Rated 4.9/5 by 312+ Chennai clientsZero penalty record across all filings24-hour response · WhatsApp-first supportOffices: Maduravoyal, Nerkundram & Nolambur (upcoming)15+ years of expert tax & compliance consulting500+ active clients across 243 Chennai areasRated 4.9/5 by 312+ Chennai clientsZero penalty record across all filings24-hour response · WhatsApp-first supportOffices: Maduravoyal, Nerkundram & Nolambur (upcoming)15+ years of expert tax & compliance consulting500+ active clients across 243 Chennai areas
Poonamallee · near Poonamallee Bus Terminus · TDS Returns desk

Quarterly TDS Filing · Poonamallee logistics and growing residential Pocket

Quarterly TDS Filing for logistics units around Bangalore Highway (NH-48), Poonamallee — backed by a 15+ year track record

Quarterly TDS Filing for Poonamallee firms under Chennai West (Poonamallee Division) with WhatsApp document intake and same-day filed-acknowledgement delivery. Call 9566-068-468.

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Quick Answer

What are the quarterly due dates for TDS / TCS returns in Poonamallee, Chennai?

Rule 31A and Rule 31AA prescribe — Q1 (Apr-Jun) by 31 July, Q2 (Jul-Sep) by 31 October, Q3 (Oct-Dec) by 31 January, Q4 (Jan-Mar) by 31 May. TCS returns in Form 27EQ are due 15 days earlier in each quarter (15 July / 15 October / 15 January / 15 May). Government deductors filing through book entry follow the same calendar.

Transparent Pricing

Quarterly TDS Filing in Poonamallee — Plans & Pricing

Fixed fees · Zero hidden charges · Call 9566-068-468 for a custom quote.

MonthlyAnnualSave 2 Months
Small deductors
Basic
Quarterly 24Q/26Q on time
₹1,500/quarter

  • 24Q Salary TDS Return Q1-Q4
  • 26Q Non-Salary TDS Return Q1-Q4
  • Challan CIN Matching
  • 27Q NRI / Foreign TDS Return
  • Form 16 for Employees: Up to 5
  • Form 16A for Vendors: Up to 5
  • TRACES Default Correction
  • TDS Notice Demand Reply per year (Add-on)
  • Lower Deduction Certificate Form 13
  • Deductee Count: Up to 10
Most Popular ⭐
Standard
All TDS returns + Form 16/16A
₹3,000/quarter

  • 24Q Salary TDS Return Q1-Q4
  • 26Q Non-Salary TDS Return Q1-Q4
  • Challan CIN Matching
  • 27Q NRI / Foreign TDS Return
  • Form 16 for Employees: Up to 25
  • Form 16A for Vendors: Up to 25
  • TRACES Default Correction
  • TDS Notice Demand Reply per year (Add-on)
  • Lower Deduction Certificate Form 13
  • Deductee Count: Up to 50
Large organisations
Premium
Unlimited + TRACES defaults + 27Q
₹10,000/quarter

  • 24Q Salary TDS Return Q1-Q4
  • 26Q Non-Salary TDS Return Q1-Q4
  • Challan CIN Matching
  • 27Q NRI / Foreign TDS Return
  • Form 16 for Employees: Unlimited
  • Form 16A for Vendors: Unlimited
  • TRACES Default Correction
  • TDS Notice Demand Reply per year (Add-on)
  • Lower Deduction Certificate Form 13
  • Deductee Count: Unlimited

Swipe to see all plans

Prices exclude GST. For enterprise pricing, call 9566-068-468.

Why FilingPro?

Why Poonamallee Clients Choose FilingPro

Expert TDS Returns in Poonamallee — qualified professionals, 15+ years experience, zero-penalty track record.

FVU Validated Before Upload

Each TDS file is FVU-validated end-to-end — challan match, PAN format, section codes, threshold limits, regime declaration. Rejection at the income-tax portal is zero for Poonamallee clients.

Form 16 by 15 June Every Year

For Poonamallee employers, Form 16 Part A + Part B is generated through TRACES, DSC-signed, and dispatched to all employees by 11-12 June each year — well ahead of the 15 June deadline.

Form 16A Within 15 Days of Due Date

Form 16A for non-salary deductees is generated and issued within 15 days of the TDS-return due date — Q1 by 15 August, Q2 by 15 November, Q3 by 15 February, Q4 by 15 June. Vendors get clean credit in their ITR.

Section 234E Pre-Computed

Where a quarter slips, Section 234E is computed (capped at TDS amount) and paid via Challan ITNS-281 code 400 before upload — FVU acceptance is one-shot, not a dispute.

Section 201(1A) Interest Working

Section 201(1A) interest is reconciled in books each quarter — 1% from deductibility-to-deduction and 1.5% from deduction-to-payment. Poonamallee CFOs see no surprise demand on TRACES.

Section 206AB Compliance Check Run

Before each deduction, the deductee's PAN is run through the Compliance Check utility — Section 206AB / 206CCA non-filer status auto-flagged. Higher rate (twice the rate / 5%) applied where required, no inadvertent default.

Key Benefits

What Poonamallee Clients Get

Every Quarterly TDS Filing engagement delivers measurable, guaranteed outcomes — expert professionals, on time, every time.

Section 194Q + 206C(1H) Optimised
Buyer-194Q vs seller-206C(1H) overlap mapped party-wise — second proviso to 206C(1H) carving means only one party deducts/collects on a transaction. Poonamallee clients save 0.1% double cash-flow leak.
Section 194T Roll-Out from FY 2025-26
Finance Act 2025 inserted Section 194T — firms / LLPs in Poonamallee deduct 10% on partner salary / remuneration / interest above ₹20,000 from 1 April 2025. FilingPro rolled this out in 26Q from Q1 FY 2025-26 cleanly.
Section 40(a)(ia) Disallowance Avoided
Tax deducted is paid to Government before the Section 139(1) due date — Section 40(a)(ia) 30% disallowance and 40(a)(i) 100% disallowance for non-resident payments avoided in the deductor's business income computation.
Section 271H Penalty Immunity
Where any quarter slips, the return is filed within one year of due date with TDS, 234E and 201(1A) paid — Section 271H(3) immunity preserved. Poonamallee clients face no ₹10K-₹1L penalty.
Litigation-Ready Records
Quarterly statements, FVU files, provisional receipts, challan acknowledgements, Form 16 / 16A copies, Justification Reports, correction statements and Form 26A archives — retained 8 years from FY-end, supporting any Section 201 reopening.
Zero Section 234E Crystallisation
All four quarters uploaded within Rule 31A. Poonamallee clients eliminate the ₹200/day Section 234E exposure — the most expensive avoidable default in TDS.
Comparison

Form 24Q (Salary) vs Form 26Q (Non-Salary)

Why this matters here — Poonamallee businesses operate where the business activity radiating outward from Poonamallee Bus Terminus and nearby commercial pockets, and with quick access via Poonamallee Bus Terminus and feeder routes connecting Poonamallee to the rest of Chennai.

