29/12/2025
*Professional Fee TDS – Understanding Section 194J Clearly Eliminates Notice Anxiety*
In today’s business and professional ecosystem, professional fees have become a routine expense. Payments such as Chartered Accountant fees, Advocate fees, Doctor consultancy charges, IT consultant fees, technical support charges, and director sitting fees are regularly recorded in the books of accounts. However, if Tax Deducted at Source is not correctly deducted on these payments, it inevitably leads to disallowance, interest, penalties, and compliance notices at a later stage. This is why it is extremely important to clearly understand what Section 194J provides, when it applies, and the correct rate at which TDS must be deducted.
Section 194J is a provision designed to collect tax at source on payments made for professional services, technical services, royalty, and certain payments of a special nature. The fundamental objective of this section is early collection of tax by the Government. The payee subsequently receives credit for this tax while filing the income tax return, whereas for the payer, it is a statutory compliance obligation.
Professional services refer to services rendered using specialized knowledge, skill, and professional qualifications. Services provided by Chartered Accountants, Cost Accountants, Advocates, Company Secretaries, Doctors, Architects, Engineers, Interior Designers, Valuers, Auditors, Tax Consultants, and Management Consultants fall under this category. Payments made for such services attract the provisions of Section 194J.
Technical services, on the other hand, relate to services involving technology or technical expertise. These include IT support, software troubleshooting, technical maintenance, and specialized technical assistance. In practice, confusion often arises between professional services and technical services. This is precisely why the wording of agreements and the description in invoices must be clear and unambiguous.
Royalty payments, non-compete fees, and payments made to directors that are not in the nature of salary are also covered under Section 194J. Director sitting fees or commission paid outside the salary structure are treated as payments subject to TDS under this section.
The responsibility to deduct TDS lies with the payer making the payment. Companies, firms, LLPs, trusts, societies, and partnerships face this obligation as part of their regular compliance. In the case of individuals or Hindu Undivided Families, the obligation arises once the prescribed turnover limits are crossed. Practically speaking, anyone maintaining business accounts should be well acquainted with Section 194J.
TDS must be deducted at the earlier of the two events: when the expense is booked in the accounts or when the actual payment is made. Creating a TDS provision at the time of booking the vendor bill is considered the safest practice. Assuming that TDS can be deducted only at the time of payment often results in backdated compliance issues.
As per recent amendments introduced through the Finance Act, the threshold limit under Section 194J has been increased. TDS is now required only if the total payment to a single payee exceeds ₹50,000 in a financial year. Earlier, this limit was ₹30,000. The revised threshold is applicable from Financial Year 2025–26 onwards. While this change provides relief for small professional payments, tracking aggregate payments has become even more important.
The applicable TDS rates vary based on the nature of service. Professional services attract TDS at 10 percent, while technical services are subject to TDS at 2 percent. Royalty, non-compete fees, and director remuneration of a non-salary nature generally attract TDS at 10 percent. Selecting the correct rate is critical, as any mismatch leads to short deduction issues and consequent demands.
If the payee fails to furnish a Permanent Account Number, Section 206AA becomes applicable, and the TDS rate increases to 20 percent. This creates cash flow issues for the payee and can strain the professional relationship for the payer. Hence, collecting and verifying PAN at the vendor onboarding stage is considered a best practice.
In earlier years, higher TDS rates were applicable to vendors who had not filed their income tax returns. Following recent amendments, this non-filer higher TDS provision has been removed, thereby reducing the compliance burden on deductors. However, the higher TDS rule for non-furnishing of PAN continues to remain in force and must not be overlooked.
Correct classification between professional and technical services is one of the most sensitive areas leading to TDS notices. If a consulting agreement contains vague descriptions, tax officers may treat the service as technical while the assessee considers it professional, or vice versa. Since the applicable rates differ, this classification mismatch often results in tax demands. Therefore, clearly specifying the nature of service in agreements and invoices is crucial for compliance safety.
Common practical mistakes include checking the threshold on a bill-by-bill basis instead of aggregating payments made to a single vendor during the year. Multiple small bills can easily cross the threshold when combined. Applying the wrong TDS section is another frequent issue, such as using Section 194J where Section 194C should apply, or the reverse. Failure to collect PAN is a serious error, and mismatches between books of accounts and TDS returns are common triggers for notices.
To illustrate, consider a company that pays a consultant a monthly consultancy fee of ₹12,000. Over the financial year, the total payment amounts to ₹1,44,000. Since the service is professional advisory in nature, Section 194J applies. As the aggregate payment exceeds ₹50,000, TDS at 10 percent must be deducted and deposited, assuming PAN has been furnished and no higher rate applies.
Although compliance under Section 194J may appear complex at first glance, it is conceptually simple. Correctly identifying the nature of service, tracking thresholds, applying the correct rate, and ensuring timely deduction and deposit form the core of compliance. The increased threshold from Financial Year 2025–26 onwards offers relief, but once the limit is crossed, compliance becomes strict. With proper documentation and disciplined accounting practices, most notices related to Section 194J can be effectively avoided.