Will TDS be cut on your PF withdrawal? Run this quick check before you withdraw. The deduction only bites if you are taking accumulated EPF money out early, the amount is large, and your income is taxable. If any one of three escape doors applies, you walk away with the full balance.
Answer these in order. The first “no” you hit usually means no TDS.
If you cleared all four gates, no tax is deducted at source. If you fall into the trap on every gate, that is, an early cash withdrawal above Rs 50,000 by someone with taxable income, then Section 192A kicks in and the EPFO deducts TDS before paying you.
The 30-second answer: TDS under Section 192A applies only to a premature EPF withdrawal (before 5 years of service) where the amount is more than Rs 50,000 and you cannot give Form 15G/15H. The rate is 10 percent if your PAN is on record. Even if it is cut, it is not a final tax, you adjust it against your tax bill when you file your ITR.
Section 192A of the Income-tax Act, 1961 was inserted by the Finance Act, 2015. It directs the trustees of the Employees' Provident Fund Scheme, 1952 to deduct tax at source when they pay out an employee's accumulated balance early. Here is the rate table.
| Situation | TDS rate |
|---|---|
| Early withdrawal above Rs 50,000, PAN furnished | 10 percent |
| Early withdrawal above Rs 50,000, PAN NOT furnished | Maximum marginal rate, about 34.608 percent |
| Withdrawal Rs 50,000 or less | Nil |
| 5+ years of continuous service | Nil |
| Form 15G/15H validly submitted | Nil |
A few points worth nailing down:
You cannot dodge tax that is genuinely due, but you can stop an unnecessary deduction:
Worked example. Ramesh resigns after 3 years and 4 months and withdraws his EPF balance of Rs 1,80,000. He is below 5 years, the amount is above Rs 50,000, and his salary this year was taxable, so all four escape doors are shut. Because his PAN is on record, the EPFO deducts TDS at 10 percent, Rs 18,000, and pays him Rs 1,62,000. When Ramesh files his ITR, the Rs 18,000 appears in his Form 26AS. His total tax is only Rs 11,000, so he claims the Rs 18,000 credit and gets a Rs 7,000 refund. Without PAN the cut would have been about Rs 62,294 at 34.608 percent, recoverable the same way, but he would have been short of cash for months.
If you ever need to confirm how much TDS the EPFO deducted, or why a withdrawal was held up, you can file an RTI with the EPFO, which is a public authority under the RTI Act, 2005. Use our AI RTI Drafter to frame a clean query, the Timeline Tracker to know when the reply is due, the PIO Reply Checker to test whether the answer is complete, and the First Appeal Builder if you are stonewalled. For the full how-to on using RTI to get answers out of any office, read The RTI Playbook.
The Income-tax Act, 2025 replaces the 1961 Act for tax year 2026-27 onward. From 1 April 2026, the rule now in Section 192A is renumbered as Section 392(7). The substance does not change, the 10 percent rate, the Rs 50,000 threshold, the 5-year and Form 15G/15H carve-outs all carry over. So if your CA or a newer guide cites Section 392(7), it is the same rule under a new number.
No. It is only tax deducted at source, an advance. It is credited to your PAN, shows in Form 26AS, and you adjust it against your total tax when you file your ITR. If too much was cut, you get a refund.
No. The total withdrawal is below the Rs 50,000 threshold, so no TDS is deducted under Section 192A even though you have not completed 5 years.
No. Once your continuous service across employers reaches 5 years or more, the withdrawal is fully TDS-free and the EPF amount itself is tax-exempt, regardless of how large it is.
The EPFO must deduct at the maximum marginal rate, currently about 34.608 percent, instead of 10 percent. You can still recover any excess by filing your ITR, but the upfront cut is far heavier, so always update your PAN first.
Yes, if your total taxable income for the year is below the basic exemption limit. Form 15G is for those under 60 and Form 15H for those 60 and above. It is a declaration that your income is non-taxable. Filing it falsely can attract penalty and prosecution, so use it only when it is true.
No. Transferring your EPF balance to a new account is not a withdrawal and is outside Section 192A. It attracts no TDS and keeps your service clock running toward the 5-year mark.