First, What Is TCS Anyway?
Let's clear this up: Tax Collected at Source, or TCS, is not an extra tax that you lose forever. Think of it as an advance tax payment. When you spend on certain things, like an overseas tour package, the seller (your travel agent or bank) collects a percentage
as tax and deposits it with the government against your PAN. This amount is then credited to you when you file your income tax returns. You can either adjust it against your total tax liability or get it back as a refund if you don't owe any tax. The government's goal is primarily to track significant foreign spending.
The 'Cut' That Simplified Travel
The headline's 'TCS cut' refers to significant changes announced in Budget 2026, which simplified a confusing system that had been introduced earlier. Previously, travellers faced a complicated slab structure for tour packages: 5% TCS on spending up to a certain limit and a steep 20% beyond that. This caused a lot of anxiety and cash-flow problems for people planning big family holidays, tying up large sums of money. The Budget 2026 announcement, effective from April 1, 2026, replaced this with a much simpler, flat 2% TCS on all overseas tour packages, with no minimum spending threshold. This was a major relief for travellers, making budget calculations far more predictable.
Credit Cards: The TCS Loophole
This is the most important distinction for any Indian travelling abroad. While there was a proposal to bring international credit card spending under the TCS net, it was put on hold and, as of mid-2026, remains deferred. This means that when you are physically overseas and you use your Indian credit card to pay for hotels, meals, or shopping, no TCS is collected. This makes credit cards the most straightforward payment method for avoiding an upfront tax hit on day-to-day expenses abroad. However, this does not apply to using your credit card from India to buy a tour package or remit funds, which would still attract TCS as applicable.
Forex Cards, Debit Cards, and Remittances
This is where the Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS) comes into play. The LRS allows every Indian resident to send up to USD 250,000 abroad in a financial year for specific purposes. When you load a forex card, use your debit card internationally, or wire transfer money, these transactions fall under LRS. The rule here is different from tour packages. For these types of remittances (for purposes other than education or medical), there is no TCS on the first ₹10 lakh in a financial year. However, once you cross that cumulative ₹10 lakh threshold, a 20% TCS applies to the amount above it. This makes it crucial to track all your non-tour package remittances throughout the year.
Smart Strategies to Manage Your Travel Budget
Understanding these rules gives you the power to plan smarter. For packaged holidays, the 2% TCS is now a simple, manageable part of the cost. For independent travellers, the strategy is clear: try to use credit cards for most point-of-sale spending while abroad to sidestep TCS entirely. If you must remit money or load forex cards, be mindful of the ₹10 lakh annual threshold. Since the LRS limit applies per individual, families can also plan by distributing expenses among different members to make use of each person's individual threshold. And always remember to provide your PAN for all transactions to ensure the collected tax is correctly credited to you, making the refund process smooth when you file your returns.
















