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New Labour Codes in India: What Businesses Must Know in 2026

Gourab Majumder

06/02/2026

Law

Quice Summary

  • India implemented the four new labour codes nationwide on November 21, 2025, replacing 29 outdated labour laws
  • The reforms impact 643 million workers across India
  • Social security coverage has already expanded from 19% in 2015 to 64% in 2025, with a projected rise to 85% under the new codes
  • Layoff approval thresholds increased to 300 workers in many cases
  • Fixed-term employees are now eligible for gratuity after one year
  • Mandatory appointment letters are required for all workers
  • Wages must be paid by the 7th of the following month
  • Annual health check-ups are mandatory for employees above 40 under the OSH Code

If you manage HR, payroll, compliance, or run a business in India, these reforms directly affect how you structure salaries, handle statutory deductions, and prepare for inspections.

 

If the new labour codes are meant to simplify compliance, why does implementation suddenly feel more complex?

Across India, startups, SMEs, IT companies, manufacturers, and large enterprises are facing the same reality:

  • Salary structures may need restructuring
  • PF and gratuity calculations may increase
  • Appointment letters require revision
  • State-wise notifications differ
  • Inspection readiness standards are changing
  • Final settlement timelines are tightening

The reform is historic, but the transition requires clarity.

On November 21, 2025, India officially replaced 29 labour laws with four consolidated codes.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi described them as: “One of the most comprehensive labour-oriented reforms since Independence… empowers workers while simplifying compliance.” – PM Narendra Modi, November 2025

At the same time, trade unions raised concerns, and several states began drafting separate implementation rules.
This creates a practical business reality:
The reform is national. The implementation is state-specific. The compliance responsibility is yours.

 

Why This Reform Is Structurally Different From Past Labour Changes

Unlike incremental amendments, these codes change foundational definitions.

They:

  • Introduce a new wage definition affecting PF & gratuity
  • Expand social security to gig and platform workers
  • Raise layoff and standing order thresholds
  • Mandate universal appointment letters
  • Enable digital inspections
  • Tighten timelines for 2-day full & final settlement
  • Permit women to work night shifts with safeguards

They also aim to boost formalisation.
Workforce formalisation is projected to rise from 60.4% to 75.5%. A reduction of up to 1.3% in unemployment (resulting in77 lakh additional jobs) is projected post-implementation.

This is not a cosmetic reform.
It is structural.

Before we go deeper into each code, here’s a detailed video breakdown that explains how the four new labour codes work, what changed from the old 29 laws, and what businesses must prepare for in 2026.

Who Is Directly Affected?

The short answer: almost everyone.

The long answer:

Employers

  • Need to reassess wage structure compliance
  • Must update HR documentation
  • Face higher penalties for non-compliance
  • Must prepare for digital inspection models

HR Teams

  • Must revise appointment letters
  • Ensure wage definition alignment
  • Update compliance training
  • Manage OSH requirements, including health check-ups

Payroll Teams

  • Recalculate PF contributions
  • Audit gratuity exposure
  • Align salary breakups with 50% wage rule
  • Prepare for statutory deduction audits

Startups & IT Companies

Many assumed labour codes applied mainly to manufacturing.
However:

  • OSH Code applies broadly
  • Health check-ups may apply depending on the workforce size
  • Standing order thresholds changed
  • Fixed-term employment now has gratuity eligibility

If you run payroll in India, the labour codes affect you.

 

Why 2026 Is the Critical Compliance Year

Although the codes became effective in late 2025, many states are still finalising rules.

This means:

  • Old rules may apply temporarily
  • State notifications must be tracked
  • Transitional compliance risks exist
  • Businesses must stay audit-ready

As Lokesh Gulati, Partner at PwC India, stated: “Modernise India’s labour framework… simplify compliance while reducing friction.”

But simplification only works if businesses adapt correctly.

 

What This Guide Will Help You Do

This 2026 compliance guide will help you:

  • Understand the four labour codes clearly
  • Decode the new wage definition
  • Learn how labour codes affect payroll restructuring
  • Understand PF & gratuity changes
  • Clarify ESIC applicability under the new codes
  • Prepare for OSH Code obligations
  • Build an audit-ready labour compliance checklist
  • Understand penalties and inspection preparedness
  • Navigate state-wise compliance challenges

This guide is informational, neutral, and compliance-focused.

