR filing; it is a prepayment. Takeaway: Withholding works because the obligation falls on institutional payers, not individual taxpayers.

4. An Indian resident receives $3,000 in dividends from US stocks. The US broker withheld 25% tax ($750). When the Indian resident files their ITR, what should they do to avoid being taxed twice on this income?

Answer: C. Indian residents are taxed on their global income, so the $3,000 must be reported in full (converted to INR). To prevent double taxation, they claim a Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) for the $750 withheld in the US — this directly reduces their Indian tax on that income. Form 67 must be filed on the income tax portal before or alongside the ITR. Option A is wrong — omitting foreign income is a violation of Indian tax law. Option B understates income. Option D is unrelated to avoiding Indian tax liability. Takeaway: Foreign income must be reported; foreign tax paid is claimed as a credit via Form 67, not as a deduction.