AspectForm 24Q (Salary)Form 26Q (Non-Salary)
Lower-deduction certificateNot typically used; salary rate is already the projected-average rate under Section 192(2A) read with Rule 26BSection 197 certificate routinely obtained by contractors and professionals; Form 13 application to jurisdictional AO
Form 16 / Form 16A linkageGenerates Form 16 Part A from TRACES once the Q4 statement is processed; Part B prepared by the employerGenerates Form 16A quarterly from TRACES within 15 days of due date under Rule 31(3)(a)
Common short-deduction triggerMissing Chapter VI-A proof leading to wrong projection; under-deduction recovered in subsequent salary monthsVendor classified as composite contract instead of works contract; Section 194C rate dispute at scrutiny
Late-fee exposureSection 234E at ₹200 per day until filing, capped at the TDS amount deducted under Section 234E provisoIdentical Section 234E exposure; vendor volume makes total deduction larger, so the per-day fee cap is rarely binding
Penalty for non-filingSection 271H penalty between ₹10,000 and ₹1,00,000; waivable under Section 271H(3) if return filed within one year of due date plus tax and fee paidIdentical Section 271H exposure; the proviso waiver applies on the same conditions
Disallowance reachSection 40(a)(ia) does not apply to salary; default leads to recovery proceedings but not expense disallowanceSection 40(a)(ia) disallows 30% of the expenditure if TDS is not deducted or not paid by the return due date
Quarterly due dates31 July, 31 October, 31 January and 31 May for Q1 through Q4 respectively under Rule 31A(2)Same statutory due dates under Rule 31A(2); deductors usually file both forms in the same upload run
Revision pathwayCorrection statement (C-type) filed against the consolidated file downloaded from TRACES; salary-detail Annexure II often revised after Form 16 reissueCorrection statement against TRACES consolidated file; common reasons are PAN correction, challan-mismatch and deductee-row addition
Statutory anchorSection 192 read with Rule 31A(4); covers salary deduction by every employer in the deductor universeSections 193 to 196D excluding 192 and 195; covers contractor, professional, rent, interest, commission deductions
Annexure structureAnnexure I quarterly deduction-wise plus Annexure II salary-detail-wise in Q4 onlySingle Annexure I capturing challan and deductee detail every quarter; no year-end recap annexure
Deduction rate driverAverage rate computed on projected annual salary under Section 192(1); recomputed each month as inputs changeFixed rate prescribed for each section (e.g. 10% under 194J, 1% / 2% under 194C) on the gross payment
PAN failure consequenceHigher rate of 20% under Section 206AA; salary employee can be told to furnish PAN before next salary cycleHigher of 20% or twice the section rate under Section 206AA; vendor invoice often paid before PAN check
Documents Required

Documents for Quarterly TDS Filing

Share documents via WhatsApp to 9566-068-468. No office visit required for Poonamallee clients.

Employee salary register / payroll summary with PAN of each employee for Form 24Q
PAN of all deductees (vendors / contractors / professionals / landlords / non-residents)
Vendor invoices and contract notes showing Section-wise TDS (194C / 194J / 194I / 194H etc.)
Rent agreements for Section 194I / 194IB compliance and threshold confirmation
Foreign remittance documentation — TRC
Prior quarter return PDF + provisional receipt + Form 16/16A copies + TRACES default summary if any
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Statutory Deadlines

Compliance deadlines that matter

Miss any of these and the next consequence kicks in automatically.

Deadlines in this neighbourhood — Poonamallee businesses operate where Poonamallee businesses in the logistics arm find that GST under reverse charge on GTA services Rule 138 e-way bill compliance and TDS under Section 194C dominate, and the cluster of logistics, warehousing, residential businesses that defines Poonamallee's commercial fabric.

Trigger eventDaysFormConsequence
End of first quarter — deductions made during April to June31 daysForm 24Q / 26Q / 27Q / 27EQ for Q1Section 234E fee of two hundred rupees per day capped at the tax deductible, plus Section 271H penalty exposure of ten thousand to one lakh rupees
End of second quarter — deductions made during July to September31 daysForm 24Q / 26Q / 27Q / 27EQ for Q2Section 234E fee accrues from 1 November; Form 26AS credit to deductees delayed and Form 16/16A issuance window of fifteen days from due date is missed
End of third quarter — deductions made during October to December31 daysForm 24Q / 26Q / 27Q / 27EQ for Q3Section 234E fee accrues from 1 February; Q3 statement defaults inflate Q4 by way of cumulative reconciliation work and short-deduction notices
End of fourth quarter — deductions made during January to March (including March year-end deductions)31 daysForm 24Q / 26Q / 27Q / 27EQ for Q4Section 234E fee from 1 June; salary Annexure II of Form 24Q drives Form 16 Part B and any delay cascades into employee return-filing default
Receipt of TRACES intimation under Section 200A with short-deduction default30 daysCorrection statement (C3 / C5) with corrected challan taggingDemand becomes recoverable; CPC-TDS escalation; deductor cannot download conso file till demand is closed
PAN-Aadhaar linkage failure rendering deductee PAN inoperativeOn due dateCorrection at higher rate under Section 206AAShort-deduction default raised in Section 200A intimation at twenty per cent or higher; deductor saddled with demand notwithstanding the actual deduction at normal rate
Form 24Q Q4 annexure-II filing for full-year salary consolidation61 daysForm 24Q with Annexure-IISection 234E late fee at ₹200 per day capped at the TDS amount; Form 16 Part B issuance to employees delayed; possible Section 272A(2)(g) penalty for failure to furnish certificate by 15 June
Form 16 issuance to employees after Q4 24Q filing75 daysForm 16 Part A and Part BSection 272A(2)(g) penalty of ₹100 per day per certificate up to the TDS amount; employees unable to file ITR-1 with prefilled salary causing AIS-Form 16 mismatch in the IT department's records

Deadline pressure points we see in Poonamallee: For Poonamallee engagements specifically — supporting the driver-loader-dispatcher workforce that operates round-the-clock from these freight clusters; for the professional and salaried population of Poonamallee navigating personal-tax and home-office GST.

Forms Library

Forms used in this engagement

Forms most asked about here — Poonamallee businesses operate where where GTA operators file GST under reverse charge and run Rule 138 e-way bill cycles with TDS Section 194C on owner-drivers, and supporting the driver-loader-dispatcher workforce that operates round-the-clock from these freight clusters.

Form 26BApplication for refund of excess TDS deposited

Refund-claim utility by the deductor where TDS has been deposited in excess of the actual liability and adjustment is not feasible. Filed on TRACES with PAN, challan and reasoning

Within the limitation window set under CBDT Circular 2/2011 Deductor through TRACES
Form 49BApplication for allotment of TAN

Application by a person responsible for deducting or collecting tax for allotment of a Tax Deduction and Collection Account Number. Without a TAN the deductor cannot file quarterly statements or deposit deducted tax

Within thirty days from the date of becoming liable to deduct or collect TIN-NSDL on behalf of CBDT
Form 13Application for lower or nil deduction certificate

Application by a payee to the Assessing Officer for issue of a certificate authorising the payer to deduct tax at a lower or nil rate. Where granted, the deductor enters the certificate number in the quarterly statement

Filed before the deduction event; certificate is valid for the financial year specified Jurisdictional Assessing Officer (TDS); generated through TRACES
Form 15GDeclaration for non-deduction by individual below 60

Self-declaration by a resident individual below sixty years that his estimated total income is below the basic exemption limit and accordingly no TDS need be deducted. Filed in respect of specified payments

Furnished before the date of payment or credit; uploaded quarterly Deductor (collects and uploads on the e-filing portal)
Form 15HDeclaration for non-deduction by senior citizen

Self-declaration by a resident senior citizen (sixty years or above) that tax payable on his estimated total income is nil — and accordingly no TDS need be deducted. Used for bank interest, EPF and similar payments

Furnished before the date of payment or credit; uploaded quarterly Deductor (collects and uploads on the e-filing portal)
Form 27AControl summary for quarterly statement

Physical control sheet generated from the File Validation Utility containing the total tax deductible, deducted, deposited and number of records. Submitted at the TIN-FC where filing is in physical mode

Accompanies the quarterly statement upload TIN-Facilitation Centre or e-filing portal acknowledgment
Form 24QQuarterly statement of tax deducted at source from salaries

Quarterly statement filed by every person responsible for deducting tax under Section 192. Reports salary-wise PAN-level deductions; Annexure II in Q4 reconciles annual salary, deductions claimed and taxable income for each employee

31 July, 31 October, 31 January and 31 May for Q1, Q2, Q3 and Q4 respectively TIN-NSDL through the income-tax e-filing portal; processed by CPC-TDS via TRACES
Form 26QQuarterly statement of TDS on payments other than salaries to residents

Captures deductions under Sections 193 to 196D for resident payees — interest, contractor payments, commission, rent, professional fees, dividend, purchases under Section 194Q and other resident deductions

31 July, 31 October, 31 January and 31 May TIN-NSDL through the income-tax e-filing portal; processed by CPC-TDS via TRACES

Quarterly TDS Filing in Poonamallee, Chennai 600056

Poonamallee (PIN 600056) falls under the Poonamallee Division of the Chennai West, the jurisdiction that handles statutory matters for businesses at this PIN. Approvals, acknowledgements and queries for Poonamallee businesses tie back to the Poonamallee Division, so our TDS Returns cadence accounts for how that office works. Because PIN 600056 sits inside the Chennai West jurisdiction, the handling office for Poonamallee stays consistent across years, which matters when filings or approvals span cycles. The 600xx geo-zone covering Poonamallee groups several locality clusters under common administration, keeping documentation expectations predictable.

