Can I get my TDS refunded by filing a return?

Short answerYes. Filing your Indian income-tax return is the way to get back any TDS that was more than your actual tax — whether it was deducted on a property sale, NRO interest or other income. The excess is refunded to your bank account, usually with interest.

Filing is the refund mechanism

There is no separate ‘refund application’. When you file your return, it reconciles the tax you actually owe against the TDS already deducted — and any excess is refunded automatically. For NRIs this is common, because TDS rates (30% on NRO interest, or 12.5%+ on a property sale) are often higher than the final tax.

Steps, with an example

  • Confirm the TDS appears in your Form 26AS / AIS.
  • Compute your real tax and file ITR-2.
  • Pre-validate a bank account so the refund can be paid.

Example: NRO interest of ₹5 lakh suffers about ₹1.5 lakh TDS (30%), but your slab tax is only ₹1 lakh — the ₹50,000 difference is refunded with interest under Section 244A.

Why refunds sometimes get stuck

The usual reasons are TDS not showing in 26AS (the deductor didn’t file the return — common when a property buyer skips Form 27Q), an un-validated bank account, or a mismatch between your return and the AIS. Fix these first. A DTAA can also reduce the TDS upfront so there is less to reclaim.

Talk to CA Vijay R Singh

Owed a TDS refund and not sure how to claim it? You can message him directly, or book a short call to talk through your situation.

This answer is general information for NRIs, not tax advice. Tax rates, thresholds and forms change with each Finance Act — please confirm the current position for your own facts, or speak to us, before acting.

© 2026 Vijay R Singh & Co., Chartered Accountants | FRN 136869W | M.No. 153926 | +91 98607 23959 | info@cavijaysingh.com | Andheri East, Mumbai 400069

Book a Call