February 2026 Compliance Calendar: GST, TDS & Labour Law

February 2026 is primarily a month of regular monthly compliance filings with no major quarterly or annual deadlines. However, it carries important carry-forward obligations from Q3 (Oct-Dec 2025), including issuance of TDS certificates (Form 16A) by February 15, 2026. The Union Budget 2026-27, presented on February 1, 2026, proposed the landmark replacement of the Income Tax Act, 1961, with the new Income Tax Act, 2025, effective from April 1, 2026 (subject to enactment) 📋. While no immediate compliance changes arise from the Budget in February itself, businesses should begin preparing for the transition. Key deadlines this month include: GSTR-1 by February 11, 2026; GSTR-3B by February 20, 2026; TDS deposit by February 7, 2026; Form 16A (Q3) by February 15, 2026; and EPF/ESI contributions by February 15, 2026.

Most Important Due Dates for February 2026 (Risk-Prioritised)

NoGoverning LawCompliance DueDue Date (Feb 2026)Who Should File / Brief Particulars
1Income Tax Act, 1961TDS Deposit (Challan 281)07 Feb 2026All deductors must deposit TDS/TCS deducted during January 2026. Non-government deductors by 7th of the following month.
2Income Tax Act, 1961Form 16A – TDS Certificate (Q3)15 Feb 2026Deductors must issue TDS certificates to deductees for Q3 (Oct-Dec 2025) within 15 days of filing quarterly TDS return (due date: 31 Jan 2026).
3CGST Act, 2017GSTR-1 (Monthly)11 Feb 2026Monthly outward supplies return for January 2026 for taxpayers with turnover > Rs. 5 crore or those who have opted for monthly filing.
4CGST Act, 2017GSTR-3B (Monthly)20 Feb 2026Monthly summary return for January 2026 for taxpayers with turnover > Rs. 5 crore or monthly filers.
5EPF & MP Act, 1952 / ESI Act, 1948EPF & ESI Contributions15 Feb 2026Employers must deposit EPF and ESI contributions for wage month January 2026 and file ECR.
6CGST Act, 2017IFF – Invoice Furnishing Facility (QRMP)13 Feb 2026Optional B2B invoice upload by QRMP taxpayers for January 2026 (M1 of Q4: Jan-Mar 2026).

Income Tax & TDS Compliance – February 2026

February 2026 focuses on monthly TDS deposits and the important carry-forward obligation of issuing Form 16A certificates for Q3 (Oct-Dec 2025). The quarterly TDS returns for Q3 were due by January 31, 2026, and the corresponding TDS certificates must now be issued to deductees. Here is the complete breakdown:

Due DatePurposePeriodDescription
07 Feb 2026Deposit of TDS/TCS (Challan 281)Jan 2026Monthly deposit of TDS/TCS deducted during January 2026. Government deductors who deposit through book entry (Treasury Challan) must deposit on the same day of deduction.
14 Feb 2026Issue of TDS Certificate (Form 16B/16C/16D)Dec 2025Issue TDS certificates for property purchase u/s 194-IA (Form 16B), rent u/s 194-IB (Form 16C), and payments to contractors/professionals u/s 194M (Form 16D) for deductions made in December 2025.
15 Feb 2026Form 16A – Quarterly TDS CertificateQ3 (Oct-Dec 2025)Deductors must issue TDS certificates (Form 16A) to all deductees for non-salary TDS deducted during Q3. Must be issued within 15 days from the due date of filing Q3 TDS return (31 Jan 2026).
15 Feb 2026Form 24GJan 2026Government offices where TDS/TCS for January 2026 has been paid without production of a challan must furnish Form 24G by this date.

Important Notes for TDS Compliance:

Form 16A is generated through the TRACES portal after filing the quarterly TDS return. Deductors who filed Q3 TDS returns (Forms 24Q, 26Q, 27Q) by January 31, 2026, must download and issue Form 16A to their deductees by February 15, 2026. Failure to issue TDS certificates on time may attract a penalty of Rs. 100 per day per certificate under Section 272A(2)(g) of the Income Tax Act, 1961, subject to a maximum of the TDS amount.

