My first TDS shock came in 2010.
I had an NRO fixed deposit in India. Matured after a year. I expected the full amount plus interest. Instead, I received 70% of the interest.
The bank had deducted 30% TDS. Nobody told me this would happen.
I called the bank. “Sir, you are NRI. TDS is mandatory.” That was their entire explanation.
It took me three years to figure out I could claim that money back. Three years. Thousands of rupees sitting with the government that should have been in my account.
I do not want you to make the same mistake.
TDS for NRIs is one of the most misunderstood aspects of Indian taxation. The rates are higher than Residents face. The rules are stricter. But refunds are absolutely possible if you know the process.
This guide will show you exactly how TDS works for US NRIs and how to get your money back.
Already familiar with the basics? Check out our US NRI tax filing guide for the complete picture.
What is TDS and Why Should NRIs Care
TDS stands for Tax Deducted at Source.
Think of it like this. Instead of you paying tax at year end, the person paying you deducts tax upfront and sends it to the government on your behalf.
Your tenant deducts TDS from rent. Your bank deducts TDS from interest. The property buyer deducts TDS from sale proceeds.
For Residents, TDS rates are low. Often 10% or less. Sometimes nil.
For NRIs, TDS rates are brutal. 30% on most income types. No threshold exemptions.
Here is the catch. TDS is not your final tax. It is advance tax. Your actual liability could be much lower. The difference? That is your refund.
TDS Rates: NRI vs Resident Comparison
This table shows why NRIs feel the pinch.
| Income Type | TDS Rate for Residents | TDS Rate for NRIs |
|---|---|---|
| Bank FD Interest | 10% (above Rs 40,000) | 30% (no threshold) |
| Rental Income | Nil (usually) | 30% flat |
| Property Sale (LTCG) | 1% (above Rs 50 lakhs) | 12.5% to 20% |
| Property Sale (STCG) | 1% (above Rs 50 lakhs) | 30% |
| Dividend Income | 10% (above Rs 5,000) | 20% |
| EPF Withdrawal | 10% (if service less than 5 years) | 30% |
See the pattern? NRIs face 30% TDS on almost everything. Residents enjoy lower rates and threshold exemptions.
The 30% rate assumes you fall in the highest tax bracket. But most NRIs do not. Their actual tax liability is often 5% to 20% depending on total Indian income.
The difference between 30% TDS and your actual liability is refund waiting to be claimed.
Types of Income Where TDS Hits NRIs
Let me break down each category.
Interest Income
NRO account interest. Fixed deposits. Recurring deposits. Corporate bonds.
TDS rate: 30% plus surcharge and cess. Effective rate around 31.2%.
No threshold. Even Rs 100 interest attracts TDS.
NRE account interest is tax free. No TDS there. But remember, you still report NRE interest to the IRS if you are US tax resident.
Rental Income
When a tenant pays rent to an NRI landlord, they must deduct 30% TDS.
Your tenant pays Rs 40,000 rent. You receive Rs 28,000. The Rs 12,000 goes to government as TDS.
Our detailed guide on rental income tax for US NRIs covers calculations and exemptions.
Property Sale
Buyer deducts TDS before paying you.
Long term capital gains: 12.5% (new regime) or 20% (old regime with indexation) Short term capital gains: 30%
On a Rs 1 crore sale, TDS can exceed Rs 20 lakhs. That is a lot of money locked up.
See our complete guide on capital gains tax for US NRIs selling property.
Dividend Income
Indian companies deduct 20% TDS on dividends paid to NRIs. DTAA may allow lower rates in some cases.
Professional or Consulting Fees
If you provide services to Indian clients while living abroad, they deduct 10% TDS under Section 194J. But if payment is to an NRI, rates can be higher depending on nature of service.
Why NRIs Face Higher TDS
The logic is simple. The government does not trust that NRIs will file returns and pay taxes.
Residents live in India. They have PAN linked to Aadhaar. The tax department can easily pursue them for non compliance.
NRIs live abroad. Pursuing them for unpaid taxes is harder. So the government collects more upfront.
This is exactly why the refund process exists. The system acknowledges that TDS rates are intentionally aggressive. You are meant to file ITR and claim back the excess.
Form 26AS: Your TDS Statement
Form 26AS is your TDS passbook. Every rupee deducted on your behalf appears here.
