Summary of this article
Indian health insurance rarely covers overseas medical expenses or evacuation
Overseas travel insurance covers emergencies, air ambulance, OPD with deductibles
Cruise travel insurance needs checks for evacuation, onboard care, exclusions
Keep documents ready; follow claim process for travel insurance reimbursement
For many individuals, the financial year begins quietly. Salaries continue as usual, businesses settle into new accounting cycles, and tax filing still feels far away. But behind the scenes, May is one of the busiest months for tax compliance, especially for those responsible for deducting or collecting taxes at source (TDS or TCS).
For employers, companies, partnerships, and even some professionals, these dates are not merely routine formalities. A missed deadline today can easily become a financial headache a few months later.
Compliance Is No Longer A Back-Office Matter
There was a time when many businesses treated TDS-related work as something that could be sorted out later. In many offices, late deposits were earlier treated as something that could be fixed later without causing too much concern. That approach is becoming increasingly risky.
The tax system now functions very differently. Today, the information available with the tax department is checked across multiple records, including Permanent Account Number (PAN) details, bank transactions, tax deposits, and statements filed by deductors. When something does not align, it becomes easier for the tax authorities to spot the discrepancy.
This matters because if a company deducts tax from an employee’s salary or from a vendor payment but delays reporting it properly, the other person may not get a timely tax credit in official records.
That is usually when the real trouble begins. Refunds get delayed, return filings become messy, and taxpayers suddenly find themselves chasing corrections for mistakes they did not directly make.
The Important Dates In May
The first key deadline arrives on May 7. Any tax that was deducted or collected in April 2026 has to be deposited within the prescribed deadline. This applies to employers deducting tax from salaries as well as businesses that are required to collect or deduct tax on certain payments and transactions.
After that comes May 15, a date on which several tax-related compliances fall due together. Certain certificates need to be issued, declarations have to be submitted, and reporting obligations become due, according to a report in the Economic Times.
For accounting teams, this period is often hectic because several parallel tasks need attention at the same time.
Towards the end of the month, additional TDS and TCS statements also become due. These filings are particularly important because they feed directly into taxpayer records and determine whether tax credits appear correctly later.
A small reporting error at this stage may look harmless initially, but such mistakes often surface months later when returns are filed, and mismatches emerge.
Why Delays Become Expensive
The financial cost of non-compliance is only one part of the issue. Interest charges and penalties can certainly add up, especially for repeated delays. But the larger burden is often operational.
Correcting errors in TDS filings can be surprisingly time-consuming. Often, the process does not end with paying the pending amount. Sometimes, fixing the problem takes far more time than expected. Sorting out the issue can take time because earlier records and filings may need to be checked all over again. People often end up speaking to accountants or tax officials multiple times before the mismatch is finally corrected. It also creates concern among employees or vendors when the tax deducted from their payments is missing from their tax details.
The tax system works very differently today compared to a few years ago. Earlier, scrutiny was more limited, and much of the checking was done manually. Now, most information is verified electronically by matching details across different databases. Increasingly, it is powered by automated systems that compare information continuously and flag inconsistencies quickly.
That is why routine tax deadlines deserve more attention than they often receive. In today’s system, even a short delay has the potential to create complications that stretch far beyond a single missed date.
FAQs
Why are TDS and TCS deadlines becoming more important now?
Tax systems are now heavily digitised, allowing authorities to quickly match PAN details, bank records, and tax filings to detect discrepancies.
What happens if TDS is deducted but not reported properly?
The taxpayer may not receive a timely tax credit in official records, which can delay refunds and create complications during return filing.
Why can even small delays in TDS or TCS compliance become costly?
Apart from interest and penalties, businesses may have to correct filings, revisit records, and deal with prolonged follow-ups with tax authorities.















