India is entering a new era of labour reform. With the Labour Codes officially coming into force on 21 November 2025, businesses must prepare for major structural and compliance changes. These reforms consolidate 29 labour laws into four simplified, modern codes, aiming to bring clarity, uniformity, and improved employee welfare.
In this blog, we break down the major changes under each L’abour Code—Wages, Social Security, OSHWC (Occupational Safety), and Industrial Relations—and explain what employers need to do to stay compliant.
The Code on Wages introduces a consistent definition of “wages” and changes the way salaries must be structured. This will impact payroll, CTC planning, and employee benefits.
Earlier, different Acts used different definitions.
Now, a uniform definition applies.
Most importantly, allowances cannot exceed 50% of total wages.
Basic Salary + DA must be at least 50% of total compensation.
Minimum Wage compliance will now be calculated only using Basic + DA (HRA excluded).
Earlier, some provisions applied only to employees earning below ₹24,000. Now, the Code applies to all employees, regardless of salary.
Bonus eligibility ceiling (₹21,000 wages) will continue until further notification.
Companies must maintain wage and attendance registers for every employee, not just eligible categories.
Restructure salary to maintain 50:50 ratio.
Higher Basic means higher PF contribution and increased employer cost.
Payroll software updates are mandatory.
This Code aims to bring gig workers, unorganized workers, and fixed-term employees under social benefits.
Since new schemes are not notified yet:
A common crèche becomes mandatory for establishments with 50 or more women employees, irrespective of ESI coverage.
Fixed-term employees become eligible for gratuity after completing just 1 year, instead of 5.
For sectors like Telecom, Banking, and Insurance, the Central Government becomes the “Appropriate Authority”.
The Occupational Safety, Health & Working Conditions Code focuses on improving workplace health and safety.
Every employee—including contract labour—must receive an Appointment Order.
Factory definition changes to:
This reduces compliance burden for small units.
Contract Labour Act applicability threshold increases from 20 workers to 50 workers.
Contract labour cannot be used for core business operations.
Principal Employer (PE) is responsible for:
Employees become eligible after 180 days, not 240.
Prepare for additional welfare infrastructure.
The Industrial Relations Code modernizes HR processes related to discipline, disputes, and layoffs.
Supervisor earning more than ₹18,000 is not considered a worker.
Committee size increases from 6 to 10 members.
Permission required for layoffs only when establishment has 300+ workers (earlier 100+).
Employer must contribute 15 days’ wages for every retrenched worker.
Prepare documentation for layoffs & retrenchment.
With the Labour Codes becoming effective from 21 November 2025, employers must immediately implement all direct provisions of these Codes. However, since procedural rules are yet to be notified by Central and State Governments, all procedural compliance will continue under existing labour laws.
SBS HR helps your organisation stay fully compliant with all four labour codes—eliminating confusion, simplifying processes, and reducing compliance risks.
From revising payroll structures to updating internal policies and managing complete statutory requirements, we provide expert guidance at every stage.
🔹Be Compliant. Be Confident. Choose SBS HR as your compliance partner.
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