Freight and foot traffic from the Poonamallee Bus Terminus hub pull steady daily commerce through Poonamallee, so there is rarely a quiet filing month in this logistics and growing residential pocket. Commercial activity in Poonamallee runs medium, so TDS Returns volumes scale through peak months and we staff the Poonamallee desk accordingly. Vendors and customers tied to the Poonamallee Bus Terminus network show up across the invoice trail we reconcile for Poonamallee Quarterly TDS Filing clients. The logistics and growing residential mix of Poonamallee shapes what lands in our workpapers — a blend of retail activity and the commercial pulse around Bangalore Highway (NH-48).

The business mix in Poonamallee centres on logistics, and that sector carries its own Quarterly TDS Filing quirks we plan for in advance. The logistics firms we serve in Poonamallee value a TDS Returns partner who already understands their sector's compliance rhythm. Quarterly TDS Filing for logistics businesses in Poonamallee hinges on getting the sector's recurring entries right the first time. Mixed logistics activity across Poonamallee means our TDS Returns team keeps sector playbooks ready rather than improvising per client.

Every TDS Returns file we open for Poonamallee is reconciled, reviewed by a qualified practitioner, and archived for seven years. A Poonamallee client sees the same TDS Returns cadence each cycle: intake, reconciliation, review, filing, acknowledgement. Document intake for Poonamallee clients runs over WhatsApp, so there is no office visit and no paper shuffle for a Quarterly TDS Filing engagement. Our Poonamallee TDS Returns process is built to be predictable, documented, and on time, cycle after cycle.

We treat Poonamallee and Avadi as one catchment for Quarterly TDS Filing, which keeps documentation and turnaround consistent. Coverage from Poonamallee naturally extends to Avadi, so group entities across the area share one Quarterly TDS Filing workflow. Serving Poonamallee and Avadi from one team keeps Quarterly TDS Filing turnaround identical across the cluster. Group companies spread across Poonamallee and Avadi consolidate their TDS Returns under one engagement with us.

Sector signals in Poonamallee — seasonal retail swings and peak-period volumes — shape how we schedule TDS Returns work. The longer we serve Poonamallee, the more precisely we predict where a TDS Returns file needs attention. The Quarterly TDS Filing mistakes we see most in Poonamallee are avoidable with disciplined intake, which our checklist enforces. Because we work repeatedly across Poonamallee, we can benchmark a new client's Quarterly TDS Filing position against the locality norm.

For a new business incorporating in Poonamallee or shifting its principal place of business here, Quarterly TDS Filing setup is one of the first things to get right. Shifting principal place of business to Poonamallee means updating jurisdiction to the Chennai West, and we manage the paperwork end-to-end. A startup setting up near Bangalore Highway (NH-48) in Poonamallee gets a TDS Returns foundation built for the Poonamallee Division from day one. New residential ventures in Poonamallee lean on us to stand up Quarterly TDS Filing correctly before the first deadline rather than after a notice.

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Expert Guide

Quarterly TDS Filing in Poonamallee — Complete Guide

At FilingPro we treat the Section 201(1A) interest exposure as a financial-statement item — 1% per month from date deductible to date deducted, plus 1.5% from date deducted to date paid. Each quarter, the working is reconciled with the books before challan deposit; no surprise interest on TRACES Justification Report. Poonamallee clients close out short-deduction defaults via Form 26A under proviso to Section 201(1) where the deductee has paid the tax in his return.

Quarterly TDS Filing in Poonamallee, Chennai

TDS return filing in Poonamallee is handled by qualified practitioners under Section 200(3) — Form 24Q salary, Form 26Q non-salary residents, Form 27Q non-residents and Form 27EQ TCS with full FVU validation and TRACES Form 16 / 16A generation.

TDS Consultant in Poonamallee — Section 234E & 201(1A) Disciplined

A TDS consultant in Poonamallee pre-computes Section 234E ₹200/day fee and Section 201(1A) 1% / 1.5% interest before each upload — zero default surprises post-CPC-TDS processing.

Form 16 / Form 16A Generation in Poonamallee via TRACES

Form 16 (annual salary, due 15 June) and Form 16A (quarterly non-salary, due 15 days from return due date) generated through TRACES login, DSC-signed, and dispatched to deductees on email and WhatsApp — Rule 31 compliant.

Section 194Q vs Section 206C(1H) Advisory in Poonamallee

For Poonamallee traders and manufacturers, the buyer-194Q (0.1% above ₹50L) versus seller-206C(1H) (0.1% above ₹50L) overlap is mapped per counter-party — second proviso to 206C(1H) carving applied so no double TDS+TCS on the same transaction.

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Qualified professionals handle your TDS Returns in Poonamallee. WhatsApp documents — we begin within 24 hours. From ₹2,500/quarterly. Free consultation.
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From ₹2,500/quarterly
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Key Facts — Quarterly TDS Filing in Poonamallee
All four TDS quarters filed within Rule 31A due dates — Q1 31 July, Q2 31 October, Q3 31 January, Q4 31 May. Section 234E ₹200/day fee never crystallises for Poonamallee clients.
Form 24Q Annexure II for Q4 carries full salary breakup with regime opted (115BAC New vs Old) per employee — Form 16 Part B generation through TRACES is clean and one-shot.
Section 192 salary TDS computed each month on the New Regime default with Form 12BAA other-income / loss-from-house-property factored — employee year-end refund minimised.
Form 27Q non-resident filings carry Tax Residency Certificate, Form 10F and treaty article reference; rate applied is the lower of 195(1) and treaty — Section 90/90A position documented.
Section 206AB / 206CCA 'specified person' status checked on the Compliance Check utility before each deduction — higher-rate default at twice/5% is never inadvertently triggered.
Section 194Q (buyer 0.1%) vs Section 206C(1H) (seller 0.1%) overlap mapped party-wise; second proviso to 206C(1H) carving applied so the right party deducts/collects.
Section 194T (Finance Act 2025) partner-remuneration TDS at 10% above ₹20,000 deducted by firm / LLP and reported in 26Q from FY 2025-26.
TRACES Justification Report reconciled quarter-wise — short-deduction, late-deduction, late-payment, late-filing and 234E flags cleared via correction statement or online correction with DSC.
Section 197 lower-deduction certificates obtained in Form 13 where deductee establishes no/lower tax liability — certificate number quoted in 26Q so CPC-TDS allows the lower rate without raising default.
Form 16 issued to Poonamallee employees by 15 June and Form 16A within 15 days of TDS return due date per Rule 31 — employees file ITR clean, deductees claim TDS credit accurately.
People Also Ask — TDS Returns in Poonamallee
What is the due date for filing TDS returns?
Rule 31A — Q1 (Apr-Jun) by 31 July, Q2 (Jul-Sep) by 31 October, Q3 (Oct-Dec) by 31 January, Q4 (Jan-Mar) by 31 May. TCS returns in Form 27EQ are due 15 days earlier — 15 July / 15 October / 15 January / 15 May respectively.
What is the late filing fee under Section 234E?
₹200 per day of delay in furnishing the TDS / TCS statement, capped at the amount of TDS / TCS deductible-collectible in that statement. Must be paid via Challan ITNS-281 (code 400) before the statement is uploaded — FVU rejects the file otherwise. Karnataka HC in Fatehraj Singhvi (2016) protected pre-1-June-2015 demands; post-amendment 234E stands.
What is the difference between Form 24Q and Form 26Q?
Form 24Q — salary TDS under Section 192 (employer to employee). Form 26Q — non-salary TDS to residents (Sections 193, 194, 194A, 194C, 194H, 194I, 194J, 194Q, 194R, 194T etc.). Both filed quarterly. 24Q has Annexure I (every quarter) and Annexure II (only Q4 — full salary breakup, regime, deductions); 26Q has only deductee-wise annexure.
When must Form 16 be issued to employees?
Rule 31 — Form 16 (Part A + Part B) must be issued by 15 June following the end of the FY. For FY 2025-26 salary, Form 16 is due 15 June 2026. Part A is system-generated on TRACES from the deductor's 24Q filings; Part B is generated from Q4 24Q Annexure II salary breakup. Both DSC-signed and dispatched to employees.
What is interest under Section 201(1A) on short or late TDS?
1% per month or part of a month from the date the tax was deductible till the date it is actually deducted, plus 1.5% per month or part of a month from the date of deduction till the date of payment to the Government. Both rates apply on the tax amount (not the gross payment). One day's delay attracts a full month's interest.
How are TDS defaults rectified?
Download the Justification Report from TRACES (tdscpc.gov.in), identify the default reason code (short-deduction, late-deduction, late-payment, late-filing, 234E), file a correction statement (C1-C9) on RPU + FVU, or use Online Correction at TRACES with DSC. Pay any additional tax/interest via ITNS-281 first. Where deductee has paid the tax, file Form 26A with CA certification under proviso to Section 201(1) to neutralise the principal demand.
What is the TDS rate on payments to senior-citizen account-holders?

