Your salary slip says TDS was deducted. Your employer gave you Form 130. But when you check Form 168 on the Income Tax portal… the TDS is missing! Don’t panic. This happens more often than you think.
Your TDS is not showing in Form 168 because your employer hasn’t filed Form 138 (quarterly TDS return) yet, or filed it with errors. TDS only appears in Form 168 after the government processes Form 138. Wait until 2–3 weeks after the quarterly due date, then check again. If still missing, contact your employer’s HR/accounts team.
Understanding the chain helps you pinpoint where the break is:
| Step | Who Does It | What Happens |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Employer | Deducts TDS from your monthly salary |
| 2 | Employer | Deposits TDS with government via challan (within 7 days) |
| 3 | Employer | Files Form 138 quarterly with employee-wise TDS details |
| 4 | CPC-TDS | Processes Form 138 and updates Form 168 |
| 5 | Employer | Issues Form 130 to employee |
If any step from 2 to 4 breaks, your TDS won’t appear in Form 168. Simple hai — the chain must be complete.
Before troubleshooting, calculate what your TDS should be. If the number doesn’t match your salary slip either, the problem may start even earlier.
Calculate My Tax Free →Most common reason. Form 138 has quarterly deadlines: Q1 by July 31, Q2 by Oct 31, Q3 by Jan 31, Q4 by May 31. If you’re checking before the deadline, TDS won’t be there yet.
Wait until 2–3 weeks after the quarterly due date. Then download Form 168 and check. If still missing after 4 weeks, email your employer’s accounts team.
Your employer deducted TDS from salary but didn’t deposit it with the government. Bahut serious hai — this is illegal on the employer’s part.
Ask employer for the challan details (BSR code, challan serial number, date). If they can’t provide these, the TDS was never deposited. You can file a complaint with the Income Tax Department.
Your employer entered the wrong PAN while filing Form 138. The TDS got deposited, but against someone else’s PAN.
Ask employer to file a correction statement for Form 138 with the correct PAN. This takes about 2–3 weeks to reflect.
Your previous employer may not have filed Form 138 for your last quarter. New employer’s TDS shows fine, but old employer’s TDS is missing.
Contact previous employer’s HR in writing. If no response within 30 days, file a grievance on the Income Tax portal under “e-Nivaran”.
Sometimes the system is just slow, especially during peak season (April–July). Form 138 was filed correctly, but processing is delayed.
Wait 2–3 more weeks. If your employer confirms Form 138 was filed and accepted (they’ll have a provisional receipt number), the TDS will show up eventually.
Vikram earns &rupee;14 lakh salary. His employer deducted &rupee;78,000 TDS over the year. In July, he checks Form 168 to file ITR:
| Quarter | Form 130 Shows | Form 168 Shows | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Q1 (Apr–Jun) | &rupee;19,500 | &rupee;19,500 | ✓ Match |
| Q2 (Jul–Sep) | &rupee;19,500 | &rupee;19,500 | ✓ Match |
| Q3 (Oct–Dec) | &rupee;19,500 | &rupee;19,500 | ✓ Match |
| Q4 (Jan–Mar) | &rupee;19,500 | &rupee;0 | ✗ Missing! |
| Total | &rupee;78,000 | &rupee;58,500 | &rupee;19,500 gap |
Vikram emails HR. They confirm Form 138 for Q4 was filed on May 28 (just before the May 31 deadline). CPC hasn’t processed it yet. Vikram waits 3 more weeks — by mid-June, Q4 TDS appears in Form 168. Problem solved!
Lesson: Don’t rush to file ITR on July 1. Wait until mid-June to ensure all quarters reflect.
If you claimed &rupee;78,000 TDS but Form 168 only showed &rupee;58,500, CPC will send an intimation under Section 143(1) adjusting the difference. You’ll either get a reduced refund or a demand notice. Fix: File a revised return (Section 139(5)) once the TDS reflects correctly in Form 168.
Our HRA Calculator and Income Tax Calculator help you verify the exact numbers. Make sure your employer’s computation matches before you file.
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