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TDS Journal Entries Under Income Tax Act 2025 — Complete Practical Guide

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TDS Journal Entries Under Income Tax Act 2025 — Complete Practical Guide
TDS Journal Entries Under Income Tax Act 2025 — Complete Practical Guide
TDS Journal Entries Explained with Logic, Golden Rules & Financial Impact | CA Devesh Thakur | eTaxSave
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📒 Income Tax · TDS Journal Entries

TDS Journal Entries Explained with Logic,
Golden Rules & Financial Impact

✍️ CA Devesh Thakur 📅 February 18, 2026 ⏱️ 12 min read

Most people memorise TDS entries. This blog teaches you to derive them — using the Golden Rules of Accounting, logical flow, and real scenarios for Salary, Rent, Professional Fees, Grossing Up, and Advance Payments.

📗
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📝 TDS Journal Entries — All Scenarios

TDS Journal Entries by CA Devesh Thakur – eTaxSave

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1. What is TDS — and Why Does It Need a Journal Entry?

TDS stands for Tax Deducted at Source. It is a mechanism under the Income Tax Act where the payer deducts a specified percentage of tax at the time of making a payment and deposits it with the government on behalf of the payee.

Because TDS creates three separate financial events — expense booking, payment to party, and remittance to government — each event needs its own journal entry. Understanding why, not just what, is the key to never getting confused again.

📌 The Core Logic

When you deduct TDS, you are acting as a tax collector for the government. The payee receives less cash (net of TDS), but you owe the full expense to them — and separately owe the TDS amount to the government. Three parties, three legs, three entries.

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Who Deducts TDS?

The Deductor — the person making payment (employer, company, individual in specified cases). They deduct from the payee’s amount and deposit to the government.

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Who Bears TDS?

The Deductee — the payee (employee, contractor, landlord). Their income is reduced by the TDS amount, but they get credit for it in their ITR.

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Who Gets It?

The Government — receives TDS from the deductor by the 7th of the following month (or 30th April for March). This is the final leg of every TDS story.


2. Golden Rules of Accounting — The Foundation

Every journal entry — including TDS — is derived from the three Golden Rules of Accounting. Before writing any entry, identify which type of account you are dealing with, then apply the rule.

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Personal Account
Debit the Receiver
Credit the Giver
Applies to: Party A/c, TDS Payable A/c, Salary Payable A/c
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Real Account
Debit what comes in
Credit what goes out
Applies to: Bank A/c, Cash A/c, Assets
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Nominal Account
Debit all Expenses & Losses
Credit all Incomes & Gains
Applies to: Expense A/c (Salary, Rent, Professional Fee)

🔑 How to Apply the Rules to TDS

  • Expense A/c → Nominal → Debit (it’s an expense/loss)
  • Party/Payee A/c → Personal → Credit (we are the giver of money to them)
  • TDS Payable A/c → Personal → Credit (Government is the receiver — we owe them)
  • Bank A/c → Real → Credit when money goes out (payment to party / government)

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3. Entry 1 — Booking the Expense (At Accrual)

The first entry happens when the liability is recognised — when the expense is due. No cash has moved yet. You acknowledge that the expense has occurred, you owe the payee the full amount, but you will deduct TDS before paying them.

📌 Scenario: Professional Fee ₹1,00,000 | TDS @ 10% | Sec 393(1)

ABC Ltd engages a consultant. Fee = ₹1,00,000. TDS @ 10% (Sec 393(1), IT Act 2025) = ₹10,000. Threshold: ₹50,000 p.a. Net payable to consultant = ₹90,000.

Journal Entry 1 — Expense Booking
On Accrual
Dr ₹1,00,000
₹90,000
₹10,000
Logic: Professional Fee A/c → Nominal → Debit (expense). Consultant A/c → Personal → Credit (we owe ₹90,000). TDS Payable → Personal → Credit (we owe ₹10,000 to govt). Total credit = ₹1,00,000 = Debit. ✅

✅ Key Point — Why Split the Credit?