Because under the new labour codes, compliance is no longer optional; it is a mandatory requirement. It is an operational discipline.

 

What Are the Four Labour Codes?

India’s labour law framework was historically built through 29 separate Acts passed over decades.

This created:

  • Overlapping compliance requirements
  • Conflicting definitions (especially wages)
  • State-level interpretation differences
  • Documentation complexity
  • Increased inspection ambiguity

To simplify and modernise the system, the Government consolidated these 29 laws into four labour codes, implemented nationally in November 2025.

Together, these four codes govern:

  • Wages
  • Industrial relations
  • Social security
  • Occupational safety & working conditions

Let’s break them down clearly.

 

Code on Wages, 2019

The Code on Wages applies to all employees across organised and unorganised sectors.

It replaces:

  • Payment of Wages Act
  • Minimum Wages Act
  • Equal Remuneration Act
  • Payment of Bonus Act

Universal Minimum Wages

For the first time, minimum wages apply universally, not limited to scheduled employment.

This means:

  • Every employee is covered
  • No sectoral exclusion
  • Uniform compliance obligation

 

National Floor Wage – India

The Central Government now sets a National Floor Wage.

States:

  • Cannot fix minimum wages below this floor
  • Must align state-level wages accordingly

This creates a baseline across India, while allowing regional flexibility.

 

New Wage Definition

This is the most impactful change for payroll.

The Code introduces a standardised definition of “wages,” which includes:

  • Basic pay
  • Dearness allowance
  • Retaining allowance

It excludes certain allowances, but with a condition:

If exclusions exceed 50% of total remuneration, the excess must be added back into wages. This is commonly referred to as the “50% basic rule,” though technically it is a wage component balancing rule.

Impact areas:

  • PF calculation
  • Gratuity liability
  • Bonus computation
  • Leave encashment

We’ll decode this in detail in the payroll section.

 

Industrial Relations Code, 2020

This code governs employer–employee relations, layoffs, retrenchment, and standing orders.

It replaces:

  • Trade Unions Act
  • Industrial Employment (Standing Orders) Act
  • Industrial Disputes Act

Standing Orders Threshold

Standing orders are now required for establishments employing 300 or more workers (the earlier threshold was 100 in many states).

This provides:

  • Operational flexibility for mid-sized businesses
  • Reduced compliance load for smaller units

 

2-Day Full & Final (F&F) Settlement

The Code mandates that full and final settlement must be completed within 2 working days in case of resignation or termination.

This significantly impacts:

  • Payroll exit processing
  • HR documentation timelines
  • Final dues calculation
  • Leave encashment accuracy

Delays may attract penalties.

 

Social Security Code, 2020

This code consolidates laws related to:

  • Employees’ Provident Fund (EPF)
  • Employees’ State Insurance (ESIC)
  • Gratuity
  • Maternity benefits
  • Gig & platform workers

 

PF & Gratuity Changes

Because of the new wage definition:

  • PF contribution base may increase
  • Gratuity liability may increase
  • Fixed-term employees become eligible for gratuity after 1 year

This increases long-term employee benefit exposure for employers.

 

ESIC Applicability – PAN India

The Social Security Code allows for PAN-India ESIC expansion, subject to notification.

This means:

  • Wider coverage
  • Reduced ambiguity across states
  • Greater compliance monitoring

 

Gig Worker Inclusion

For the first time:

Gig and platform workers are formally recognised under social security provisions. This is a structural shift in India’s labour protection framework.

 

Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions (OSH) Code, 2020

The OSH Code merges 13 labour laws related to working conditions.

It applies broadly to:

  • Factories
  • Mines
  • Plantations
  • Establishments meeting threshold requirements
  • IT/ITeS companies (depending on workforce size and notification)

 

Mandatory Health Check-Ups

Under the OSH Code:

  • Employees above 40 years may require annual health check-ups
  • Employer cost responsibility applies

This adds a new compliance obligation for HR teams.

 

IT / ITeS Applicability

Many IT companies assumed OSH provisions applied only to manufacturing.