Senior citizens furnishing Form 15H under Rule 29C escape Section 194A interest TDS subject to the threshold; the form is a self-declaration that the total income falls below the basic exemption limit, valid for the financial year of submission.

Can Form 15G be filed by a person below the basic exemption limit?

Form 15G under Rule 29C is for individuals below 60 years whose estimated income falls below the basic exemption limit and whose taxable income on which TDS would be deducted does not exceed the basic exemption; it must be filed before the first interest payment.

What is the difference between Section 194 and Section 194A?

Section 194 covers TDS on payment of dividend by a domestic company to a resident shareholder at 10% with a ₹5,000 threshold; Section 194A covers interest other than on securities paid to a resident, with rate of 10% and varied thresholds.

Is TDS deductible on payments to a partnership firm?

Yes — Section 194C, 194J and other applicable sections apply to payments to a partnership firm with rate of 2% for Section 194C and 10% for Section 194J, irrespective of partner-composition; the firm's PAN is used for deduction.

What is the TDS treatment for payments to a non-resident on professional fees?

Payments to a non-resident for professional fees fall under Section 195 with the applicable DTAA-rate (often 10% to 15%); the deductor must file Form 27Q quarterly, attach TRC, Form 10F and consider Section 9(1)(vii) FTS characterisation.

What does Section 40(a)(ia) disallow for TDS defaults?

Section 40(a)(ia) disallows 30% of the expenditure on which TDS was deductible but not deducted or not paid by the return due date under Section 139(1); the disallowance is reversed in the year the TDS is finally deposited.

What Poonamallee clients want to know before signing: For Poonamallee engagements specifically — around the Poonamallee Bus Terminus catchment of Poonamallee; where GTA operators file GST under reverse charge and run Rule 138 e-way bill cycles with TDS Section 194C on owner-drivers.

Expert Guide

A complete walkthrough — Quarterly Tds Filing

Localised for Poonamallee, Chennai — where GTA operators file GST under reverse charge and run Rule 138 e-way bill cycles with TDS Section 194C on owner-drivers.

Reading this guide locally — Poonamallee businesses operate where on the Iyyappanthangal-Porur corridor that passes through Poonamallee, and Poonamallee businesses in the logistics arm find that GST under reverse charge on GTA services Rule 138 e-way bill compliance and TDS under Section 194C dominate.

What is TDS quarterly filing and when is it required

Statutory architecture of Chapter XVII-B

Tax Deduction at Source in India is governed by Chapter XVII-B of the Income-tax Act 1961, spanning Sections 192 to 196D, and is supplemented by Tax Collected at Source under Section 206C. The substantive provisions impose a withholding obligation on the payer for specified categories of payment, while the procedural framework under Section 200(3) read with Rule 31A of the Income-tax Rules 1962 prescribes quarterly statements consolidating all deductions made during the quarter. The constitutional basis traces to Entry 82 of the Union List read with Article 246, with the withholding mechanism characterised by the Supreme Court in CIT v Eli Lilly and Company as a vicarious obligation discharged on behalf of the deductee. Four return forms cover the universe — Form 24Q for salary deductions under Section 192, Form 26Q for non-salary resident payments, Form 27Q for non-resident payments under Section 195 and allied provisions, and Form 27EQ for tax collected at source under Section 206C. The framework dates structurally to the 2003 amendments through the Finance Act 2002 which moved India from annual Form 26 reporting to a quarterly statement architecture aligned with OECD Forum on Tax Administration recommendations on real-time withholding compliance.

Trigger events for the deduction obligation

Sub-section (1) of each provision under Sections 192 to 196D specifies the trigger event — for Section 192 it is the actual payment of salary, while for Section 194C, Section 194J, Section 194-I and most non-salary provisions it is the earlier of credit to the payee's account or actual payment. The credit-or-payment-whichever-is-earlier formulation, encoded uniformly across the Chapter, was clarified by CBDT Circular 3/2010 to apply even to suspense accounts, provision accounts, and any other credit by whatever name called in the deductor's books. Section 194Q, introduced by the Finance Act 2021, applies the trigger to buyers whose preceding-year turnover exceeds ₹10 crore making purchases above ₹50 lakh per seller per year. The Section 206AB higher-rate trigger applies where the deductee is a specified person who has not filed returns for the preceding two years and has aggregate TDS-TCS of ₹50,000 or more in each of those years — verified through the Compliance Check utility on the reporting portal before each payment.

TAN as the unique identifier

Every deductor and collector requires a Tax Deduction Account Number under Section 203A obtained through Form 49B online via the Protean eGov-NSDL or UTIITSL portal. The ten-character TAN identifies the deductor across all four quarterly statements, all challans deposited under ITNS-281, all certificates issued in Forms 16, 16A, 16B, 16C, 16D, 16E and 27D, and the entire TRACES correspondence trail. Failure to obtain TAN before deduction does not relieve the deduction obligation but adds a Section 272BB penalty of ₹10,000. A single deductor may operate multiple TANs across branches, but the consolidated employer-level Form 24Q Annexure-II must reflect the salary breakup against the TAN under which Section 192 deductions are actually deposited. Branch-level deduction with consolidated reporting under a single TAN is permissible only where authorised under sub-rule (1A) of Rule 30, subject to the deductor selecting the consolidation option at the TAN registration stage.

TRACES portal architecture

Online correction versus offline FVU correction

Two correction routes operate parallel — online corrections through the TRACES portal interface for simple updates including C1 deductor-details and C5 PAN-update, and offline corrections through the Return Preparation Utility followed by FVU validation and conso-file upload for complex updates including C3 deductee-row-update and C9 new-challan-and-deductee. The online route requires digital-signature-certificate authentication of the authorised signatory and processes within seconds. The offline route requires download of the consolidated file from TRACES, modification through RPU, FVU validation, and upload through the income-tax e-filing portal — processing takes hours to days. Choice of route depends on correction type and statement volume — small corrections favour online, bulk corrections affecting hundreds of deductee rows favour offline. The CBDT Notification 36/2019 unified the correction-statement architecture and eliminated the legacy paper-based correction workflow.

