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Income Tax

How We Saved Rs 1.2 Crore in TDS Through Proper Certificate Management — A CFO's Playbook

@arjun_cfo · 29 Mar 2026 · 2 min read
I manage tax compliance for a Rs 500 crore manufacturing company. Last year we saved Rs 1.2 crore in TDS outflows — without any aggressive tax planning, purely through better certificate management. Here is what we did.

THE PROBLEM WE WERE FACING
We were deducting TDS at full rates on all vendor payments even when vendors had lower rate certificates or NIL deduction certificates. The refund process for vendors is slow and creates working capital issues for them — which eventually becomes a procurement headache for us.

STEP 1: CREATED A CENTRALISED CERTIFICATE REGISTER
We built a simple Excel tracker (now migrated to our ERP) with:
- Vendor PAN
- Certificate number
- Valid from / valid to date
- Rate specified in certificate
- Threshold amount in certificate
- Alert 30 days before expiry

Before this, certificates were sitting in someone's email. With centralisation, every payment desk can verify instantly.

STEP 2: IDENTIFIED VENDORS WITH LOWER RATE CERTIFICATES
We had 847 active vendors. When we actually checked, 112 of them had Section 197 certificates for lower deduction. We had been deducting at full rates because nobody was tracking.

STEP 3: FOLLOWED UP WITH HIGH-VALUE VENDORS
For any vendor where annual payment exceeds Rs 50 lakh, we proactively ask them to obtain Section 197 certificates if their overall tax liability justifies it. This helps them; it also helps us reduce the administrative burden of excess deduction and refund tracking.

STEP 4: PAN VERIFICATION BEFORE EVERY NEW VENDOR ONBOARDING
Invalid PAN means TDS at 20% instead of applicable rate. We now verify PAN on TRACES before adding any new vendor to our system. This eliminated a category of errors completely.

RESULTS
- Vendors with correct TDS: Up from 67% to 94%
- Excess TDS deducted (that had to be refunded): Down 78%
- Vendor complaints about TDS: Near zero
- TDS notices received: Zero in the last 18 months

The Rs 1.2 crore saving is the aggregate of lower TDS deductions across all vendors — the cash stayed in vendor hands rather than sitting with the tax department for 12+ months.
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Disclaimer: This content is the author's personal opinion and analysis. It does not constitute professional tax or legal advice. Consult a qualified professional for specific advice on your situation.

Comments (5)

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Vikash Tiwari 2 weeks from now

That centralised certificate register idea is brilliant. Simple but nobody does it.

CA Pooja Verma 1 week from now

Startups should do this too. Even with 20-30 vendors, TDS mistakes add up.

CMA Meera Iyer 4 days from now

Rs 1.2 crore saved just from better tracking? That's insane ROI on a spreadsheet.

CA Sneha Joshi 7 hours ago

The centralised certificate register idea is something even small businesses should implement. I use a simple Google Sheet. Vendor name, PAN, certificate number, validity, rate. Takes 30 minutes to set up, saves enormous headache at year end when 26Q is being filed.

CA Vikram Mehta 7 hours ago

Arjun, excellent practical insights from the CFO perspective. The PAN verification point is critical — I have seen TDS demands of 20% on large vendor payments purely because the PAN was not verified and turned out to be invalid. TRACES has a bulk PAN verification facility. For companies with 500+ vendors it is worth running this quarterly.