However:

  • Working condition standards
  • Safety norms
  • Appointment letter mandates
  • Working hour regulations

May apply depending on establishment size and state rules.

 

Mandatory Appointment Letters

All employers must issue written appointment letters to employees.

This standardises employment documentation across India.

 

Why These Four Codes Matter Together

Individually, each code addresses a different area.

Together, they:

  • Standardise wage definition
  • Formalize workforce protections
  • Expand social security
  • Digitise inspection processes
  • Reduce overlapping legislation

But they also increase:

  • Documentation expectations
  • Payroll accuracy requirements
  • State-rule monitoring responsibility

The reform simplifies the law structure.
It does not reduce compliance accountability.

 

State-Wise Implementation & Compliance Challenges

If you’re waiting for a single nationwide “go-live” announcement, that’s not how this will unfold.

The four labour codes are Central laws. But the actual rules that affect your daily compliance inspections, forms, registers, health check-ups, and ESIC enforcement are notified state-wise.

That means your compliance status depends on where you operate.

And if you operate in more than one state?

Your risk multiplies.

 

Why State Implementation Creates Real Confusion

Here’s where most companies underestimate the complexity.

You might have:

  • A head office in Karnataka
  • A warehouse in Maharashtra
  • A sales office in Delhi
  • Remote employees across multiple states

Each state must notify its own rules under:

  • Code on Wages
  • Industrial Relations Code
  • Social Security Code
  • OSH Code

Until a state finalises its rules, certain operational details remain transitional.

That’s why two companies in different states may face different inspection formats, timelines, and documentation expectations even under the same central code.

This is not theoretical.

It directly affects:

  • Your health check-up compliance
  • Your appointment letter format
  • Your inspection documentation
  • Your grievance and standing order obligations
  • Your digital record-keeping readiness

 

Jurisdiction-Specific Compliance: What It Means for You

Jurisdiction-specific compliance simply means:

Your compliance process must align with the state where the employee works, not just where your company is registered.

If you have remote workers in another state:

You may be subject to that state’s OSH rules.

If you run IT or ITeS operations:

You still fall under OSH Code applicability even if traditional “factory” rules don’t apply.

If you assume the code is “only for manufacturing,” you are already misreading it.

 

OSH Code & State Rules: The Practical Impact

The Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code brings:

  • Mandatory appointment letters
  • Annual health check-ups (where applicable)
  • Safety standards for certain establishments
  • Registration requirements
  • Digitized inspections

But implementation details, especially around frequency, documentation, and enforcement, may vary by state notification.

This is where compliance becomes operational, not legal.

Because when inspection happens, officers check:

  • Updated employee registers
  • Appointment letters
  • Safety policies
  • Health check documentation
  • Statutory deduction proofs

If your documents are scattered or outdated, you are exposed even if you “intended” to comply.

 

Inspection Preparedness: The Real Risk Area

Under the new framework, inspections are increasingly:

  • Risk-based
  • Digitally triggered
  • Data-driven

That means:

If your PF filings mismatch the wage structure
If your ESIC registration is inconsistent
If your appointment letters don’t reflect wage definition updates

You may be flagged automatically.

The biggest compliance mistake companies make is this:

They prepare for audits after receiving notice.

In 2026, you need to be audit-ready before notice.

 

What Smart Companies Are Doing Now

Instead of waiting for clarity from every state, prepared organisations are:

  • Reviewing compliance across all operating states
  • Standardising appointment letter formats
  • Aligning payroll logic with the new wage definition
  • Updating OSH documentation proactively
  • Maintaining centralised digital compliance records
  • Conducting internal labour compliance audits quarterly

They are not reacting.

They are restructuring governance.

Because under the new labour codes, compliance is no longer just HR’s responsibility.

It’s:

HR + Payroll + Legal + Operations + Leadership.

 

The Bottom Line

Central laws define the framework.

States define execution.

If your compliance strategy assumes uniformity across India, you are exposed.

If your organisation operates in multiple states, your compliance strategy must be multi-layered.

And if you want to avoid penalties, inspection disruption, or payroll corrections later state-wise readiness cannot be optional.

 

Labour Codes Compliance Checklist for 2026 (Audit-Ready Guide)

If you are preparing for the new labour codes implementation, this is the section you should bookmark.