Deductor-side functionality

The TRACES portal at the tdscpc.gov.in domain provides the operational interface for deductors — registration of TAN with authorised-signatory details and digital-signature-certificate, request and download of consolidated files for correction-statement preparation, request and download of Form 16 Part A and bulk Form 16A, certificate generation under Section 197 reference matching, declaration filing under Form 27C for sub-section (1A) of Section 206C nil collection on manufacturing-purpose declarations, online correction submission for C1 through C9 correction types, and challan-status query against deposited ITNS-281. The PAN-verification utility and the Section 206AB Compliance Check utility are accessed through TRACES with API-based bulk-query support for large deductors. The deductor inbox aggregates intimations under Section 200A(1) on processing of quarterly statements, demand notices under Section 156 read with Section 201, and Form 26AS reconciliation prompts.

Deductee-side functionality and Form 26AS

Deductees access TRACES through the income-tax e-filing portal SSO integration. Form 26AS — the Annual Tax Statement under Section 203AA and Rule 31AB — consolidates per-deductee data from all deductors across the financial year covering TDS deductions under Form 26Q, salary deductions under Form 24Q, non-resident deductions under Form 27Q, TCS collections under Form 27EQ, advance-tax and self-assessment-tax payments through OLTAS, Section 285BA Statement of Financial Transactions high-value transactions, and turnover information from GSTN. The migration of high-volume reporting to the Annual Information Statement under Rule 114-I from 2021 has shifted the comprehensive deductee picture to AIS while Form 26AS retains the tax-credit core. The deductee reconciles the pre-filled return Schedule TDS columns against AIS and Form 26AS at return filing — discrepancies are flagged through the feedback mechanism in AIS for deductor-side correction action.

PAN validation and Section 206AA

Section 206AB specified non-filer regime

Section 206AB inserted by the Finance Act 2021 and amended by the Finance Act 2022 imposes a higher-rate withholding on specified persons — deductees who have not filed an income-tax return for the relevant assessment year for which the time limit under Section 139(1) has expired, and whose aggregate TDS and TCS in that year is ₹50,000 or more. The applicable rate is twice the rate-in-force or twice the rate specified in the relevant provision, or five per cent, whichever is higher. The deductor identifies specified persons through the Compliance Check utility on the reporting-portal accessible through TRACES — bulk-query and per-PAN-query interfaces operate with API integration support for large deductors. The deductee row in Form 26Q and Form 27Q carries an indicator field for Section 206AB application, with FVU validation enforcing rate-consistency where the indicator is set.

Inoperative-PAN consequences under Section 139AA

Section 139AA(2) mandates linkage of Aadhaar with PAN, with the consequence of PAN becoming inoperative on failure to link by the prescribed date. CBDT Circular 3/2023 dated 28 March 2023 clarified that inoperative PAN attracts Section 206AA higher-rate consequences — twenty per cent or rate-in-force whichever is higher — equivalent to the no-PAN scenario, even though the PAN technically exists in the income-tax master. The deductor query through the TRACES PAN-verification utility returns the operative-or-inoperative status alongside the active-status check. Post-1-July-2023, deductors filing Form 26Q and Form 27Q must validate operative status for every deductee row to avoid Section 201(1) short-deduction demands. The Section 234H late-linkage fee imposed by the Finance Act 2021 applies at the deductee end for re-activation of inoperative PAN.

PAN format and active-status check

PAN validation in TDS quarterly statements operates at two levels. Format validation at the FVU stage applies the standard ten-character structure — first three letters alphabetic, fourth letter the entity-type code (P for individual, C for company, H for HUF, F for firm, A for AOP, T for trust, B for BOI, L for local authority, J for AJP, G for government), fifth letter the first character of the surname for individuals or the first character of the name for non-individuals, next four characters numeric, last character alphabetic check-digit. Active-status validation at the TRACES processing stage queries the income-tax department PAN master to verify that the PAN is allotted and active — PANs that are de-duplicated, inoperative under Section 139AA for Aadhaar non-linkage, or otherwise flagged trigger Section 206AA higher-rate consequences. The Section 139AA Aadhaar-PAN linkage requirement, with the post-2023 inoperative-PAN consequences under CBDT Circular 3/2023, has materially expanded the PAN-validation reconciliation workload.

Section 234E late filing fee

Pre-2015 retrospectivity controversy

Section 234E enabled by the Finance Act 2012 was operative from 1 July 2012, but the enabling machinery provision under Section 200A — empowering the CPC-TDS to compute and demand the fee through statement processing — was inserted only by the Finance Act 2015 from 1 June 2015. The intervening three-year gap produced extensive litigation on whether Section 234E could be enforced through pre-2015 Section 200A intimations. The Karnataka High Court in Fatheraj Singhvi v UoI held that pre-1-June-2015 Section 200A intimations could not be the basis for Section 234E demands, requiring separate Section 271H proceedings. The Gujarat High Court in Rajesh Kourani v UoI took a contrary view upholding the pre-2015 intimations. The Bombay High Court in Rashmikant Kundalia took a middle position. The position remains unsettled at the Supreme Court level, with several Special Leave Petitions pending. Post-1-June-2015 enforcement is uncontroversial.

Interaction with Section 271H penalty

Section 234E operates parallel to Section 271H which imposes a separate penalty for failure to deliver the quarterly statement within the prescribed time — minimum ₹10,000 extending up to ₹1,00,000 per default. Section 271H(3) provides a saving where the deductor proves that the tax along with applicable fee and interest has been paid to the credit of the central government and the statement has been delivered before the expiry of one year from the time prescribed for delivering the statement. The interaction is therefore — Section 234E fee runs from the due date until the statement is filed irrespective of the underlying tax position, while Section 271H penalty applies only where the one-year-savings clause is not satisfied. A deductor who files within one year and has paid all underlying tax, fee and interest avoids Section 271H but still pays Section 234E. A deductor who files beyond one year faces both.

OECD framework on late-filing penalty design

The OECD Forum on Tax Administration 2013 study on tax-administration penalties identifies a global convergence on day-based late-filing fees for withholding statements, with rates typically calibrated to a small multiple of the underlying tax-at-risk per day. The Indian Section 234E ₹200 per day fee falls within this range relative to the typical TDS quantum per quarter, and the capping at total tax deductible aligns with the OECD principle of proportionality between regulatory fee and underlying compliance value. The United Kingdom Real Time Information regime imposes parallel late-submission penalties scaled by employer size. The Australian Single Touch Payroll regime applies a similar day-based framework. Comparison with the European Union Directive on Administrative Cooperation in Direct Taxation enforcement framework shows that the Indian Section 234E framework is structurally aligned with international good practice in design, though enforcement automation through Section 200A CPC processing is at the leading edge of administrative practice.

What Poonamallee clients usually ask next: For Poonamallee engagements specifically — supporting the driver-loader-dispatcher workforce that operates round-the-clock from these freight clusters; where GTA operators file GST under reverse charge and run Rule 138 e-way bill cycles with TDS Section 194C on owner-drivers; for the professional and salaried population of Poonamallee navigating personal-tax and home-office GST.

Glossary

Plain-English glossary for this service

Terms you will hear in this area — Poonamallee businesses operate where where GTA operators file GST under reverse charge and run Rule 138 e-way bill cycles with TDS Section 194C on owner-drivers.

Section 206AB specified person

Section 206AB requires deduction at twice the prescribed rate or 5%, whichever is higher, where the deductee is a 'specified person' — broadly, one who did not file ITR for the preceding assessment year and whose aggregate TDS plus TCS was ₹50,000 or more in that year. The status must be checked on the income-tax Reporting Portal's compliance-check tool; vendor self-declarations are not acceptable defence.

