M MoneyExplain
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Tools
  • About
  • Contact
Home › Blog › Tax & Insurance

What Is TDS? The Complete Guide for Employees & Freelancers (2026)

By MoneyExplain • 10 min read • Updated Feb 2026
TDS explained: Pie chart slice removed from income

Key Takeaways

  • Concept: TDS is tax collected at the moment money is paid to you, not at the end of the year.
  • Not Final Tax: TDS is just an advance. If your total tax liability is zero, you get 100% of TDS back as a refund.
  • Tracking: Always check Form 26AS or AIS to see if your deducted tax is actually with the Govt.
  • Save TDS: Submit Form 15G/15H to banks to prevent TDS on FD interest if your income is low.

You earned ₹50,000, but the bank credited only ₹45,000. Why? Because the government took its share before the money even reached you.

This is TDS (Tax Deducted at Source). It is the government's way of ensuring people don't run away without paying taxes. They catch the tax right where the money originates.

1. How TDS Works: The "Waiter Tip" Analogy

Imagine you are a waiter. Instead of giving you the full bill amount, the customer is forced by law to cut 10% and give it directly to the restaurant owner (Govt) in your name.

  • Payer (Deductor): The person paying the money (Employer, Bank, Client).
  • Payee (Deductee): You (Receiver of money).
  • The Proof: The Payer gives you a TDS Certificate (Form 16/16A) as proof that they took your money and gave it to the Govt.

2. Common TDS Rates (2025-26)

Different types of income have different "cuts". Here are the most common ones:

Income Type TDS Rate When is it deducted?
Salary Slab Rate If annual salary > Exemption Limit (₹4L)
FD Interest 10% If interest > ₹40,000 / year
Freelance Work 10% If payment > ₹30,000
Dividends 10% If dividend > ₹5,000
Lottery / Gaming 30% Flat rate (e.g. Dream11 winnings)

3. Where Is My Money? (Form 26AS vs AIS)

If money is cut from your salary or interest, how do you know the Payer actually deposited it with the Govt? What if they pocketed it?

The Golden Rule

Trust, but Verify. Always log in to the Income Tax Portal and check two documents:

  • Form 26AS: The classic "Passbook" of your tax. It lists every rupee deducted against your PAN.
  • AIS (Annual Information Statement): The modern, detailed version. It shows TDS plus other financial data (Savings interest, Share market trades).

If your TDS is not visible in 26AS, you cannot claim a refund. Chase your employer/bank immediately.

4. The "Refund" Hack

This is where most students and beginners lose money. They think "TDS kata hai matlab tax pay ho gaya" (TDS is cut means tax is paid).

Scenario:

  • You are a college student doing freelance design. You earn ₹2 Lakhs in a year.
  • Your client deducts 10% TDS = ₹20,000.
  • Your Tax Liability: Since your income (₹2L) is below the taxable limit (₹4L), your tax is ZERO.

Action: File an ITR (Income Tax Return). Tell the Govt: "My tax is 0, but you have my ₹20,000. Give it back."
Result: Govt refunds ₹20,000 + Interest directly to your bank account.

5. How to avoid TDS? (Form 15G/15H)

If you know your total income will be below the taxable limit, you can stop the Bank from cutting TDS on your FD interest.

  • Form 15G: For people below 60 years.
  • Form 15H: For Senior Citizens (60+).

Submit this form to your bank at the start of the financial year (April). They will pay you full interest without cuts.

Final Takeaway

TDS is not a penalty. It is a mechanism. If you are an honest taxpayer, TDS is just an advance payment which is adjusted against your final bill. If you owe nothing, you get it all back.

Pro Tip: Never ignore an email saying "TDS Certificate". Save it. It is your proof of money paid.

Want to check if you need to pay tax?
Use our simple calculator to see your liability.
→ Income Tax Calculator

In This Article

  • How TDS Works
  • TDS Rates 2026
  • Form 26AS & AIS
  • How to Get Refund
  • Form 15G/15H

Taxation Basics

  • What is Income Tax?
  • Old vs New Regime
  • Tax Calculator
M MoneyExplain

Simplified personal finance for Indians. No jargon, just logic.

© 2026 MoneyExplain. All rights reserved.