Many businesses assume compliance will “settle down” once rules are notified. In reality, labour compliance in India is becoming more structured, digital, and inspection-ready.

The safest approach in 2026 is not reactive compliance; it is audit-ready compliance.

Below is a practical, HR-friendly, and payroll-ready labour codes compliance checklist designed for startups, SMEs, IT companies, and large enterprises.

 

Audit-Ready Labour Compliance Checklist (2026)

  • Review Salary Structure Under the New Wage Definition

Under the Code on Wages, the new wage definition (50% rule) affects:

  • PF calculation
  • Gratuity calculation
  • Bonus eligibility
  • Statutory deductions under the new labour codes

You should:

  • Recalculate Basic Pay vs Allowances
  • Check if Basic is at least 50% of total remuneration
  • Audit payroll restructuring under labour codes
  • Review CTC impact and take-home salary changes

This is critical for HR payroll compliance and future inspections.

 

  • Conduct a PF & Gratuity Recalculation Audit

The PF & gratuity changes under the labour codes may increase employer contribution liability.

Your compliance checklist must include:

  • PF recalculation based on revised wage definition
  • Gratuity impact analysis
  • Review of employee benefits impact under labour codes
  • Update payroll software configuration

This forms part of your internal labour compliance audit checklist.

 

  • Validate PAN-India ESIC Applicability

The Social Security Code expands ESIC applicability under labour codes, including potential wider coverage.

You must:

  • Confirm ESIC registration status
  • Verify employee threshold applicability
  • Review coverage across branches and states
  • Document ESIC compliance for multi-state operations

This is especially important for businesses with operations in multiple jurisdictions.

 

  • Update Appointment Letters (Mandatory Under OSH Code)

The OSH Code mandates appointment letters in a prescribed format.

Your HR payroll compliance checklist should include:

  • Issuing appointment letters to all employees
  • Updating templates to include required terms
  • Ensuring clarity on wages, working hours, and benefits
  • Maintaining digital records

Many inspection failures occur due to outdated appointment documentation.

 

  • Implement Annual Health Check-Up Policy (Where Applicable)

Under the OSH Code, certain establishments must provide:

  • Mandatory annual health check-ups
  • Free medical examination depending on industry and risk

This applies especially to:

  • Manufacturing
  • Hazardous industries
  • Certain commercial establishments

Include documentation of compliance as part of your state-wise OSH code compliance preparation.

 

  • Prepare for 2-Day Full & Final Settlement (F&F Rule)

The Industrial Relations Code introduces stricter timelines around final settlement rules under labour codes.

Your checklist must verify:

  • F&F settlement within the prescribed timeline
  • Payroll system readiness for 2-day F&F settlement
  • Exit clearance workflow documentation
  • Settlement register maintenance

Delays can trigger penalties and inspection scrutiny.

 

  • Maintain Digital Records for Labour Inspection Readiness

Labour compliance in India is moving toward:

  • Web-based inspections
  • Risk-based digital scrutiny
  • Centralized reporting

Your labour inspection checklist India file should contain:

  • Wage registers
  • Attendance records
  • ESIC & PF challans
  • Bonus and gratuity records
  • Health check-up records
  • Appointment letters
  • Contractor compliance documents

Always keep digital and physical copies ready.

 

  • Conduct Labour Code Compliance Training for HR & Payroll Teams

Compliance risk often comes from internal misinterpretation.

You should:

  • Conduct labour code compliance training for HR
  • Train payroll teams on wage definition changes
  • Educate managers on OSH Code applicability
  • Update SOPs for statutory deductions

Well-trained HR teams reduce audit risk significantly.

 

  • Review State-Wise Labour Rules & Jurisdiction-Specific Compliance

Remember:

The central codes are enacted. But rules are notified state-wise.

Your compliance roadmap should include:

  • Monitoring state-wise labour rules notifications
  • Tracking state-wise OSH code compliance requirements
  • Aligning jurisdiction-specific compliance practices
  • Consulting local labour authorities where necessary

This is where many multi-location companies face risk.

 

  • Create a Labour Code Implementation Roadmap

Do not treat compliance as a one-time activity. Create a structured labour code implementation roadmap that includes:

  • Phase 1: Salary restructuring
  • Phase 2: Policy updates
  • Phase 3: Documentation alignment
  • Phase 4: Training & communication
  • Phase 5: Internal audit review

This ensures sustainable compliance, not last-minute corrections.

