If you are a salaried tenant or any individual paying house rent of more than Rs 50,000 a month, the law makes you deduct tax at source from your own landlord and deposit it with the government using Form 26QC. Most tenants never hear about this until a notice arrives, so here is the plain-English version.
Quick answer: Under Section 194-IB, an individual or HUF not under tax audit who pays monthly rent above Rs 50,000 must deduct 2 percent TDS, deposit it with Form 26QC within 30 days from the end of the month of deduction, and give the landlord a Form 16C certificate. No TAN is needed; your PAN is enough.
Section 194-IB puts the job of collecting a small slice of tax on rent onto the tenant. If you pay rent above Rs 50,000 for any month in a year, you deduct 2 percent of the total annual rent once a year, pay it online, and report it through Form 26QC. The landlord then claims that credit in their return.
The rule sits in Section 194-IB of the Income-tax Act, 1961, administered by the Income Tax Department. It applies to individuals and HUFs who are NOT liable to a tax audit under Section 44AB. The rate is 2 percent where the landlord has given a valid PAN, reduced from the earlier 5 percent by the Finance No. 2 Act, 2024 with effect from 1 October 2024. If the landlord does not share a PAN, you deduct 20 percent, but that amount is capped at the rent of the last month.
Deduction happens once in the financial year, in the last month of tenancy or in March, whichever is earlier. You report it on Form 26QC, a combined challan-cum-statement, and then download Form 16C for the landlord.
Note the transition: under the new Income-tax Act, 2025, the Income Tax Department has confirmed that for rent paid or credited on or after 1 April 2026, a single unified challan, Form 141, replaces Form 26QC along with Forms 26QB, 26QD and 26QE. Rent paid up to 31 March 2026 still uses Form 26QC.
Real-life example: Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak rented a flat in Patna at Rs 65,000 a month from June 2025 to March 2026, ten months, total Rs 6,50,000. In March 2026 he deducted 2 percent, Rs 13,000, paid his landlord Rs 6,37,000 net for the cycle, filed Form 26QC by 30 April 2026 quoting both PANs, and downloaded Form 16C from TRACES a week later. The whole online process took him under 30 minutes and cost nothing beyond the tax itself.
Yes. If you are an individual or HUF not under tax audit and your rent crosses Rs 50,000 for any month, Section 194-IB makes you deduct 2 percent and file Form 26QC, even if you earn only a salary.
It is 2 percent of the total annual rent where the landlord has given a PAN. This was reduced from 5 percent with effect from 1 October 2024. Without a landlord PAN, the rate is 20 percent.
No. Section 194-IB specifically removes the TAN requirement for this category. You use your own PAN as the deductor when filing Form 26QC.
Once per financial year. You deduct in the last month of the tenancy or in March, whichever is earlier, on the full rent paid to that landlord during the year.
You must deposit the tax and file Form 26QC within 30 days from the end of the month in which you deducted the TDS. Late filing attracts Rs 200 per day plus 1 percent monthly interest.
Form 16C is the TDS certificate the tenant downloads from the TRACES portal after filing Form 26QC and hands to the landlord. It lets the landlord claim credit for the tax you deducted.
Yes, for rent paid on or after 1 April 2026. Under the Income-tax Act, 2025, a single unified challan called Form 141 replaces Form 26QC. Rent paid up to 31 March 2026 still uses Form 26QC.
You can be treated as an assessee in default, pay the tax yourself with interest at 1 percent a month, and face a late-filing fee of Rs 200 per day. Keeping the landlord PAN and filing on time avoids all of this.