As per recent CBDT instructions, certain TDS/TCS return corrections may be time-barred after a prescribed period. Deductors should review Q3 returns promptly and consult their tax advisor for specific correction timelines applicable to their filings.

📌 Union Budget 2026-27 – Proposed TDS/TCS Changes (Effective April 1, 2026, Subject to Enactment):

The Union Budget 2026-27 proposed the following TDS/TCS changes that businesses should prepare for: TCS on overseas tour packages is proposed to be reduced from 5%/20% to a uniform 2%; TCS on education and medical remittances under LRS is proposed to be reduced from 5% to 2%; TDS on manpower supply services is proposed to be rationalised and aligned with contractor payments, with detailed rate and section changes to follow in the notified law. The Budget also signals greater digitisation and simplification of TDS processes, including streamlined lower/nil TDS certificate issuance and declaration handling; details will follow in Rules and departmental guidelines. These changes will apply from April 1, 2026 under the proposed Income Tax Act, 2025, subject to enactment of the Finance Bill and formal notification.

Goods and Services Tax (GST) – February 2026

February 2026 carries standard monthly GST filings. QRMP taxpayers are in the first month (M1) of Q4 (Jan-Mar 2026), making the Invoice Furnishing Facility (IFF) available for uploading January 2026 B2B invoices. Below are all GST-related due dates:

Due DatePurpose (Form)PeriodDescription
10 Feb 2026GSTR-7 / GSTR-8Jan 2026Returns for GST TDS/TCS by deductors and e-commerce operators for tax deducted/collected in January 2026.
11 Feb 2026GSTR-1 (Monthly)Jan 2026Monthly outward supplies return for taxpayers with turnover > Rs. 5 crore or those who have opted for monthly filing.
13 Feb 2026IFF (QRMP) – Invoice Furnishing FacilityJan 2026Optional B2B invoice upload by QRMP taxpayers for January 2026 (M1 of Q4: Jan-Mar 2026). Enables buyers to claim ITC in their monthly GSTR-3B.
13 Feb 2026GSTR-5Jan 2026Non-Resident Taxable Persons monthly return for January 2026.
13 Feb 2026GSTR-6Jan 2026Input Service Distributor (ISD) return – ITC received and distributed during January 2026.
20 Feb 2026GSTR-5AJan 2026OIDAR (Online Information and Database Access or Retrieval) services providers monthly return for January 2026.
20 Feb 2026GSTR-3B (Monthly)Jan 2026Monthly summary return for taxpayers with turnover > Rs. 5 crore or monthly filers.
25 Feb 2026PMT-06 (QRMP)Jan 2026Monthly tax payment by QRMP taxpayers for January 2026 (M1 of Q4). QRMP taxpayers must pay their estimated tax liability through PMT-06 challan for the first and second months of each quarter.

Key Points for QRMP Taxpayers in February 2026:

QRMP taxpayers (turnover up to Rs. 5 crore) are now in Q4 (Jan-Mar 2026). During M1 (January) and M2 (February), QRMP taxpayers do not file GSTR-1 or GSTR-3B but must use IFF to upload B2B invoices (optional, by 13th of the following month) and PMT-06 for monthly tax payment (by 25th of the following month). The quarterly GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B for Q4 will be due only in April 2026. If a QRMP taxpayer has sufficient ITC to cover the month’s liability, PMT-06 payment may not be required, but the challan must still be generated showing nil payment ⚡.

Labour Law Compliance (EPF & ESI) – February 2026

Employers must ensure timely deposit of EPF and ESI contributions to avoid penalties and interest. Below are the due dates for February 2026:

Due DateCompliancePeriodParticulars
15 Feb 2026EPF & ESI ContributionsWage Month: Jan 2026Deposit contributions and file ECR (Electronic Challan cum Return). Delays attract interest at 12% p.a. u/s 7Q of the EPF Act plus damages as per para 32A of the EPF Scheme and latest EPFO notifications, generally computed as a percentage of arrears depending on the period of default.

