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Labour Laws India — Employee Rights Every Worker Should Know in 2026

Labour laws employee rights India workplace

Millions of Indian workers are underpaid, overworked, and denied basic entitlements — simply because they don't know their rights. Whether you work in an IT company, a factory, a shop, or a restaurant, Indian labour laws give you powerful protections that your employer must follow.

The four Labour Codes enacted in India (effective progressively from 2022 onwards) consolidate and strengthen worker protections. Here's what every working Indian must know.

📌 Note: India's four Labour Codes (Wages Code, Industrial Relations Code, Social Security Code, Occupational Safety Code) are being progressively implemented by states. Until full implementation, older laws like PF Act, Gratuity Act, Factories Act continue to apply. Always check current state rules for your sector.

1. Minimum Wage Rights

The Code on Wages, 2019 mandates a national floor minimum wage for all workers — regardless of sector, geography, or employment type (including contract workers).

  • Minimum wages vary by state and skill level — check your state's labour department website
  • Tamil Nadu minimum wages are notified by the Labour Department and revised periodically
  • If paid below minimum wage, file complaint with Labour Inspector (District Labour Office)
  • Employer can be fined ₹50,000 for first offence; imprisonment for repeat violation

2. Provident Fund (PF) Rights

Under the Employees' Provident Funds Act, 1952, any establishment with 20+ employees must provide PF:

  • Employee contributes 12% of basic salary + DA to PF
  • Employer contributes matching 12% (8.33% goes to EPS pension, 3.67% to EPF)
  • PF is YOUR money — employers cannot withhold it
  • Check your PF balance on the EPFO portal (epfindia.gov.in) using UAN
  • Employer not depositing PF deducted from your salary is a criminal offence — report at epfindia.gov.in/Grievance

3. Gratuity Rights

Under the Payment of Gratuity Act, 1972:

  • Any employee who has completed 5 years of continuous service is entitled to gratuity
  • Formula: (Last drawn salary × 15/26) × Years of service
  • Maximum gratuity: ₹20 lakh (tax-free)
  • Must be paid within 30 days of leaving
  • Even in case of resignation, death, or disability — gratuity is payable after 5 years
  • Wrongful denial of gratuity: file complaint with Controlling Authority (Labour Commissioner)

4. Leave Entitlements

Leave TypeEntitlementGoverning Law
Annual/Earned Leave1 day per 20 days worked (Factories Act)Factories Act / Shops Act
Casual LeaveTypically 7–12 days (varies by state)State Shops & Establishment Acts
Sick Leave7–15 days (varies by state/sector)State Shops & Establishment Acts
Maternity Leave26 weeks (first 2 children)Maternity Benefit Act 2017
National Holidays3 mandatory + state holidaysNegotiable Instruments Act + State rules

Employers cannot force employees to forfeit earned leave without compensation.

5. Working Hours and Overtime

  • Maximum work hours: 48 hours per week / 9 hours per day (Factories Act)
  • Overtime pay: Double the regular wage rate for every overtime hour worked
  • Maximum overtime: 50 hours per quarter (subject to state rules)
  • IT/services sector: typically covered under state Shops and Establishment Acts (may allow more flexibility)
  • Working beyond prescribed hours without overtime pay = labour law violation

6. Termination and Notice Period Rights

  • Under the Industrial Disputes Act, establishments with 100+ workers must get government permission before retrenchment or closure
  • Workers terminated after 1 year of continuous service are entitled to retrenchment compensation (15 days wages per year of service)
  • You cannot be dismissed without a show-cause notice and opportunity to be heard (principles of natural justice)
  • Dismissal without notice or pay in lieu of notice is wrongful termination
  • Standing Orders (employment terms registered with Labour Department) govern dismissal in factories and large establishments

7. ESIC — Employee Health Insurance

Under Employees' State Insurance (ESI) Act, 1948, workers earning up to ₹21,000/month in eligible establishments get health insurance through ESIC:

  • Employee contributes 0.75% of wages; employer contributes 3.25%
  • Covers hospitalization, specialist treatment, medicines, and maternity
  • ESIC hospitals and dispensaries spread across India
  • If employer is not registering eligible employees for ESIC — report to ESIC Regional Office

How to File a Labour Complaint

  1. Write a complaint letter to the Labour Inspector at your District Labour Office
  2. For PF issues: file online grievance at epfindia.gov.in/Grievance
  3. For ESI issues: approach ESIC Regional Office
  4. For wage disputes: file before the Labour Court or Commissioner under Payment of Wages Act
  5. For wrongful termination: file before the Labour Court / Industrial Tribunal

Frequently Asked Questions

My employer deducted PF from my salary but it's not showing in my EPFO account. What can I do?
This is a criminal offence — the employer is keeping your money illegally. Steps: (1) Check your EPFO passbook at epfindia.gov.in using your UAN, (2) File an online grievance at epfindia.gov.in under "For Employers" section, (3) Report to the regional EPFO Enforcement Officer, (4) File a written complaint at the nearest EPFO regional office. EPFO has strong enforcement powers and can prosecute employers for this.
I resigned after 4.5 years. Am I entitled to gratuity?
Strictly speaking, the Payment of Gratuity Act requires 5 years of continuous service. However, the Supreme Court has ruled that if you worked more than 240 days in the fifth year, it counts as a completed year — making you eligible. Many companies also voluntarily pay proportionate gratuity even before 5 years as a matter of policy. Check your employment contract and HR policy for your company's specific practice.
Can my employer fire me without any notice or reason?
No, for most employment relationships. Employees covered by Industrial Disputes Act (workmen) can only be terminated after following proper procedure — show-cause notice, enquiry, opportunity to respond. For non-workmen (management staff), the contract terms apply, but basic principles of natural justice must be followed. Wrongful termination can be challenged in Labour Court (workmen) or civil court. Document everything if you sense dismissal is coming.
I work at a small shop with just 5 employees. Do labour laws still apply to me?
Yes, many do. Minimum wage laws and the Code on Wages apply to all workers regardless of establishment size. The Shops and Establishments Act of your state governs small shops — most states mandate leave entitlements, working hour limits, and holiday pay even for tiny establishments. PF applies once there are 20+ employees. ESIC applies at 10+ employees. Even at 5 employees, you have minimum wage and basic safety rights.
My contract says "no union allowed." Is this legal?
No. The right to form trade unions is a Fundamental Right under Article 19(1)(c) of the Constitution. No employment contract can take away this right. Employers cannot legally prohibit workers from forming or joining registered trade unions. Pressuring workers not to form or join unions is an "Unfair Labour Practice" under the Industrial Disputes Act, punishable with fines. An employment contract clause taking away union rights is void and unenforceable.