The consultant earned ₹1,00,000. But we owe ₹90,000 to them and ₹10,000 to the government. Splitting the credit into two separate accounts accurately captures the dual liability created by TDS deduction.


4. Entry 2 — Payment to Party (Net of TDS)

The second entry is when actual cash is paid to the payee. Since TDS was already deducted at accrual, you now settle only the net amount outstanding in the party’s account.

Journal Entry 2 — Payment to Consultant
On Payment
Dr ₹90,000
₹90,000
Logic: Consultant A/c → Personal → Debit (we are paying them, they are the receiver). Bank A/c → Real → Credit (money going out). The TDS Payable A/c is untouched — it remains a liability until we remit to govt.

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5. Entry 3 — TDS Remittance to Government

The third and final entry is when you deposit the TDS with the government — via Challan 281 — by the due date (7th of next month, or 30th April for March). This clears the TDS Payable liability completely.

Journal Entry 3 — TDS Remittance to Govt
On Deposit
Dr ₹10,000
₹10,000
Logic: TDS Payable → Personal → Debit (the government, who was the receiver, is now being paid — we square off the liability). Bank A/c → Real → Credit (money goes out). TDS Payable A/c now shows zero balance. ✅

📊 Complete Flow Summary

  • Entry 1 (Accrual): Expense Dr ₹1,00,000 | Consultant Cr ₹90,000 | TDS Payable Cr ₹10,000
  • Entry 2 (Payment): Consultant Dr ₹90,000 | Bank Cr ₹90,000
  • Entry 3 (Remittance): TDS Payable Dr ₹10,000 | Bank Cr ₹10,000
  • Net Bank Outflow: ₹90,000 + ₹10,000 = ₹1,00,000 ✅ (equals gross expense)

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6. Entry 4 — Grossing Up (Net Payment Agreed)

Sometimes a contract specifies net payment — the payee wants ₹90,000 in hand, and the payer agrees to bear TDS. In this case, the payer must “gross up” the payment to find the gross amount from which TDS can be deducted to leave exactly ₹90,000.

📌 Grossing Up Formula
Net Amount = ₹90,000
÷
(1 − TDS Rate) = 0.90
=
Gross = ₹1,00,000

TDS = ₹1,00,000 × 10% = ₹10,000. Net paid to consultant = ₹90,000. ✅

Journal Entry — Grossing Up (Payer Bears TDS)
Special Case
Dr ₹1,00,000
₹90,000
₹10,000
Note: The entry structure is the same as Entry 1. What changes is the computation — you calculated the gross ₹1,00,000 from the agreed net ₹90,000. The ₹10,000 TDS is an additional cost borne by the payer (not recovered from payee).

7. TDS on Salary, Rent & Professional Fees — Comparison

The entry structure is identical across payment types. What differs is the TDS section, rate, and threshold. Here’s a consolidated view:

Payment Type Section Rate Threshold Expense A/c Debited
Salary Sec 392 As per slab Basic exemption limit Salary A/c Dr
Professional Fees Sec 393(1) 10% ₹50,000 p.a. Professional Fee A/c Dr
Rent (Land/Building) — Specified Person Sec 393(1) 10% ₹50,000 Rent A/c Dr
Rent (Machinery) — Specified Person Sec 393(1) 2% ₹50,000 Rent A/c Dr
Contract — Indiv/HUF Sec 393(1) 1% ₹30,000 per tx / ₹1L p.a. Contract Expense A/c Dr
Contract — Others Sec 393(1) 2% ₹30,000 per tx / ₹1L p.a. Contract Expense A/c Dr
Salary Entry — Sec 392 (Monthly Payroll)
Sec 392
Dr ₹5,00,000
₹4,75,000
₹25,000
On Payment: Salary Payable A/c Dr ₹4,75,000 | To Bank A/c ₹4,75,000. Then on 7th: TDS Payable Dr ₹25,000 | To Bank ₹25,000.
Rent Entry — Sec 393(1) | Land & Building (Specified Person)
Sec 393(1)
Dr ₹50,000
₹45,000
₹5,000
Rate: 10% TDS on ₹50,000 = ₹5,000. Threshold: ₹50,000 (per Sec 393(1), IT Act 2025). TDS deducted at time of credit or payment, whichever is earlier.