EPF/ESI Contribution Rates:

EPF contribution is 12% by employee plus 12% by employer. The employer’s 12% is split as 3.67% to EPF and 8.33% to EPS. ESI contribution is 0.75% by employee plus 3.25% by employer, applicable for employees earning up to Rs. 21,000 per month.

Late payment consequences include interest at 12% p.a. on EPF delays plus damages as per para 32A of the EPF Scheme and latest EPFO notifications (generally computed as a percentage of arrears depending on the period of default), and penalties under the ESI Act as per applicable regulations. Additionally, employees’ EPF/ESI contributions paid after the statutory due date are generally disallowed as a deduction under section 36(1)(va) of the Income Tax Act, and delayed employer contributions are governed by section 43B.

Foreign Trade (DGFT) & RBI – February 2026

Due DatePurpose (Form)PeriodDescription
~9 Feb 2026RBI Form ECB-2Jan 2026Monthly ECB (External Commercial Borrowing) return due within seven working days of month-end. Reported through the RBI FIRMS portal.
As applicableFC-GPRAs applicableReport to RBI within 30 days of allotment of shares to foreign investors under FDI route. Filed through the FIRMS portal.
As applicableFC-TRSAs applicableReport transfer of shares between resident and non-resident within 60 days of transfer. Filed through the FIRMS portal.

State-Specific Compliances (Professional Tax) – February 2026 💼

Important: Professional Tax slabs and due dates are state-specific and change frequently through State Finance Acts and notifications. The table below is illustrative only and is not to be treated as up-to-date legal rates. Always verify on the respective State PT portal (Commercial Tax / Profession Tax department) before filing.

StateDue Date (Feb)FrequencyIncome Slabs (Illustrative)
Andhra Pradesh10 FebMonthlyUp to Rs. 15,000: Nil; Rs. 15,001–Rs. 20,000: Rs. 150/month; Above Rs. 20,000: Rs. 200/month
Telangana10 FebMonthlyUp to Rs. 15,000: Nil; Rs. 15,001–Rs. 20,000: Rs. 150/month; Above Rs. 20,000: Rs. 200/month
Karnataka20 FebMonthlyUp to Rs. 25,000: Nil; Above Rs. 25,000: Rs. 200/month (Rs. 2,500/annum)
Assam28 FebMonthlyUp to Rs. 10,000: Nil; Rs. 10,001–Rs. 15,000: Rs. 150/month; Rs. 15,001–Rs. 25,000: Rs. 180/month; Above Rs. 25,000: Rs. 208/month
West Bengal21 FebMonthlyUp to Rs. 10,000: Nil; Rs. 10,001–Rs. 15,000: Rs. 110/month; Rs. 15,001–Rs. 25,000: Rs. 130/month; Rs. 25,001–Rs. 40,000: Rs. 150/month; Above Rs. 40,000: Rs. 200/month
Maharashtra28 FebMonthly/AnnualFebruary is the annual adjustment month. Male employees earning above Rs. 10,000: Rs. 300 (instead of usual Rs. 200). Female employees earning above Rs. 25,000: Rs. 300 (instead of usual Rs. 200). This is to meet the annual cap of Rs. 2,500.

Maharashtra Professional Tax – February Special Note:

Under the Maharashtra State Tax on Professions, Trades, Callings and Employments Act, 1975, February is the annual adjustment month. Employers must deduct Rs. 300 (instead of the standard Rs. 200) from male employees’ earnings above Rs. 10,000 per month and from female employees’ earnings above Rs. 25,000 per month. This ensures the total annual Professional Tax deduction equals the statutory maximum of Rs. 2,500 per annum 📊.

