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FY 2026-27 · Critical Before ITR Filing

Reconciling Form 130 with Form 168 (AIS) — Don't Skip This Step!

You got your Form 130 from your employer. You downloaded Form 168 from the portal. But do the numbers match? If they don't, you could lose your TDS refund. Yeh step mat chhodna!

Form 130 = Employer's Side
Form 168 = Government's Side

Quick Answer

Reconciliation means matching your Form 130 (employer's TDS certificate) with Form 168 (government's record). You need to verify 3 things: (1) total salary amount, (2) total TDS deducted, and (3) TDS deposited — all should be identical in both documents. If there's any mismatch, contact your employer before filing your ITR.

Why Is This So Important?

Here's the thing most people don't realize:

When you file your ITR and claim TDS credit, the government only believes Form 168. If your employer says they deducted ₹50,000 TDS in Form 130, but Form 168 only shows ₹40,000 — you'll only get credit for ₹40,000.

Samajh lo: Form 168 is the "government's truth." Your refund depends on it.

Step-by-Step Reconciliation Guide

Step 1: Collect Both Documents

Step 2: Match the 3 Key Numbers

What to CheckWhere in Form 130Where in Form 168Must Match?
Total Salary PaidPart B — Total amount paid/creditedSalary section — Gross amount✓ Yes
Total TDS DeductedPart B — Total TDS deductedTDS section — Amount deducted✓ Yes
Employer's TANPart A — TAN of DeductorTDS section — TAN of deductor✓ Yes
Quarter-wise TDSPart B — Quarter-wise breakupTDS section — Quarter-wise entries✓ Yes
Your PANPart A — PAN of EmployeeLogin PAN✓ Yes

Step 3: Identify Mismatches

If everything matches — great, you're ready to file! If not, here's what to do:

Real-Life Example: Amit's Reconciliation

Amit earns ₹15 lakh salary. He downloads both documents and compares:

DetailForm 130 ShowsForm 168 ShowsStatus
Gross Salary₹15,00,000₹15,00,000✓ Match
Q1 TDS (Apr-Jun)₹24,375₹24,375✓ Match
Q2 TDS (Jul-Sep)₹24,375₹24,375✓ Match
Q3 TDS (Oct-Dec)₹24,375₹24,375✓ Match
Q4 TDS (Jan-Mar)₹24,375₹0❌ Mismatch!
Total TDS₹97,500₹73,125❌ ₹24,375 missing

Amit's Q4 TDS is missing from Form 168! This means his employer deducted TDS in January–March but hasn't filed Form 138 for Q4 yet. The Q4 deadline is May 31 — so Amit should wait until June and check again.

✓ What Amit Should Do

Wait until June 15 for the employer to file Q4 Form 138 and issue Form 130. Then re-check Form 168. If Q4 TDS still doesn't appear by June 30, escalate to HR in writing. Do not file ITR claiming ₹97,500 TDS when Form 168 only shows ₹73,125.

Common Mismatch Reasons & Fixes

Mismatch TypeLikely ReasonFix
TDS not showing in Form 168Employer hasn't filed Form 138 yetWait for quarterly deadline, then follow up with HR
TDS amount differentEmployer filed wrong amount in Form 138Ask employer to file correction statement
Wrong employer TANPAN-TAN mapping errorRaise grievance on Income Tax portal
Salary amount differentEmployer reported net vs gross, or timing differenceClarify with employer's payroll team
TDS shows under wrong PANPAN typo in Form 138 filingEmployer must file correction with correct PAN

Timeline — When to Check

Don't wait until July to discover a mismatch. Follow this schedule:

QuarterPeriodForm 138 Due DateCheck Form 168 By
Q1April – JuneJuly 31Mid-August
Q2July – SeptemberOctober 31Mid-November
Q3October – DecemberJanuary 31Mid-February
Q4January – MarchMay 31Mid-June
💡 Pro Tip: Quarterly Checking = No Surprises

If you check Form 168 every quarter, you catch problems early. A Q1 mismatch discovered in August gives your employer months to fix it. A mismatch discovered in July (when ITR is due) gives you almost no time. Be proactive, not reactive.

⚠ Changed Jobs Mid-Year? Double Check!

If you changed employers during the year, you'll have two Form 130 certificates — one from each employer. Both must reflect correctly in Form 168, each under the respective employer's TAN. This is where mismatches happen most often.

Verify Your Expected Tax Amount

Before reconciling, know what your tax should be. Use our calculator to compute exact tax on your salary, then compare with your Form 130 and Form 168.

Calculate My Tax Free →

Frequently Asked Questions

Compare these 3 things: (1) Total salary amount in Form 130 Part B should match salary reported in Form 168. (2) Total TDS deducted in Form 130 should match TDS credit shown in Form 168. (3) Employer's TAN number should be the same in both forms. If any mismatch exists, contact your employer before filing your ITR.
Common reasons: employer filed Form 138 late and TDS hasn't reflected yet, employer filed incorrect Form 138 with wrong amounts, TDS was deducted but not deposited with government, or there's a PAN mismatch. Contact your employer's accounts team to investigate.
Yes, absolutely. Filing ITR with TDS credit that doesn't appear in Form 168 will lead to rejected refund claims. Always verify all three: salary amount, TDS deducted, and TDS deposited match across both documents before filing.
If your employer refuses to correct the mismatch, file a grievance on the Income Tax portal under "e-Nivaran." You can also claim only the TDS amount that reflects in Form 168 while filing your ITR, and follow up with the employer separately for the balance.
Check after each quarter's due date: after July 31 (Q1), after October 31 (Q2), after January 31 (Q3), and after May 31 (Q4). Form 168 updates within 2-3 weeks of your employer filing Form 138 for that quarter.

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