What TDS is
TDS is the system of collecting tax at the point of payment. When you receive salary, interest, rent, professional fees or the proceeds of a property sale, the payer deducts a set percentage and deposits it against your PAN. It then shows in your Form 26AS / AIS.
Why it isn't an extra tax
TDS is an advance against your eventual liability, not a separate charge. When you file your return, you add up all your income, compute the tax, and credit the TDS already deducted. If TDS exceeds your tax, the excess is refunded; if it falls short, you pay the balance. Rates vary by payment type — confirm the applicable section.
A worked example
Example: a bank deducts 10% TDS on ₹1 lakh of fixed-deposit interest (₹10,000). If your slab rate is 5%, your actual tax is ₹5,000, so you reclaim ₹5,000 by filing. If your rate is 30%, you pay an extra ₹20,000. Either way the TDS is just a part-payment. Checking your 26AS before filing ensures every deduction is credited. Our team can reconcile it.