8. Advance Payment Scenarios — TDS Timing Rules

TDS must be deducted at the time of credit to the payee’s account OR payment, whichever is earlier. This means if you pay an advance before the service is complete, TDS is deducted on the advance itself.

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Advance Paid — TDS Deducted at Advance Stage

If you pay ₹50,000 advance for a ₹1,00,000 contract, deduct TDS on ₹50,000 at the time of advance payment. Deduct balance TDS on remaining ₹50,000 when final payment is made.

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Credit Before Payment

If you credit the payee’s account (book the liability) before making cash payment, TDS is deducted at the time of credit (accrual), not at actual cash payment.

Entry — Advance Payment with TDS (Sec 393(1))
Advance Stage
Dr ₹45,000
Dr ₹5,000
₹50,000
Note: TDS of ₹5,000 (10% on ₹50,000 advance) is deducted. The advance is tracked as an asset until services are rendered. On final expense booking, the advance and TDS deducted earlier are adjusted against the total liability.
Entry — Final Expense Booking & Adjustment
On Completion
Dr ₹1,00,000
₹45,000
₹5,000
₹45,000
₹5,000
Balance Payment: Consultant Dr ₹45,000 | Bank Cr ₹45,000. Then TDS Payable Dr ₹10,000 | Bank Cr ₹10,000. Total TDS deposited = ₹5,000 (advance) + ₹5,000 (balance) = ₹10,000. ✅

9. Financial Impact & Key Clarity Points

TDS journal entries have a direct impact on the financial statements. Understanding this impact is essential for balance sheet accuracy, cash flow planning, and audit readiness.

Financial Statement Impact of TDS Entries
P&L (Income Statement) Full gross expense debited (e.g., ₹1,00,000 Professional Fee). TDS deduction does not reduce the expense — the full cost hits P&L.
Balance Sheet — Liabilities TDS Payable A/c appears as a Current Liability until deposited with the government.
Balance Sheet — Assets TDS Receivable (for the deductee) appears as a Current Asset — credit claimable in ITR.
Cash Flow Bank outflow = Net payment (₹90,000) + TDS remittance (₹10,000) = Gross expense (₹1,00,000). No leakage. ✅
Form 26AS / AIS TDS deposited reflects in deductee’s 26AS. Deductee gets credit for this TDS against their final tax liability.

📌 Key Clarity Points — Common Confusions Resolved

  • TDS is NOT an expense: It is a portion of the payee’s income tax collected by you on behalf of the government. Your expense is the gross amount.
  • Late deduction penalty: If TDS is not deducted, interest @ 1% per month from due date to deduction date applies. If deducted but not deposited, interest @ 1.5% per month applies.
  • Lower or Nil TDS certificate: If the payee holds a certificate under Sec 197 (IT Act 1961) / applicable provision under IT Act 2025, deduct TDS at the rate specified in the certificate, not the standard rate. Entry structure remains the same.
  • TDS on advance: TDS is deducted at the time of payment of advance — the entry must capture TDS even when services haven’t yet been rendered.
  • No TDS if payment below threshold: Check the annual aggregate against the threshold. If below threshold — no TDS, no TDS Payable account, just: Expense Dr | Party Cr | Bank Cr (direct).
  • Deductee’s books: For the consultant/payee, TDS Receivable A/c is debited — it’s money that the government holds on their behalf.

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Next Step After Journal Entry
How to Pay TDS/TCS Challan Online
New Process · Income Tax Act 2025 · FY 2026–27
🎬 After booking entries — deposit TDS via Challan 281. Watch the step-by-step guide above. Watch on YouTube

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