 

Why This Checklist Matters

The new labour codes are not just legal reform.
They directly affect:

  • Payroll impact
  • Employee benefits
  • Statutory deductions
  • Inspection preparedness
  • Financial liability

Businesses that prepare early avoid:

  • Labour code penalties and fines
  • Payroll disputes
  • Audit failures
  • Regulatory complications

Compliance in 2026 is not about reacting. It’s about being audit-ready.

Stronger HR governance

 

Penalties for Non-Compliance Under New Labour Codes

If you’re treating the new labour codes as “something we’ll fix later,” this is the section you should read carefully.

The 2026 labour law changes are not just structural reforms; they introduce stricter labour code penalties and fines, clearer accountability, and stronger inspection mechanisms.

Non-compliance under the four labour codes can result in:

  • Monetary penalties
  • Compounded offences
  • Legal prosecution in serious cases
  • Business disruption during inspections

Let’s break this down clearly.

 

Monetary Penalties Under Labour Codes

Across the four labour codes, penalties have been rationalized but made more enforceable.

Depending on the violation, penalties may apply for:

  • Non-payment of minimum wages
  • Violation of wage definition norms
  • Delay in 2-day F&F settlement
  • Failure to issue mandatory appointment letters
  • Non-compliance with OSH Code requirements
  • Failure to deposit statutory deductions under the new labour codes

Fines can range from:

  • ₹10,000 for minor procedural defaults
  • ₹50,000 to ₹1,00,000 for serious violations
  • Higher penalties for repeat offences

Repeated non-compliance can attract enhanced penalties and legal consequences.

The message is clear: Compliance is no longer optional; it is enforceable accountability.

 

Criminal Liability in Severe Cases

In cases involving:

  • Willful non-payment of wages
  • Obstruction of labour inspection
  • Major OSH safety violations
  • Repeated violation of the labour compliance India norms

Authorities may initiate prosecution proceedings.

While imprisonment provisions exist for extreme cases, most businesses face monetary penalties and reputational damage first.

But even a single prosecution notice can:

  • Trigger additional inspections
  • Impact investor confidence
  • Affect government tender eligibility

This is why proactive labour compliance audit checklist implementation is essential.

 

Digital & Risk-Based Labour Inspections

One of the biggest 2025–2026 shifts is digitalisation.

Inspections are now increasingly:

  • Risk-based
  • Web-enabled
  • Document-driven
  • Data-backed

This means:

  • Random inspections are reduced
  • High-risk employers are prioritised
  • Digital record inconsistencies trigger scrutiny

If your HR payroll compliance systems are not aligned with:

  • Wage definition rules
  • PF recalculations
  • ESIC applicability
  • State-wise OSH code compliance

You may be flagged during digital review.

In 2026, labour inspections in India are less about surprise visits and more about document intelligence.

 

Why Early Compliance Reduces Risk

Most penalties happen not because businesses intend to violate laws
but because:

  • Payroll was not restructured properly
  • Wage definition changes were misunderstood
  • Appointment letter formats were outdated
  • State-specific rules were ignored

This is why your labour code implementation roadmap must include:

  • Quarterly compliance review
  • Payroll restructuring audit
  • ESIC and PF reconciliation
  • Internal labour compliance training

Prevention costs less than a penalty.

 

Quick Risk Summary

If you ignore compliance updates, you risk:

  • Financial penalties
  • Employee disputes
  • Legal notices
  • Operational disruption
  • Reputation damage

If you prepare properly, you gain:

  • Audit-ready compliance
  • Smooth inspections
  • Predictable payroll impact
  • Stronger HR governance

 


Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

 

1. How do the new labour codes affect payroll?

The new labour codes significantly impact payroll structuring in India.

The biggest change is the new wage definition, which requires that basic pay must be at least 50% of total remuneration. If allowances exceed 50%, the excess will be added back to wages for PF, gratuity, and bonus calculation.

This means companies may need to:

  • Restructure salary components
  • Recalculate statutory deductions
  • Adjust PF and gratuity contributions
  • Review CTC vs take-home balance

Payroll systems must now align with the updated wage definition under the Code on Wages and the Social Security Code.