Reporting Portal compliance check

The Reporting Portal compliance-check is the ITD tool at report.insight.gov.in where the deductor can verify whether a deductee PAN is a 'specified person' under Section 206AB or 206CCA. The system returns a Yes/No flag with a reference number; the reference number is the defensible record for the deductor's working file when the default-notice cycle starts.

Challan ITNS 281

Challan ITNS 281 is the TDS/TCS payment challan used to deposit tax deducted, interest under Section 201(1A), Section 234E fee and Section 271H penalty. The challan separates the major head (0020 for company deductees, 0021 for non-company), minor head (200 for regular, 400 for assessment) and the section-wise nature of payment code, all of which must align with the return's deductee block.

Section 200A intimation

Section 200A is the processing-of-return provision under which CPC-TDS issues an intimation after computing arithmetical errors, late fees, short deductions and interest from the filed TDS statement. The intimation is the first stop in the default-notice cycle; if not responded to within 30 days the demand crystallises and gets posted to the demand register on the TDS portal.

Form 27Q non-resident return

Form 27Q is the quarterly return for tax deducted under Section 195 and related provisions on payments to non-residents. It captures additional fields not in Form 26Q — country of residence, tax identification number, nature of remittance code per Rule 37BB, and DTAA article invoked. FVU validation for 27Q is stricter; missing TIN or country code is the most frequent rejection cause.

Form 26QB property TDS

Form 26QB is the challan-cum-statement for Section 194-IA TDS on purchase of immovable property worth ₹50 lakh or more. Unlike regular quarterly TDS, 26QB is a per-transaction filing by the buyer using PAN (no TAN required), due within 30 days from end of the month of deduction. Form 16B is the seller's certificate generated thereafter on TRACES.

Section 194Q purchase TDS

Section 194Q requires a buyer with preceding-year turnover above ₹10 crore to deduct 0.1% TDS on purchase value exceeding ₹50 lakh from a resident seller in a financial year. Where 194Q applies, the seller's parallel Section 206C(1H) TCS does not — settled by CBDT Circular 13/2021. The buyer's deduction takes precedence and the seller must be intimated in writing.

Online Challan Correction OLTAS

Online Challan Correction is the TRACES facility allowing correction of TAN, major head, minor head, assessment year, nature of payment and amount on a paid challan. Bank-routed correction is available within seven days of deposit; beyond seven days the correction is routed through the assessing officer's TDS jurisdiction. Without correction, the challan will not match the return and a demand will be raised.

Form 27EQ TCS quarterly return

Form 27EQ is the quarterly return for tax collected at source under Section 206C and its sub-sections — including sale of scrap, motor vehicles, foreign remittance under LRS and Section 206C(1H) on sale consideration. The filing timeline and FVU validation discipline mirror Form 26Q; collector liability under Section 206C(7) for interest on delay parallels Section 201(1A) on the deductor side.

Default notice cycle

The default-notice cycle for TDS begins with a Section 200A intimation, escalates to a Section 201(1)/(1A) demand if unresponded, can lead to a Section 271H penalty proceeding, and finally to TAN-level demand publication. Most defaults are curable at the 200A stage through a correction return; once escalated past 201 the resolution cost — in management time, not just money — climbs sharply.

Section 271H non-filing penalty

Section 271H allows the AO to impose a penalty between ₹10,000 and ₹1,00,000 for failure to file a TDS/TCS statement within the prescribed time or for filing with incorrect details. The penalty is in addition to Section 234E fee; a defensible reason coupled with subsequent filing within a year is a common ground on which the AO drops the proceeding.

TRACES portal

TRACES (TDS Reconciliation Analysis and Correction Enabling System) is the ITD's TDS-specific portal at tdscpc.gov.in for filing correction statements, downloading Form 16/16A/16B/27D certificates, resolving default intimations, requesting consolidated files and managing the deductor's challan-deductee reconciliation. Every deductor TAN must register on TRACES separately from the e-filing portal.

Cost of Non-Compliance

Real-world penalty exposure

Numerical examples showing tax + interest + penalty across common default scenarios.

Penalty exposure typical of this micro-market — Poonamallee businesses operate where Poonamallee businesses in the logistics arm find that GST under reverse charge on GTA services Rule 138 e-way bill compliance and TDS under Section 194C dominate, and supporting the driver-loader-dispatcher workforce that operates round-the-clock from these freight clusters.

ScenarioBase taxInterestPenaltyTotal
Form 24Q Q3 Section 234E demand for repeat-defaulter employer₹12,40,000 (TDS deducted in Q3)Nil (tax paid in time)₹56,400 Section 234E × 282 days (cap not hit)₹12,96,400
Section 194Q failure on purchase of ₹14 crore from single supplier₹14,000 (0.1% on the excess over ₹50 lakh)₹420 × 3 months₹14,000 under Section 271C exposure₹28,420
Section 194-I rent of ₹6 lakh per month not subjected to TDS for 8 months₹4,80,000 (10% on ₹48 lakh paid)₹21,600 × 3 months avg₹4,80,000 under Section 271C₹9,81,600
Section 194H commission deduction omitted by FMCG distributor₹4,20,000 (5% on ₹84 lakh)₹18,900 × 3 months avg₹4,20,000 under Section 271C₹8,58,900
Form 24Q Q4 Annexure II salary mismatch impacting 18 employeesNil (Annexure II is informational)Nil₹10,000 minimum Section 271H₹10,000
Section 192 short deduction on Section 80C investment proof not realised₹38,000 short deduction₹570 × 1 monthNil (Section 271C rarely invoked on Section 192 average-rate variance)₹38,570

How Poonamallee businesses typically avoid these: For Poonamallee engagements specifically — the business activity radiating outward from Poonamallee Bus Terminus and nearby commercial pockets; for the professional and salaried population of Poonamallee navigating personal-tax and home-office GST.

By Industry

Industry-specific patterns in Poonamallee

How the local trade mix shapes this — Poonamallee businesses operate where where GTA operators file GST under reverse charge and run Rule 138 e-way bill cycles with TDS Section 194C on owner-drivers, and the business activity radiating outward from Poonamallee Bus Terminus and nearby commercial pockets.

Healthcare
Common issue: Multi-speciality hospitals engage visiting consultants under Section 194J retainer arrangements, salaried registrars under Section 192, and locum doctors under daily-rate engagements often defaulted to Section 194J. Where the relationship is in substance employment but documented as professional engagement, the Form 24Q Annexure-II versus Form 26Q allocation comes under scrutiny under the Piyare Lal Adishwar Lal versus CIT test of master-servant relationship.
How we handle it: Apply a documented substance test — fixed hours, supervisory control, exclusivity, leave entitlement — to classify each engagement before the first payment is processed; route true-employment engagements through Form 24Q Annexure-I, retainer arrangements through Form 26Q under Section 194J, and locum payments through Section 194J only where independence and rotation are documented; align the classification with EPF and ESI coverage decisions to avoid cross-statute inconsistency.
Healthcare
Common issue: Diagnostic chains in metropolitan zones operate on referral-fee arrangements with general practitioners that, post the National Medical Commission Regulations 2002 prohibition on fee-splitting, sit in a disallowance zone under Explanation 1 to Section 37(1). The withholding tax position under Section 194J on such payments is treated as a separate question from the income-tax allowability, leading to mismatched return positions.
How we handle it: Decouple the TDS deduction obligation from the deductibility question — Section 194J withholding applies whether or not the expense is allowable; maintain a disclosure register flagging referral payments for separate add-back at the Tax Audit Report under clause 21(a); align with the OECD BEPS Action 4 principle of distinguishing withholding compliance from substantive deductibility analysis.
Retail
Common issue: Organised retail chains operate revenue-share lease arrangements with mall operators where the rent is computed as a percentage of monthly turnover with a minimum-guarantee floor. Whether the variable component attracts Section 194I rent withholding from day one, or only on crystallisation at month-end, becomes a recurring Form 26Q reconciliation gap.
How we handle it: Deduct on the minimum guarantee on the first day of the month per Section 194I, and on the variable top-up at month-end on crystallisation, with both legs deposited under separate challan ITNS-281 entries cross-referencing the same mall PAN; load both legs into Form 26Q under the same deductee row with consolidated amount paid and TDS columns, mirroring the substance-over-form approach of CBDT Circular 715/1995.
Retail
Common issue: Quick-commerce and dark-store operators procure inventory through ultra-short delivery cycles from thousands of micro-suppliers where individual seller turnover stays below the Section 194Q ₹50 lakh aggregate threshold in the early months and crosses it abruptly at peak season, raising deduct-from-which-invoice questions mid-quarter.
How we handle it: Configure the procurement ERP to track running-aggregate purchase value per seller-PAN in real time and trigger Section 194Q deduction prospectively from the invoice that crosses the threshold; document the threshold-crossing date in the deductee remarks; align the cut-off methodology with the CBDT Circular 13/2021 guidance on Section 194Q implementation to defend the no-deduction position on the pre-threshold invoice tranche.
Logistics
Common issue: Freight aggregators paying owner-operator truck drivers face the Section 194C transporter exemption under sub-section (6) which requires the transporter to own ten or fewer goods carriages and furnish a declaration with PAN. Many aggregators apply the exemption uniformly without collecting the prescribed declaration, exposing themselves to Section 201(1) short-deduction proceedings.
How we handle it: Collect the owner-operator declaration in the form prescribed under sub-rule (6) of Rule 31A before the first payment, verify ownership against RC details for each registered vehicle, and load the declaration metadata into Form 26Q remarks; refresh the declaration annually; for aggregator-fleet hybrid operators, segregate fleet-owned trips from owner-operator trips and apply the exemption only on the latter category in line with CBDT Circular 6/2017.
Case Studies

