Budget 2026 Update: Changes in TDS and TCS from 1 April 2026

Budget 2026: Key Amendments in TDS & TCS Framework (Effective from 1 April 2026)

The Union Budget 2026 has introduced wide-ranging reforms in the TDS and TCS provisions under the Income-tax Act, 2025. These measures are aimed at rate rationalisation, simplification of compliance, removal of ambiguities, taxpayer relief, and selective decriminalisation of offences.

Unless specifically mentioned otherwise, all amendments will come into force from 1 April 2026 and apply from Tax Year 2026–27 onwards.


1. Rationalisation of TCS Rates – Section 394(1)

Earlier, Section 394(1) prescribed multiple and inconsistent TCS rates across different categories of transactions. Budget 2026 proposes to standardise TCS rates wherever feasible, while also granting rate relief in select cases.

Revised TCS Rate Structure

Sl. No. Nature of Receipt Existing Rate Proposed Rate
1 Sale of alcoholic liquor for human consumption 1% 2%
2 Sale of tendu leaves 5% 2%
3 Sale of scrap 1% 2%
4 Sale of minerals (coal, lignite, iron ore) 1% 2%
5(a) LRS remittance – education / medical treatment exceeding ₹10 lakh 5% 2%
5(b) LRS remittance – other purposes 20% 20% (unchanged)
6 Overseas tour programme package Tiered (5% / 20%) 2% flat

2. Overseas Tour Programme Package – Significant Relief

Earlier Regime

  • 5% TCS on amounts up to ₹10 lakh

  • 20% TCS on amounts exceeding ₹10 lakh

Budget 2026 Change

  • Uniform TCS rate of 2%

  • ₹10 lakh threshold removed

  • Applicable irrespective of transaction value

Impact

  • Substantial reduction in tax burden on travellers

  • Prevents diversion of business to foreign tour operators

  • Simplifies compliance for Indian tour operators


3. Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS) – Rate Reduction

For remittances under RBI’s LRS:

Purpose Earlier TCS Revised TCS
Education / Medical treatment (above ₹10 lakh) 5% 2%
Other purposes 20% No change

This amendment provides notable relief to students and individuals remitting funds for medical treatment abroad.


4. Electronic Filing for Lower / Nil TDS Certificates – Section 395

Earlier Position

  • Manual application before the Assessing Officer

  • Lengthy and compliance-intensive process

Amendment under Budget 2026

  • Payees can now apply electronically

  • Application to be made before a prescribed income-tax authority

  • Certificate may be:

    • Issued electronically, or

    • Rejected if conditions are not met or details are incomplete

Benefit

  • Faster processing

  • Improved transparency

  • Major compliance relief for small and medium taxpayers


5. TDS on Supply of Manpower – Ambiguity Clarified

Issue Earlier

Confusion existed on whether manpower supply should be classified as:

  • Contract work (1% / 2%), or

  • Technical / professional services (up to 10%)

Budget 2026 Clarification

  • Supply of manpower is explicitly included under “work” in Section 402(47)

Applicable TDS Rates

  • 1% – where payee is Individual or HUF

  • 2% – in all other cases

Outcome

  • Uniform tax treatment

  • Reduced litigation and interpretational disputes


6. Deduction Allowed to Non-Life Insurance Business for Delayed TDS

Earlier Issue

  • Expenses were disallowed if TDS was not deducted or paid on time

  • No explicit provision for allowing deduction in a subsequent year

Budget 2026 Amendment

  • Schedule XIV amended

  • New provision allows deduction in the year in which TDS is deducted and paid

Applicability

  • Non-life insurance businesses

  • Effective from AY 2026–27 onwards


7. Decriminalisation and Rationalisation of TDS/TCS Offences

Fully Decriminalised Defaults

Failure to deposit TDS relating to:

  • Lottery or crossword puzzle winnings

  • Benefits or perquisites arising from business or profession

➡️ No imprisonment prescribed

Revised Punishment Structure (Selected Cases)

Applicable to:

  • Online gaming winnings

  • Virtual Digital Asset (VDA) transactions

Amount of TDS Default Punishment
Above ₹50 lakh Imprisonment up to 2 years / fine / both
₹10 lakh – ₹50 lakh Imprisonment up to 6 months / fine / both
Other cases Fine only

Wholly in-kind transactions involving online gaming or VDAs are excluded from prosecution.


8. TDS on Sale of Immovable Property by Non-Residents – Procedural Ease

Earlier

  • Buyer was required to obtain TAN for TDS compliance

Now

  • TDS can be deposited using PAN-based challan

  • No TAN required

Impact

  • Simplified property transactions with NRIs

  • Reduced compliance burden for resident buyers


Effective Date

1 April 2026
✔ Applicable from Tax Year 2026–27 onwards


Closing Note

With these comprehensive reforms, Budget 2026 significantly reshapes the TDS–TCS landscape, balancing automation, relief, and enforcement. Taxpayers, professionals, tour operators, insurers, and businesses engaged in manpower supply or cross-border remittances should realign systems, contracts, and compliance processes well ahead of 1 April 2026.