Access it through:
- Income Tax e-filing portal (incometax.gov.in)
- TRACES portal
- Net banking (most banks provide link)
What you see in Form 26AS:
| Section | What It Shows |
|---|---|
| Part A | TDS deducted by deductors (employers, banks, tenants) |
| Part A1 | TDS on sale of property |
| Part A2 | TDS on rent of property |
| Part B | Tax collected at source |
| Part C | Tax paid by you (advance tax, self assessment) |
| Part D | Refunds received |
| Part F | Details of SFT transactions |
Before filing ITR, verify Form 26AS matches your records. Missing TDS means missing refund.
If TDS is deducted but not appearing in 26AS, contact the deductor. They may have filed late or incorrectly.
Annual Information Statement: The New Form 26AS
AIS is the upgraded version of Form 26AS. Launched in 2021. Contains even more details.
It shows:
- All TDS and TCS
- Interest income from all banks
- Dividend income
- Stock transactions
- Mutual fund purchases and sales
- Foreign remittances
- High value transactions
Think of AIS as the government showing you what they already know. If something is in AIS, you better report it in ITR.
Access AIS through the income tax portal. Review it carefully. You can provide feedback if any entry is incorrect.
Lower Deduction Certificate: Stop Overpaying TDS
This is your most powerful tool against excessive TDS.
A Lower Deduction Certificate (LDC) under Section 197 tells deductors to apply a reduced TDS rate. Instead of 30%, they might deduct 10%. Or 5%. Or nothing.
When to use LDC:
- Your total Indian income is below taxable threshold
- You qualify for exemptions (Section 54, 54EC for property sale)
- Your actual tax liability is significantly lower than standard TDS rate
How to apply:
- Log in to TRACES portal
- File Form 13 online
- Provide estimated income and tax calculations
- Upload supporting documents
- Wait for certificate (usually 15 to 30 days)
- Share certificate with deductor before payment
Example:
Meera sells her Mumbai flat for Rs 80 lakhs. Standard TDS would be Rs 10 lakhs (12.5% of sale price).
But Meera plans to reinvest in another property under Section 54. Her actual tax liability is nil.
She applies for LDC. Gets certificate specifying nil TDS. Buyer deducts nothing. Meera receives full Rs 80 lakhs.
Without LDC, Meera would wait 6 to 12 months for Rs 10 lakhs refund. That is a lot of money to lend the government interest free.
How to Claim TDS Refund: Step by Step
Already paid excess TDS? Here is how to get it back.
Step 1: Gather TDS certificates
Collect Form 16A from every deductor. Banks issue this for FD interest. Tenants issue for rent. Property buyers issue for sale TDS.
Step 2: Verify Form 26AS and AIS
Match certificates with 26AS. Every TDS deduction should reflect. If something is missing, follow up with deductor.
Step 3: Calculate actual tax liability
Determine your taxable income. Apply deductions. Calculate tax using applicable slab rates or flat rates for capital gains.
| Your Total Taxable Income | Tax Liability (New Regime FY 2024 to 25) |
|---|---|
| Up to Rs 3,00,000 | Nil |
| Rs 3,00,001 to Rs 7,00,000 | 5% of amount exceeding Rs 3 lakhs |
| Rs 7,00,001 to Rs 10,00,000 | Rs 20,000 plus 10% of amount exceeding Rs 7 lakhs |
| Rs 10,00,001 to Rs 12,00,000 | Rs 50,000 plus 15% of amount exceeding Rs 10 lakhs |
| Rs 12,00,001 to Rs 15,00,000 | Rs 80,000 plus 20% of amount exceeding Rs 12 lakhs |
| Above Rs 15,00,000 | Rs 1,40,000 plus 30% of amount exceeding Rs 15 lakhs |
Step 4: File Income Tax Return
Use the correct ITR form. For most NRIs with investment income, ITR 2 works. If you have business income, use ITR 3.
Report all income. Claim all TDS. The system calculates refund automatically.
Step 5: Verify your return
E-verify within 30 days of filing. Without verification, return is invalid. No refund processed.
Verify through:
- Aadhaar OTP
- Net banking
- Bank account EVC
- Demat account EVC
- Digital Signature Certificate
Step 6: Wait for processing
Processing time varies. Usually 30 to 90 days. Sometimes longer if return is picked for scrutiny.
Step 7: Receive refund
Refund is credited directly to your bank account. The account must be linked to PAN and pre-validated in the tax portal.
