TDS on Crypto P2P Transactions
Section 194S TDS Compliance for Peer-to-Peer Cryptocurrency Transfers — Buyer Obligations, Challan Deposit, and Form 26QE
When cryptocurrency is bought and sold directly between two individuals — without going through a registered exchange — the exchange platform cannot deduct TDS. In such peer-to-peer (P2P) transactions, the buyer is personally responsible for deducting 1% TDS under Section 194S from the consideration paid, depositing it with the government, and filing the required compliance forms. This is a frequently overlooked obligation that carries significant penalties.
Our TDS on crypto P2P service covers the complete compliance cycle — from identifying which transactions trigger TDS, through challan deposit, Form 26QE or Form 26Q filing, and issuing TDS certificates. This connects with our crypto consulting, crypto tax filing, and ITR filing services.
Our TDS on Crypto P2P Transactions Services
P2P TDS Obligation Assessment
Reviewing P2P crypto transaction records to identify which transactions require TDS deduction under Section 194S — based on transaction value, counterparty type, and applicable thresholds.
TDS Computation
Computing the exact TDS amount — 1% of the consideration paid in each P2P transaction — and the applicable threshold to determine whether TDS is required.
Challan Deposit (Form 26QC / 26QE)
Depositing the TDS amount with the government using the correct challan — Form 26QE for individuals/HUFs below the audit threshold for P2P crypto TDS, or Form 26Q for audit-category deductors.
Form 26QE Filing
Filing Form 26QE — the TDS statement for Section 194S P2P transactions by non-audit individuals and HUFs — within 30 days of the end of the quarter in which TDS was deducted.
TDS Certificate (Form 16E)
Generating and issuing Form 16E — the TDS certificate for Section 194S P2P transactions — to the seller, enabling them to claim the TDS credit in their own ITR.
TDS Default Resolution
Advising on and resolving TDS defaults — late deduction interest, late deposit interest, and late filing fees — for P2P crypto transactions where compliance was not completed on time.
Key Facts
- P2P crypto buyers must deduct 1% TDS under Section 194S from the amount paid to the seller
- TDS threshold: ₹50,000 per financial year per seller (₹10,000 for individuals/HUFs below tax audit threshold)
- For non-audit individuals and HUFs: Form 26QE is the applicable TDS statement for P2P crypto
- Form 26QE must be filed within 30 days from the end of the quarter in which TDS was deducted
- Late TDS deposit attracts interest at 1.5% per month from the date of deduction to the date of deposit
- Late filing of Form 26QE attracts a fee of ₹200 per day under Section 234E
- If TDS is not deducted, the buyer is treated as assessee-in-default — liable for TDS demand plus interest plus penalty
Frequently Asked Questions
Who is responsible for deducting TDS on a P2P crypto transaction?
What is Form 26QE and who must file it?
What if the P2P crypto consideration is partly in crypto (crypto-to-crypto swap)?
What is the penalty for not deducting TDS on P2P crypto?
Does TDS under Section 194S apply to foreign exchange P2P transactions?
P2P Crypto TDS — Deducted, Deposited, Filed Correctly
Section 194S compliance for peer-to-peer crypto buyers — Form 26QE, challan deposit, and TDS certificates.
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