Introduction
Buying property above ₹50 lakhs? Congratulations.
Now here’s the part most buyers ignore: you become responsible for deducting TDS.
Under Section 194IA of the Income Tax Act, the buyer must deduct tax at source (TDS) when purchasing immovable property above ₹50 lakhs.
Not the seller.
Not the broker.
You.
Miss it, and penalties follow.
Let’s understand everything step-by-step.
What is Section 194IA?
Section 194IA mandates that:
If you purchase immovable property (other than agricultural land in rural areas) for ₹50 lakhs or more, you must deduct 1% TDS on the sale consideration.
This rule applies to:
- Residential property
- Commercial property
- Plots
- Flats under construction
It does not apply to rural agricultural land.
What is the TDS Rate on Property Purchase?
The TDS rate is:
✔ 1% of total sale consideration
If the seller does not provide PAN, TDS may increase to 20%.
Yes, that escalates quickly.
On What Amount is TDS Calculated?
TDS is deducted on the total sale value, not just the amount exceeding ₹50 lakhs.
Example:
If property value = ₹75,00,000
TDS = 1% of ₹75,00,000 = ₹75,000
Not 1% of ₹25 lakhs.
Many buyers misunderstand this and underpay.
When Should TDS Be Deducted?
TDS must be deducted:
- At the time of payment, or
- At the time of credit to seller
Whichever is earlier.
If you pay in instalments (common in under-construction properties), TDS must be deducted on each instalment.
How to Pay TDS on Property (Form 26QB Process)
This is where panic usually starts.
Step 1: Deduct 1% TDS
Reduce the TDS amount from payment to seller.
Step 2: File Form 26QB
Form 26QB must be filed online on the income tax portal.
Step 3: Pay TDS Within 30 Days
TDS must be deposited within 30 days from the end of the month in which deduction is made.
Step 4: Download Form 16B
After filing Form 26QB, download Form 16B (TDS certificate) and issue it to the seller.
This ensures seller gets credit in Form 26AS.
Miss these steps and penalties apply.
What if There Are Multiple Buyers or Sellers?
This is where compliance gets tricky.
If there are:
- 2 buyers
- 2 sellers
Each buyer must file separate Form 26QB for each seller.
Example:
2 buyers × 2 sellers = 4 Form 26QB filings.
Yes. Even if total property value is ₹60 lakhs split between co-owners.
The ₹50 lakh threshold applies to total property value, not individual share.
This is one of the most common mistakes in property transactions.
TDS on Under-Construction Property
TDS under Section 194IA applies even to:
- Properties under construction
- Builder payments
If total agreement value exceeds ₹50 lakhs, TDS must be deducted on every instalment.
Even if individual instalments are below ₹50 lakhs.
What About Stamp Duty Value?
If stamp duty value is higher than agreement value, TDS must be calculated on higher of the two values.
This was introduced to prevent undervaluation.
So if:
Agreement value = ₹52 lakhs
Stamp duty value = ₹58 lakhs
TDS must be deducted on ₹58 lakhs.
Penalty for Non-Deduction of TDS on Property
Skipping TDS is not a minor oversight.
Here’s what can happen:
1. Interest for Late Deduction
1% per month from date TDS was deductible.
2. Interest for Late Payment
1.5% per month from date of deduction to date of payment.
3. Late Filing Fee
₹200 per day under Section 234E.
4. Penalty
May extend to amount equal to TDS.
This can easily run into tens of thousands.
All because of “we didn’t know.”
Common Mistakes Buyers Make
- Assuming builder handles TDS
- Calculating TDS only on amount above ₹50 lakhs
- Not filing separate 26QB for multiple parties
- Missing 30-day deadline
- Ignoring stamp duty value difference
Property deals involve large sums. Even small compliance mistakes become expensive.
Special Situations
NRI Seller
If seller is NRI, Section 194IA does not apply.
Instead, TDS is deducted under Section 195 at higher rates (20%+).
This requires different compliance.
Many buyers get this wrong.
Joint Loan & Joint Purchase
Even if loan is joint, TDS compliance must be handled correctly per buyer.
Why TDS on Property Matters
This provision ensures tax compliance on high-value transactions.
The government tracks property deals closely.
When TDS is properly filed:
- Seller receives tax credit
- Buyer avoids penalties
- Transaction remains clean
When ignored:
Notices follow.
How Tax Works Can Help
TDS filing for property purchase seems simple. Until:
- There are multiple buyers
- Stamp duty mismatch exists
- PAN errors happen
- Deadlines are missed
Professional assistance ensures:
✔ Accurate TDS calculation
✔ Correct Form 26QB filing
✔ Proper Form 16B issuance
✔ Compliance for NRI cases
✔ Avoidance of penalties
Because once property registration is done, you don’t want tax notices chasing you next.
Conclusion
TDS on property purchase above ₹50 lakhs under Section 194IA is mandatory in India. The buyer must deduct 1% TDS on the total sale consideration and file Form 26QB within 30 days.
Understanding the rules, deadlines, and documentation is critical to avoid penalties and legal complications.
Property investment should build wealth, not compliance headaches.
Buying property above ₹50 lakhs?
Don’t risk penalties due to incorrect TDS filing.
Tax Works offers:
✔ Complete TDS compliance support
✔ Form 26QB filing assistance
✔ NRI property transaction guidance
✔ End-to-end tax advisory
Contact Tax Works today and ensure your property transaction is 100% tax compliant.