NRO accounts can receive refunds. NRE accounts cannot (they are for foreign remittances only).
Refund Timeline: What to Expect
| Stage | Typical Duration |
|---|---|
| ITR filing to e-verification | Do immediately (30 day deadline) |
| Processing by CPC | 30 to 60 days |
| Refund credit to bank | 7 to 15 days after processing |
| Total time | 45 to 90 days typically |
If refund is delayed beyond 90 days, you earn interest at 6% per annum from April of the assessment year.
Check refund status at incometax.gov.in. Log in. Go to e-File. Select View Filed Returns. Click refund status.
Common TDS Mistakes NRIs Make
After years of community calls, I have seen every error possible.
Mistake 1: Not updating NRI status with banks
Your bank thinks you are Resident. They deduct 10% TDS. You think everything is fine.
Then the tax department notices discrepancy. They apply 30% rate. Issue demand notice for shortfall. Plus interest and penalties.
Fix: Update KYC with every Indian bank. Provide overseas address. Link NRO account properly.
Mistake 2: Tenant not deducting TDS
Many tenants do not know about NRI TDS requirements. They pay full rent. You receive extra money.
Then you both face consequences. Tenant penalized for non deduction. You face scrutiny for receiving non compliant payment.
Fix: Educate your tenant. Provide written communication about TDS requirement. Consider property manager who handles compliance.
Mistake 3: Not filing ITR because TDS was deducted
TDS is not final tax. It is advance payment. You must file ITR to reconcile.
Without ITR, excess TDS stays with government. You never get refund.
Fix: File ITR every year you have Indian income with TDS deduction.
Mistake 4: Missing Form 26AS verification
You assume all TDS is reflected. It is not. Deductor filed wrong PAN. Or did not file at all.
You claim credit in ITR. System rejects because 26AS does not match.
Fix: Download and verify Form 26AS before filing. Reconcile every entry.
Mistake 5: Wrong bank account for refund
Refund sent to old account. Account closed. Or wrong account number entered.
Refund bounces. Gets stuck. Takes months to resolve.
Fix: Pre-validate your NRO account in the income tax portal before filing. Double check account number.
US Tax Implications of TDS
Here is what most guides miss.
TDS paid in India is not just Indian tax. It creates Foreign Tax Credit opportunity for US filers.
The DTAA between India and USA allows you to claim credit for Indian taxes paid. TDS counts as taxes paid.
| Scenario | Indian Treatment | US Treatment |
|---|---|---|
| TDS deducted | Advance tax paid | Foreign Tax Credit available |
| ITR filed, refund received | Final tax determined | Credit limited to final tax |
| ITR not filed | TDS becomes final tax | Credit based on TDS amount |
What this really means: If you paid Rs 1 lakh TDS but got Rs 70,000 refund, your actual Indian tax is Rs 30,000. You claim Rs 30,000 as Foreign Tax Credit on US return.
Keep all TDS certificates. You need them for IRS documentation.
For complete US reporting guidance, see our article on reporting Indian income to IRS.
ITR Forms for NRIs
Which form to use? Depends on your income types.
| ITR Form | Use When |
|---|---|
| ITR 1 | Not for NRIs (only for Resident individuals) |
| ITR 2 | Salary, house property, capital gains, other sources (no business income) |
| ITR 3 | Business or professional income |
| ITR 4 | Presumptive income (not typically for NRIs) |
Most US NRIs with rental income, interest, and capital gains use ITR 2.
If you also have business income from India (consulting, freelancing), use ITR 3.
Special Case: TDS on Property Sale
Property sale TDS deserves special attention because amounts are large.
The buyer is responsible for:
- Obtaining TAN (Tax Deduction Account Number)
- Deducting TDS at applicable rate
- Depositing TDS using Form 26QB
- Filing TDS return
- Issuing Form 16A to seller (you)
Many individual buyers do not have TAN. They must obtain one before transaction.
| Buyer Type | TAN Requirement | Form for TDS Deposit |
|---|---|---|
| Individual without TAN | Must obtain TAN first | Form 26QB |
| Individual with TAN | Use existing TAN | Form 26QB |
| Company | Already has TAN | Form 26Q |
Some CAs recommend having the buyer apply for TAN well before closing date. Avoid last minute scrambles.
For complete property sale guidance, see capital gains tax for US NRIs.
TDS Refund for Previous Years
What if you did not file ITR in past years? TDS was deducted. You never claimed refund.