Union Budget 2026-27 – Key Highlights for Compliance Planning

The Union Budget 2026-27, presented by the Finance Minister on February 1, 2026, proposed several landmark changes that will impact compliance from the next financial year. While no immediate changes apply in February 2026, businesses should begin their transition planning now:

ChangeCurrent PositionProposed Effective DateAction Required
Income Tax Act, 2025 replaces IT Act, 1961IT Act 1961 with amendments01 Apr 2026Review all tax processes, ITR forms, and compliance workflows
MAT rate proposed at 14% (final tax)15% under Section 115JB01 Apr 2026Recalculate MAT liability for FY 2026-27
ITR revision deadline proposed to be extendedDecember 31 of AY01 Apr 2026ITR can be revised until March 31 of AY with nominal fee
STT on F&O futures proposed to be raised0.02% on futures01 Apr 2026Update F&O trading cost calculations (exact rate to be confirmed in Finance Bill)
TCS rates proposed to be reduced on LRS5%/20% on remittances01 Apr 2026Update TCS calculation for overseas remittances
Assessment & penalty proceedings proposed to be integratedSeparate proceedings01 Apr 2026Common order for assessment and penalty
Pre-payment for appeals proposed to be reduced20% of disputed demand01 Apr 2026Proposed reduction to 10% of disputed demand

Note: These changes are Budget proposals that require legislative approval (enactment of the Finance Bill) and formal notification. The proposed Income Tax Act, 2025, along with simplified ITR forms and rules, will be notified before April 1, 2026.

February 2026 Non-Compliance Penalty Matrix (Quick Reference)

Note: The figures below are illustrative, based on current per-day late fee provisions. Actual penalties should be computed on the respective portals or as per the latest notifications.

CompliancePenalty StructureAdditional Consequences
TDS Deposit (Challan 281)Late fee per day under Section 47 of the CGST Act (Rs. 50/day for regular; Rs. 20/day for nil) subject to turnover-based capsProsecution risk for deliberate non-deposit u/s 276B (3 months to 7 years imprisonment).
Form 16A IssuancePenalty Rs. 100 per day per certificate u/s 272A(2)(g), capped at TDS amountPenalties under the ESI Act; disallowance under the Income Tax Act for delayed employees’ contributions.
GSTR-1 (Monthly)The deductee is unable to claim the TDS credit without a certificate.Buyer’s ITC delayed; GSTR-3B filing for subsequent period restricted until GSTR-1 filed.
GSTR-3B (Monthly)Late fee Rs. 50 per day (Rs. 20 per day for nil returns), subject to per-return maximum limits notified for different turnover slabs (Notification 19/2021-Central Tax and subsequent amendments); interest at 18% p.a. on unpaid taxITC mismatch notices possible; e-way bill generation may be blocked after two consecutive defaults.
EPF/ESIInterest at 12% p.a. on delays (PF) plus damages as per para 32A of EPF Scheme and latest EPFO notifications (percentage of arrears based on period of default)Varies by state – penalty and interest as per the respective State PT Act
Professional TaxVaries by state – penalty and interest as per respective State PT ActNon-compliance may attract prosecution under state laws.

February 2026 Compliance Calendar at a Glance

07 Feb: TDS/TCS deposit for January 2026

~09 Feb: ECB-2 for January 2026

10 Feb: GSTR-7/GSTR-8 for Jan 2026; Professional Tax (AP, Telangana)

11 Feb: GSTR-1 (Monthly) for Jan 2026

13 Feb: IFF (QRMP M1 of Q4); GSTR-5; GSTR-6 for Jan 2026

14 Feb: TDS Certificates (Form 16B/16C/16D) for Dec 2025

15 Feb: EPF/ESI contributions for Jan 2026; Form 16A (Q3 Oct-Dec 2025); Form 24G for Jan 2026

20 Feb: GSTR-3B (Monthly) for Jan 2026; GSTR-5A for Jan 2026; Professional Tax (Karnataka)

21 Feb: Professional Tax (West Bengal)

25 Feb: PMT-06 (QRMP) for Jan 2026

28 Feb: Professional Tax (Assam, Maharashtra – Rs. 300 annual adjustment)

FAQ’s

What is the last date for issuing Form 16A for Q3 (Oct-Dec 2025)?