Anonymised engagements we have handled

Real client situations (names changed); illustrative of the kind of work we do.

A flavour of cases we handle nearby — Poonamallee businesses operate where where GTA operators file GST under reverse charge and run Rule 138 e-way bill cycles with TDS Section 194C on owner-drivers, and Poonamallee businesses in the logistics arm find that GST under reverse charge on GTA services Rule 138 e-way bill compliance and TDS under Section 194C dominate.

Section 194C vs 194JHealthcare

ITAT Chennai upholds short-deduction defence on contractor-vs-professional characterisation

Issue: A diagnostic-imaging chain deducted TDS at 1% under Section 194C on payments to visiting radiologists who reported on scans on a per-case basis. The AO recharacterised the engagement as Section 194J professional services and raised a short-deduction default at the 10% rate, generating a Section 201(1) demand of ₹6,84,000.
Approach: We filed an appeal under Section 246A producing the per-case service agreement, the absence of a master-employee relationship, and the practical contractor pattern. After a CIT(A) confirmation, we appealed to the ITAT Chennai under Section 253. The argument leaned on the contract terms over the professional-qualification label.
Outcome: ITAT Chennai held the engagement to be Section 194C contractor in nature given the per-case payment structure; Section 201 default deleted; Section 234E and Section 271H proceedings rendered infructuous.
Section 234E post-amendmentHealthcare

Section 234E challenge fails post-1-June-2015 deductor compelled to pay

Issue: A diagnostic chain challenged a Section 234E late fee of ₹52,000 for Q2 of FY 2018-19 in a writ before the Madras HC, hoping to extend the Fatheraj Singhvi reasoning. The deductor argued the fee was unconstitutional in principle.
Approach: We advised the deductor that the post-1-June-2015 amendment to Section 200A had cured the machinery defect identified in Fatheraj Singhvi, and that no constitutional infirmity remained per the Bombay HC ruling in Rashmikant Kundalia v UoI. The writ was withdrawn at admission stage on the Court's prima-facie observation.
Outcome: Writ withdrawn; Section 234E fee paid; deductor escaped costs by withdrawing at admission; subsequent quarters filed on time to avoid recurrence.
PAN-Aadhaar inoperativeRetail

Form 26Q rent deduction at 5% reversed to 10% because landlord PAN was inoperative

Issue: A T Nagar retail chain deducted TDS on commercial rent of ₹1.2 lakh per month at 10% under Section 194-I and uploaded the deductee PAN in the Form 26Q Q3 annexure. Two weeks after filing, TRACES generated a Section 200A intimation flagging the landlord's PAN as inoperative under Rule 114AAA — the PAN was not linked with Aadhaar before 30 June 2023. Rate applicable became 20% under Section 206AA; short-deduction default came to ₹14,400 plus Section 201(1A) interest.
Approach: We did not contest — the rule is mechanical. We deducted the ₹14,400 differential from the landlord's next month's rent with a clear debit-note explanation referring to CBDT Circular 3/2023 and Rule 114AAA. Paid through challan 281 same evening, filed a Form 26Q correction return adding the higher rate row, and pulled the corrected Form 16A. We also ran a TRACES PAN-status check on every recurring deductee across all 600+ clients — found 23 more inoperative PANs sitting on payroll and vendor masters that would have failed the next quarter.
Outcome: Differential TDS ₹14,400 recovered from landlord; Section 201(1A) interest ₹430 absorbed by deductor; correction Form 26Q processed clean; PAN-status check is now a quarter-1 standing item for every deductee master.
Section 197 LDC lapseLogistics

Lower deduction certificate Section 197 lapsed mid-quarter — short deduction crystallised

Issue: A Chennai logistics service provider held a Section 197 lower deduction certificate at 0.5% (against the default 2% under Section 194C) valid for the period 1 April to 31 December. The principal customer continued to deduct at 0.5% in January and February, until our quarter-3 review caught that the certificate had expired on 31 December. Short deduction on January-February billings of ₹46 lakh came to ₹69,000 (1.5% differential).
Approach: We computed the differential, deposited it through challan 281 with the customer's TAN as the deductor (because the legal obligation under Section 201 is on the deductor, not the certificate-holder vendor), filed a Form 26Q correction return for Q4 capturing the higher rate row, and refunded the ₹69,000 to the customer through a debit-note adjustment in the next invoice. We applied for a fresh Section 197 certificate covering the new financial year well before the expiry of the old one — the standing rule is now: apply by 15 February for the certificate to take effect from 1 April.
Outcome: Differential ₹69,000 deposited with Section 201(1A) interest of ₹1,030; new Section 197 certificate issued effective 1 April; customer relationship intact; certificate-expiry calendar now sits on the partner's monthly review pack with a 60-day lead warning.

Why these Poonamallee engagements look the way they do: For Poonamallee engagements specifically — the cluster of logistics, warehousing, residential businesses that defines Poonamallee's commercial fabric; for the professional and salaried population of Poonamallee navigating personal-tax and home-office GST.

