Section 194Q TDS on Purchase of Goods – Complete Practical Guide for Businesses

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1. Why This Topic is Important?

Section 194Q is one of the most confusing and frequently searched provisions under Income Tax, especially for:

  • Traders and wholesalers
  • Manufacturers
  • MSMEs dealing in bulk purchases
  • Businesses crossing ₹10 crore turnover

Even today, many businesses are:

  • Deducting TDS incorrectly
  • Confused between 194Q vs 206C(1H)
  • Facing notices due to non-compliance

2. Basic Overview of Section 194Q

ParticularsDetails
Applicable From1st July 2021
Who Deducts TDSBuyer
Threshold TurnoverBuyer turnover > ₹10 crore (previous year)
Transaction CoveredPurchase of goods
Threshold Limit₹50 lakh per seller (per year)
TDS Rate0.1%

3. Applicability Conditions (All Must Be Satisfied)

Section 194Q applies only if:

  • Buyer’s turnover in previous year > ₹10 crore
  • Purchase from a seller exceeds ₹50 lakh in current year
  • Seller is a resident
  • Goods are purchased (not services)

4. When to Deduct TDS?

TDS should be deducted at:

  • Earlier of:
    • Payment OR
    • Credit in books

This creates practical challenges in accounting systems.


5. Practical Example

  • Buyer turnover (FY 2024-25): ₹15 crore
  • Purchase from Supplier A (FY 2025-26): ₹80 lakh

TDS applicability:

  • Threshold: ₹50 lakh
  • Taxable amount: ₹30 lakh
  • TDS @0.1% = ₹3,000

6. Section 194Q vs Section 206C(1H) (Very Important)

Particulars194Q206C(1H)
Who deducts/collectsBuyer (TDS)Seller (TCS)
ApplicabilityPurchaseSale
Priority194Q overridesSecondary
Rate0.1%0.1%

Key Rule:

  • If both sections apply → Only 194Q applies (TDS by buyer)

7. Transactions Covered / Not Covered

Covered:

  • Raw material purchases
  • Trading goods
  • Capital goods

Not Covered:

  • Import of goods
  • Non-resident sellers
  • Services
  • Transactions already covered under other TDS sections

8. Common Practical Issues

  1. Advance Payments
    • TDS applicable even on advance
  2. GST Inclusion
    • If invoice booked → TDS on amount excluding GST
    • If advance → TDS on full amount
  3. Purchase Returns
    • Adjustment allowed in future transactions
  4. Multiple Branch Accounting
    • PAN-wise threshold to be considered

9. Compliance Requirements

ComplianceDue Date
TDS Deposit7th of next month
TDS Return (26Q)Quarterly
TDS Certificate (Form 16A)Quarterly

10. Consequences of Non-Compliance

  • Disallowance of 30% of purchase expense
  • Interest:
    • 1% (non-deduction)
    • 1.5% (non-payment)
  • Penalty and notices from Income Tax Department

11. Practical Implementation Tips

  • Maintain vendor-wise purchase tracking system
  • Automate threshold alerts in accounting software
  • Obtain vendor PAN and residency confirmation
  • Reconcile with AIS and TDS returns
  • Train accounts team specifically on 194Q

12. Expert Insight

From a practical standpoint, Section 194Q is not just a compliance provision—it directly impacts:

  • Working capital
  • Vendor relationships
  • Audit risk

Businesses that proactively implement systems for 194Q:

  • Avoid notices
  • Improve financial discipline
  • Strengthen compliance credibility

13. Conclusion

Section 194Q has significantly changed how businesses handle purchase transactions. While the provision looks simple, its execution requires:

  • Strong accounting controls
  • Continuous monitoring
  • Clear understanding of overlapping provisions
Section 194Q TDS on Purchase of Goods – Complete Practical Guide for Businesses

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