India’s labour system just got a major shake-up. Until now, rules for workers and labourers were spread across 29 old laws, many written long before today’s workplaces even existed. However, on 21st November 2025, all of that was combined into four new Labour Codes. It is a significant occasion, and it is intended to simplify the system for workers and employers.
Read below what these codes mean, what has changed and how they will affect you!
India’s labour laws were distributed across 29 different acts, which were mostly drafted in the pre-Independence era. They addressed one concern multiple times, contradicted each other, and were very far from being in line with the way people work today. The law did not provide for gig workers. Remote work was not accounted for. The system was so complicated that businesses had a hard time managing it, and it offered very few rights to workers.
In 2015, the government sought the opinions of employers, unions, and industry representatives to merge the laws into four codes. The Code on Wages was passed in August 2019, followed by the Industrial Relations, Social Security, and Occupational Safety codes in September 2020. After years of states setting up their rules and systems, all four finally took effect on November 21, 2025.
Code on Wages: Guarantees every worker gets minimum wage paid on time, regardless of sector. At least 50% of your total pay must be classified as basic wages—the rest can be allowances. This matters because basic wages determine your gratuity, provident fund, and pension. Overtime is paid at twice your normal rate. Gender discrimination in wages is prohibited.
Industrial Relations Code: Simplifies how disputes between workers and employers get resolved. It sets rules for unions, strikes, and layoffs. Fixed-term contracts are now allowed with full wage parity and gratuity eligibility after one year. Workers retrenched get retrenchment compensation plus a reskilling fund (equal to 15 days’ wages per worker) to help them train for new jobs. By mutual agreement between the employer and employee, working from home has been allowed in the service sectors. Now, women get equal representation in workplace grievance committees.
Code on Social Security: The new Indian labour codes now formally recognise and protect gig and platform workers (like Uber drivers, Swiggy delivery partners, and freelancers). They give workers access to provident funds, health insurance, gratuity, and maternity benefits. The codes also require platform companies to contribute 1–2% of their yearly turnover toward worker welfare. A portable account system linked to Aadhaar is for the benefit of migrant workers who keep their benefits when they change states.
Occupational Safety Code: It lays down the safety regulations for all workplaces. Annual health checkups are compulsory and free of charge. Employers must provide safety gear, drinking water, a resting area, and toilets. They can now assign women to night shifts in any establishment, including underground mining, where rules previously blocked them from working.
Your salary structure is being reorganised. Employers are restructuring how they break down your pay. Basic wages increase, allowances may decrease, but your total compensation stays the same. This shift is happening now under the new indian labour codes.
You’re getting a formal appointment letter. You should now receive a written letter specifying your job duties, wages, working hours, and other terms. This creates transparency and helps you access social security benefits.
Fixed-term contracts are now standardised. You can sign a time-bound contract with full wage parity and benefits. The gratuity eligibility point has been shifted to only one year of uninterrupted service instead of the previous requirement of five years. Workers hired on a contractual basis will benefit greatly from this change.
Workplace safety has real enforcement. Employers must provide health checkups, safety equipment, and proper working conditions. If you feel unsafe, there are clear procedures to report and address it. Courts can now direct at least 50% of fines from safety violations to go to injured workers as compensation.
Migrant workers get real support. If you move states for work, your Social Security benefits are now portable. You get annual travel allowances and access to public distribution system benefits regardless of location. There’s now a national database system to help map your skills and connect you with job opportunities.
As an employer, if you are appealing against an EPFO order, you are now required to only deposit 25% of the assessed amount (reduced from 40-70%) instead of the full amount. This also makes it simpler to contest decisions without putting down large amounts of money.
Commute-based accidents are now insured. The moment you get injured while travelling to or from work, it is termed an employment-related incident and, thus, qualifies for compensation. This safeguard hadn’t existed before.
Only fine for first-time violation. The codes substitute imprisonment with monetary fines for first-time offences. The system now concentrates on getting businesses to follow regulations rather than punishing them.
Equal opportunities for Women. Employers must pay men and women the same for the same job. They can assign night shifts only if the employee agrees and proper safety measures are in place. Women obtain a fair share of seats in grievance committees.
Social security is finally covering gig workers. If you drive for Uber, deliver for Swiggy, or work as a freelancer, you now have access to provident funds, health insurance, and disability benefits that didn’t exist before. You can register through a national system.
Business owners now have to revise their payroll setup, update employment contracts, and rework how they define and break up wages. Compliance costs will increase around social security contributions and workplace safety under the new indian labour codes.
The upside: instead of managing 29 different laws and dealing with multiple agencies, you now have one registration, one license, and one return. Inspections shift from adversarial audits to a “facilitator” model where inspectors help you comply rather than just catch violations.
Implementation timeline by company size:
For contract labour, the threshold increased from 20 to 50 workers. Factory applicability rose from 10 workers to 20 workers (with power) and 40 workers (without power), reducing compliance burden for small units.
Laws work only when the government enforces them, not when they sit on paper. But the structure is now solid. Inspectors are switching from a punishment-focused approach to a facilitator model, using randomised, algorithm-driven web-based inspections for transparency.
For workers, this is genuinely significant—especially gig workers and informal sector employees who were essentially invisible to labour law before. You now have defined rights and social security access instead of operating in a legal grey area.
For businesses, there’s compliance work ahead, but a simpler and more organised system overall. The single registration, license, and return framework reduces unnecessary steps.
India consolidated 29 fragmented labour laws that dated back to the pre-Independence era into four labour codes that are more aligned with the current working environment. The total jobs has gone up from 475 million in 2017-18 to 643.3 million in 2023-24, and the unemployment rate has dropped by half from 6% to 3.2%. The new codes are not only matching the speed of the changes but also helping businesses to be law-compliant with less hassle, giving more safety to gig and casual workers and setting up a more equitable and transparent system.
It’s not a perfect changeover to the new system. The process is slow, and how the government carries it out matters. But the new setup now gives workers real rights and makes business operations simpler.
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