Wednesday, May 6, 2026

TDS on Payments to Non-Residents under Section 195: When DTAA Means “No TDS”

 By CA Surekha Ahuja

Introduction

TDS on payments to non-residents under Section 195 remains one of the most critical and litigated areas in international taxation.

While many practitioners limit their approach to applying a standard DTAA rate (often 10%), the law provides a far more fundamental principle:

If income is not chargeable to tax in India under the Income-tax Act or applicable DTAA, TDS is not required at all.

This situation commonly arises in:

  • No Permanent Establishment (PE) scenarios under Article 7 (Business Profits)
  • Cases where income is fully exempt under DTAA provisions

This guide provides a comprehensive and practical understanding of:

  • When TDS becomes NIL under DTAA
  • Documentation required to sustain such positions
  • Practical illustrations under India–US DTAA
  • Treatment in Form 27Q
  • Judicial position on Section 195 vs DTAA
  • Common pitfalls in “no-TDS under DTAA” claims

When is TDS Not Applicable under Section 195?

TDS under Section 195 is not applicable where the payment to a non-resident is not chargeable to tax in India under the Income-tax Act or the applicable DTAA.

Legal Position: Section 195 and DTAA (Section 90(2))

  • Section 195 applies only where income is chargeable to tax in India
  • Section 90(2) allows the assessee to apply more beneficial DTAA provisions

Core Principle:
No taxability = No TDS obligation

Thus, DTAA may:

  • Reduce the rate of TDS, or
  • Completely eliminate taxability → TDS = 0%

When Does DTAA Result in Zero TDS?

ScenarioDTAA ProvisionTDS Position
Business profits with no PE in IndiaArticle 7No TDS
Royalty / FTS fully exempt under DTAARelevant DTAA provisionsNo TDS
Interest / dividend fully exemptTreaty-specific clausesNo TDS
Income not taxable in India under Section 9 read with DTAASource + treaty overrideNo TDS

Does DTAA Override Section 195?

Yes. Under Section 90(2), DTAA provisions override the Income-tax Act where they are more beneficial, including cases where taxability is completely eliminated.

Documentation for “No TDS under DTAA”

A nil TDS position must be supported by robust documentation:

DocumentPurpose
Tax Residency Certificate (TRC)Establish treaty eligibility
Form 10F / declarationCapture TIN, address, legal status
No PE declarationConfirm absence of PE in India
Contracts and invoicesEstablish nature of income
Internal memoRecord legal reasoning
Section 195(2) / 197 application (if required)Risk mitigation

Note: Where TRC and prescribed details are available, Rule 37BC prevents higher TDS under Section 206AA. In cases of no taxability, TDS itself is zero.

India–US DTAA: Practical Illustrations

Business Profits – No PE

  • US company provides services remotely
  • No Permanent Establishment in India
  • Covered under Article 7

Result: Not taxable in India → No TDS under Section 195

Royalty vs Business Income – Critical Distinction

Nature of PaymentDTAA TreatmentTDS
Royalty (use of IP, copyright, patent)Article 1210%
Software / service income (no PE)Article 7No TDS

Correct classification is crucial—mischaracterisation may convert a nil TDS position into a taxable one.

How to Report NIL TDS in Form 27Q

Even where TDS is not deducted, compliance must be maintained:

  • Record all cross-border payments
  • Classify the nature of income
  • Maintain supporting documentation (TRC, PE declaration, internal memo)
  • Report transactions in Form 27Q with TDS = 0
  • Apply under Section 195(2) / 197 in case of doubt

There is no separate NIL-TDS return; Form 27Q captures such reporting.

Is Form 27Q Required if No TDS is Deducted?

Yes. Payments to non-residents should be reported in Form 27Q even if TDS is NIL, supported by proper documentation to justify non-deduction.

Judicial Position: Section 195 vs DTAA

The courts have consistently clarified:

  • TDS arises only when income is chargeable to tax in India
  • DTAA provisions prevail where beneficial

In GE India Technology Centre Pvt. Ltd. v. CIT, the Supreme Court held:

TDS obligation under Section 195 exists only when the payment is chargeable to tax in India.

Implication:
If DTAA removes taxability (e.g., no PE), no TDS is required.

Common Pitfalls in “No TDS under DTAA” Claims

PitfallRiskMitigation
Mischaracterising royalty as business incomeTax demandAlign substance with documentation
Ignoring PE exposureHidden tax liabilityConduct PE analysis
Invalid or missing TRCDTAA benefit deniedObtain valid TRC
Lack of documentationDisallowance riskMaintain internal memo
Ignoring treaty updatesIncorrect positionRefer latest DTAA text

Quick Summary: When is TDS Zero?

ConditionTDSReason
Business profits with no PENILNot taxable in India
DTAA-exempt incomeNILTreaty override
No India-source incomeNILNot chargeable

FAQs

Can DTAA eliminate TDS completely?
Yes. If income is not taxable in India under DTAA (e.g., no PE), TDS is not applicable.

Is PAN mandatory for DTAA benefit?
No, where TRC and prescribed details are available as per Rule 37BC.

What is the TDS rate for foreign companies under DTAA?
It depends on the nature of income—commonly 10%, but can be 0% where income is not taxable in India.

Conclusion

DTAA is not merely a rate-reduction mechanism—it is a taxability filter.

Before applying TDS under Section 195:

  • First determine taxability under DTAA
  • Apply TDS only if income is chargeable

Because in international taxation:

Where there is no taxability, there is no TDS.