A TDS default is rarely caused by ignorance of the rate. It is almost always caused by a process failure.
Wrong challan mapping, incorrect PAN of the deductee, mismatch between Form 26AS and the return filed, delay in depositing the challan — these are the real reasons organisations receive default notices from TRACES.
The cascading effect is significant. A default triggers interest under Section 201, a short deduction demand, and in some cases, disallowance of the expense itself under Section 40(a)(ia). For a business processing hundreds of vendor payments monthly, one systematic error can compound quickly.
What makes TDS management particularly demanding is that it touches every function — payroll, vendor payments, rent, professional fees, and property transactions. Each category has different rates, different thresholds, and different return forms.
Professionals managing TDS need to be comfortable not just with the law but with the TRACES portal, e-payment systems, challan correction procedures, and the resolution of outstanding demands.
This is precisely what our TDS Retainership Training programme is structured to deliver.

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