Deductors must issue Form 16A (TDS certificate for non-salary deductions) for Q3 (Oct-Dec 2025) by 15 February 2026. This is within 15 days from the due date of filing the quarterly TDS return, which was 31 January 2026. Form 16A is downloaded from the TRACES portal after the quarterly TDS return has been processed.

Are there any quarterly TDS or GST return filings due in February 2026?

No. Quarterly TDS returns for Q3 (Oct-Dec 2025) were already due by 31 January 2026. The next quarterly TDS returns for Q4 (Jan-Mar 2026) will be due by 31 May 2026. Similarly, quarterly GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B for QRMP taxpayers relate to Q4 (Jan-Mar 2026) and will be due in April 2026.

What is the IFF facility and who should use it in February 2026?

The Invoice Furnishing Facility (IFF) allows QRMP scheme taxpayers with annual turnover up to Rs. 5 crore to upload B2B invoices during the first and second months of a quarter. For February 2026, QRMP taxpayers can upload their January 2026 B2B invoices through IFF by 13 February 2026. This is optional but recommended as it enables buyers to claim Input Tax Credit (ITC in their monthly GSTR-3B without waiting for the seller’s quarterly GSTR-1.

Why is Maharashtra Professional Tax Rs. 300 in February instead of Rs. 200?

Under the Maharashtra State Tax on Professions, Trades, Callings and Employments Act, 1975, the annual Professional Tax cap is Rs. 2,500. Since the standard monthly deduction of Rs. 200 for 11 months totals Rs. 2,200, an additional Rs. 300 is deducted in February to reach the annual cap. This applies to male employees earning above Rs. 10,000 per month and female employees earning above Rs. 25,000 per month.

What is the PMT-06 challan and who must file it in February 2026?

PMT-06 is a monthly GST payment challan used by QRMP scheme taxpayers to deposit their estimated tax liability during the first and second months of a quarter. For February 2026, QRMP taxpayers must pay their January 2026 GST liability through PMT-06 by 25 February 2026. The amount can be paid using either the fixed sum method or the self-assessment method. Even if sufficient ITC is available, a nil PMT-06 challan should still be generated.

Will the Union Budget 2026-27 changes affect my February 2026 compliance?

No. The Union Budget 2026-27 proposals, including the new Income Tax Act, 2025, reduced TCS rates, and MAT rate reduction, are proposed to be effective from 1 April 2026, subject to enactment of the Finance Bill. February 2026 compliance will continue under the existing laws and rates, though businesses should begin preparing for the upcoming changes.

Is there any advance tax deadline in February 2026?

No. The 4th and final advance tax instalment for FY 2025-26 is due on 15 March 2026. The 3rd instalment was due on 15 December 2025. There is no advance tax payment due in February 2026.

What is the penalty for late deposit of TDS after deduction?

Under Section 201(1A) of the Income Tax Act, 1961, interest at 1.5% per month or part of a month is charged from the date of deduction to the date of actual deposit. If TDS is not deducted at all, interest at 1% per month applies from the date it was deductible to the date of actual deduction. Additionally, willful failure to deposit TDS can attract prosecution under Section 276B with imprisonment ranging from 3 months to 7 years along with a fine.

Disclaimer: This general guidance calendar reflects laws/notifications as of February 3, 2026, incorporating Union Budget 2026-27 announcements presented on February 1, 2026. The Budget proposals are subject to legislative approval by Parliament. Regulations may change; confirm on official MCA/CBDT/CBIC portals (www.incometax.gov.in, www.gst.gov.in, www.epfindia.gov.in, www.esic.gov.in). This is not legal or tax advice. Consult professionals for specific situations. SetIndiabiz offers complete compliance support—alerts, expert advice, and streamlined filings—to help you focus on growth. Transform compliance into a strategic advantage.

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Setindiabiz Editorial Team is a multidisciplinary collective of Chartered Accountants, Company Secretaries, and Advocates offering authoritative insights on India’s regulatory and business landscape. With decades of experience in compliance, taxation, and advisory, they empower entrepreneurs and enterprises to make informed decisions.