Client Reviews

What Poonamallee Clients Say

Ramachandran S
Quarterly TDS Filing
“FY 2024-25 — three quarters of 24Q filed late by my previous accountant, Section 234E ₹47,200 plus 201(1A) interest in TRACES Justification. FilingPro reviewed default-wise, identified that two quarters had pre-paid 234E tagged to wrong challan code; online correction filed with DSC, ₹19,800 reduction confirmed by CPC-TDS within 21 days. Net 234E down to ₹27,400.”
2 months agoVerified Client
Sundar V
Quarterly TDS Filing
“Manufacturing unit with 65 employees plus 200+ vendor deductees in 26Q. FilingPro automated the quarterly cycle — challan ITNS-281 by 7th, RPU + FVU validated by 25th, upload by 28th every quarter. Form 16 dispatched to all 65 employees on 11 June 2025 — well ahead of 15 June deadline. Zero default notice in three quarters running.”
6 weeks agoVerified Client
Venkatesan K
Quarterly TDS Filing
“Section 195 remittance to a US software vendor — earlier we deducted 20% under 195(1) without checking treaty. FilingPro applied US-India DTAA Article 12 royalty rate of 15% with TRC + Form 10F validation, filed Form 15CA Part C and Form 15CB. 27Q Q3 reflected the treaty rate cleanly. Vendor's PAN-less rate cap under 206AA + 206AB was also avoided through the TRC route.”
4 months agoVerified Client
Kalaichelvi R
Quarterly TDS Filing
“Got a Section 201 short-deduction order for FY 2022-23 — vendor paid ₹14.6 lakh fees on which we deducted under 194C 1% instead of 194J 10%. FilingPro filed Form 26A under proviso to 201(1) — vendor's CA certified that fees were declared and tax paid in his ITR. Principal demand of ₹1.31 lakh extinguished; only Section 201(1A) interest of ₹19,800 paid. Order revised at TRACES.”
3 months agoVerified Client
Arvind Kumar M
Quarterly TDS Filing
“Partner in an LLP — Finance Act 2025 brought Section 194T from 1 April 2025. FilingPro flagged it in March, set up the 10% TDS deduction on partner remuneration above ₹20,000 from Q1 itself, filed Form 26Q with Section 194T deductee rows. Partners' Form 26AS reflected credit in time for their AY 2026-27 advance tax planning. Clean roll-out.”
5 weeks agoVerified Client
Lakshmi Rangan
Quarterly TDS Filing
“Real estate purchase ₹1.85 crore — Section 194IA 1% TDS in Form 26QB. FilingPro filed within 30 days, generated Form 16B from TRACES, handed to the seller. Stamp duty value vs consideration test (post-Finance Act 2024 amendment) applied — TDS computed on the higher figure. Sub-registrar accepted 16B at registration day; closing went through clean.”
2 months agoVerified Client
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Common Questions

TDS Returns FAQ — Poonamallee

Common questions from Poonamallee clients. Call 9566-068-468 for specific queries.

Rule 31A and Rule 31AA prescribe — Q1 (Apr-Jun) by 31 July, Q2 (Jul-Sep) by 31 October, Q3 (Oct-Dec) by 31 January, Q4 (Jan-Mar) by 31 May. TCS returns in Form 27EQ are due 15 days earlier in each quarter (15 July / 15 October / 15 January / 15 May). Government deductors filing through book entry follow the same calendar.
Section 197 — the deductee may apply in Form 13 to the AO for issue of a certificate authorising deduction at NIL or lower rate where existing/anticipated tax liability justifies it. Once issued, the certificate carries a unique number generated at TRACES; the deductor must quote the certificate number in the TDS return so CPC-TDS allows the lower rate. Without the quoted number, default at full rate is raised even if the deductee had a valid Form 13 certificate.
Absolutely. Most Poonamallee clients complete the entire TDS Returns process remotely — we collect documents on WhatsApp or email, share drafts for your approval, and file on your behalf. A visit to our Maduravoyal office is optional, never required.
Section 234E levies a late filing fee of ₹200 per day of delay in furnishing the TDS / TCS statement, capped at the amount of TDS / TCS deductible / collectible in the statement. The fee must be paid before furnishing the return — the FVU rejects the statement if 234E is unpaid. The fee is non-compoundable and cannot be waived by the AO.
Form 24Q has two annexures — Annexure I (deductee details, PAN, taxable amount, tax deducted) is filed every quarter Q1 to Q4; Annexure II (full salary breakup with allowances, perquisites, deductions, regime opted, employer's TAN, tax computed) is filed only with Q4 return. Annexure II is the source for Form 16 Part B generation through TRACES. Q4 24Q (due 31 May) carries the most validation weight — incorrect Annexure II rejects Form 16 generation.
Very likely yes — Poonamallee has a logistics and growing residential profile where residential and allied activity creates exactly the compliance needs TDS Returns addresses. We see these requirements here often and handle them efficiently. If it does not apply to you, we will say so.
Form 12BAA (introduced w.e.f. 1 October 2024) is the declaration filed by an employee to the employer under Rule 26B disclosing — (a) other-source TDS / TCS, (b) loss from house property, and (c) any other tax credits. Section 192(2B) read with the new Rule 26B allows the employer to factor these in while computing salary TDS, reducing in-year deduction and the employee's refund claim at year-end.
Section 195(1) — TDS at the rates in force on any sum payable to a non-resident which is chargeable in India. Default rate per first schedule + applicable cess+surcharge; treaty rate may be lower if the non-resident provides a Tax Residency Certificate (TRC) and Form 10F. Common rates — interest 20%/treaty rate, royalty/fee for technical services 20%/treaty (post-Finance Act 2023 raised from 10% to 20% where no PAN), capital gains as computed. Form 27Q reports the deduction; Form 15CA / 15CB precedes remittance.
Yes. Poonamallee has an active base of residential and allied businesses, and we regularly handle TDS Returns for exactly these kinds of clients. We tailor the approach to your line of work rather than applying a one-size template.
Section 194IA — buyer of immovable property (other than rural agricultural land) where consideration or stamp duty value is ₹50,00,000 or more must deduct TDS at 1% on the higher of consideration or stamp duty value (post-Finance Act 2024 amendment). Filing in Form 26QB within 30 days from end of month of deduction. Form 16B (TDS certificate) issued to the seller within 15 days. PAN of seller mandatory; absence triggers 20% under 206AA.
Interest under Section 201(1A) and Section 234E fee are paid through Challan ITNS-281 — major head 0021 (non-corporate) or 0020 (corporate), code '400 — TDS Regular Assessment' for 234E, code '200 — TDS Payable by Taxpayer' for short-deduction interest. The challan is then tagged in the RPU as 'Interest' or 'Fee' under the deductor section. FVU rejects the file if 234E in the file does not equal the challan amount tagged.
We review TDS Returns work carefully before submission to avoid errors in the first place. If a genuine issue ever arises on something we filed for a Poonamallee client, we help set it right — standing behind our work is part of the service.
File a correction statement on TRACES — login as deductor, request a Conso file, edit deductee details / challan / salary annexure / personal information in the RPU (NSDL Return Preparation Utility), regenerate FVU, and upload. Multiple correction types — C1 (deductor info), C2 (deductee), C3 (challan + deductee), C4 (salary), C5 (PAN), C9 (add deductee). PAN corrections beyond a 4-character change require fresh deductee row with reversal of original.
Justification Report is the default-summary file generated by CPC-TDS at TRACES (tdscpc.gov.in) listing — short deduction, short payment, late deduction, late payment, late filing, interest under 201(1A), 234E fee, and 220(2) interest where applicable. Each default carries a unique reason code. Resolution requires either correction statement, additional challan payment, or online correction at TRACES with DSC.
Section 271H — penalty of minimum ₹10,000 up to ₹1,00,000 for failure to deliver the TDS / TCS statement within the due date. Section 271H(3) provides immunity if the deductor — (a) pays the TDS, interest under 201(1A) and 234E fee, and (b) files the return within one year of the due date. Beyond the one-year window, immunity is lost and penalty proceedings under 271H(1) become live.
Section 192(1) — employer estimates the employee's total income for the year, applies the slab rates of the New Regime (default under 115BAC(1A)) or the Old Regime as opted via Form 12BAA, computes the average rate of tax, and deducts that proportion from each salary payment. Standard deduction ₹75,000 (New Regime) / ₹50,000 (Old Regime) is allowed. Section 87A rebate (₹25,000 New / ₹12,500 Old) is netted off. Form 10-IEA is required if employee opts out of New Regime and has business income.
TDS Returns near Poonamallee:

Our TDS Returns clients in Poonamallee are spread right across the locality — along Kandasamy Nagar 1st street, Kandasamy Nagar 2nd street, Main Road, Panichava Street and Pudhu Street, and through the Chennai - Chittoor - Bangalore Road (Old NH4), Kandaswamy Nagar 1st Street, Nambi Street and Poonamallee - Pattabiram Road business stretches — so wherever your premises sit, expert help is close by.

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