You can file belated or updated returns.
| Return Type | Deadline | Penalty |
|---|---|---|
| Original return | July 31 of assessment year | None |
| Belated return | December 31 of assessment year | Rs 5,000 or Rs 1,000 |
| Updated return | Within 24 months of end of assessment year | Additional tax of 25% to 50% |
Example: For FY 2022 to 23, original deadline was July 31, 2023. Belated deadline was December 31, 2023. Updated return can be filed until March 31, 2026.
Updated returns (ITR U) require paying additional tax. But if you are claiming refund and no additional tax is due, the calculation gets complicated. Consult a CA.
For really old years, the refund may be time barred. The government keeps your money. Painful but true.
This is why I keep saying: file ITR every year. Do not let TDS refunds expire.
Working with Your CA
For anything beyond simple FD interest, get professional help.
A good CA helps with:
- Lower Deduction Certificate application
- ITR preparation and filing
- Refund tracking and follow up
- Responding to tax notices
- Cross border tax coordination
Cost for NRI ITR filing: Rs 5,000 to Rs 25,000 depending on complexity.
Property sale compliance: Rs 15,000 to Rs 50,000.
Compare that to the refunds involved. Usually worth it.
Our financial advisors directory lists CAs experienced with NRI taxation.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Can I get TDS refund without filing ITR?
No. ITR filing is mandatory to claim refund. TDS paid is reconciled against actual liability only through ITR.
Q: How do I check TDS deducted against my PAN?
Log in to income tax portal. Download Form 26AS and Annual Information Statement. All TDS linked to your PAN appears there.
Q: What if deductor used wrong PAN?
Contact deductor. Ask them to file correction statement. TDS will be credited to correct PAN after correction.
Q: Is there interest on delayed TDS refund?
Yes. If refund is delayed beyond the processing timeline, you receive 6% per annum interest from April of the assessment year.
Q: Can NRE account receive TDS refund?
No. NRE accounts are for foreign remittances. TDS refund is Indian income. It goes to NRO account only.
Q: What if I am RNOR status?
Resident but Not Ordinarily Resident still faces NRI TDS rates on most income. But RNOR can claim more exemptions. Tax liability and refund calculations differ.
Q: Do I need to show TDS refund as income?
No. Refund is return of your own money. Not income. But the interest component on refund (if any) is taxable.
Quick Checklist for TDS Refund
Before tax season ends:
- Update NRI status with all Indian banks
- Collect Form 16A from every deductor
- Download and verify Form 26AS
- Check Annual Information Statement for completeness
- Calculate actual tax liability
- Consider Lower Deduction Certificate for future payments
- File ITR using correct form
- E-verify within 30 days
- Pre-validate NRO account for refund
- Track refund status online
- Keep records for US Foreign Tax Credit
The Bottom Line
TDS for NRIs is aggressive by design. 30% deducted upfront. But your actual tax is often much lower.
The system expects you to file ITR and claim refund. If you do not, you are essentially donating money to the government.
Here is what matters:
- TDS is advance tax, not final tax
- NRIs face 30% TDS on most income
- Lower Deduction Certificate prevents overpayment
- File ITR every year to claim refund
- Verify Form 26AS before filing
- TDS paid creates Foreign Tax Credit for US returns
- Keep all certificates for seven years
That Rs 12,000 TDS I lost in 2010? I eventually learned to file ITR regularly. Now I claim refunds every year. The process takes time but the money is real.
If you have questions about TDS or refund process, join our WhatsApp community at https://backtoindia.com/groups. Over 20,000 NRIs helping each other with real, lived experience. It is free and volunteer run.
Tax questions come up every single day. Someone in the group has faced your exact situation.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only. Tax laws change frequently. Always consult qualified tax professionals for advice specific to your situation.
Sources:
- Income Tax Department, India (TDS Provisions): https://www.incometax.gov.in
- Section 195 (TDS on payments to NRIs): https://www.incometax.gov.in
- Section 197 (Lower Deduction Certificate): https://www.incometax.gov.in
- TRACES Portal: https://www.tdscpc.gov.in
- Form 26AS and AIS: https://www.incometax.gov.in
- TDS Rate Chart for NRIs: https://www.incometax.gov.in
- ITR Forms and Instructions: https://www.incometax.gov.in
- IRS Form 1116 (Foreign Tax Credit): https://www.irs.gov/forms-pubs/about-form-1116
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