 

2. What are the four labour codes in India?

The four labour codes consolidate 29 central labour laws into four simplified frameworks:

  1. Code on Wages (2019)
  2. Industrial Relations Code (2020)
  3. Social Security Code (2020)
  4. Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions (OSH) Code (2020)

Together, they regulate:

  • Wages
  • Industrial disputes
  • Social security benefits
  • Workplace safety and health standards

These reforms aim to simplify labour compliance requirements in India.

 

3. What is the new wage definition under the labour codes?

The new wage definition standardises how wages are calculated.

Key rule:

Basic pay must be at least 50% of total remuneration.

If allowances exceed 50%, the excess is added back to wages for calculating:

  • PF
  • Gratuity
  • Bonus
  • Other statutory benefits

This change directly affects payroll restructuring under labour codes.

 

4. Are annual health check-ups mandatory under the OSH Code?

Yes, under the OSH Code, annual health check-ups are mandatory for certain categories of employees.

Employers must:

  • Provide periodic medical examinations
  • Bear the cost of such health check-ups
  • Maintain health records

Applicability may vary depending on establishment type and state-wise OSH code compliance rules.

 

5. How will PF calculation change under the new labour codes?

PF contributions may increase due to the 50% wage rule.

If basic salary is increased to meet compliance:

  • Employer PF contribution increases
  • Employee PF deduction increases
  • Overall retirement corpus may grow

Payroll teams must reassess PF calculation to ensure statutory deductions under the new labour codes are accurate.

 

6. How should companies restructure salaries under the labour codes?

Companies should:

  • Ensure basic pay is at least 50% of total salary
  • Reduce excessive allowances
  • Evaluate the impact on CTC and take-home pay
  • Run payroll simulations before implementation

Salary restructuring should be done carefully to avoid sudden employee dissatisfaction.

 

7. What must appointment letters include under the OSH Code?

Under the OSH Code, employers must issue mandatory appointment letters to all employees.

Appointment letters should include:

  • Job role and designation
  • Wage details
  • Working hours
  • Leave entitlements
  • Workplace location
  • Terms of employment

This is now a compliance requirement, not a best practice.

 

8. Does ESIC apply to all establishments under the new codes?

The Social Security Code expands ESIC applicability.

Key changes include:

  • Wider coverage thresholds
  • Potential PAN-India ESIC expansion
  • Inclusion of gig and platform workers

However, applicability still depends on:

  • Employee count
  • Wage limits
  • State notifications

Businesses must validate ESIC applicability under labour codes carefully.

 

9. What is the difference between minimum wages and floor wages?

Minimum wage is the state-level wage fixed for specific employment categories.

The national floor wage is a baseline wage fixed by the Central Government. States cannot set minimum wages below the floor wage.

This ensures wage uniformity across labour compliance India frameworks.

 

10. Is a 2-day full and final settlement mandatory?

Yes.

Under the Industrial Relations Code, employers must complete a full and final settlement within 2 days of employee separation.

This includes:

  • Salary dues
  • Leave encashment
  • Bonus
  • Other pending payments

This rule significantly impacts payroll closure processes.

 

11. What are the penalties for non-compliance under labour codes?

Penalties may include:

  • Monetary fines
  • Increased fines for repeat offences
  • Legal prosecution in serious cases
  • Digital inspection scrutiny

Non-compliance with wage definition, PF deposits, OSH standards, or F&F timelines can trigger penalties.

 

12. How to prepare for a labour law compliance audit?

To prepare for a labour compliance audit checklist review:

  • Reassess wage structures
  • Validate PF and ESIC calculations
  • Update appointment letters
  • Maintain health check-up records
  • Prepare inspection document files
  • Conduct labour code compliance training

Being audit-ready reduces inspection risk.

 

13. Who should attend labour code compliance training?

Compliance training should include:

  • HR managers
  • Payroll teams
  • Finance heads
  • Compliance officers
  • Business owners

Training ensures the correct interpretation of labour law changes 2025 and prevents costly errors.

 

14. How do labour codes impact gratuity and bonus?

Since gratuity and bonus are linked to the wage definition:

  • A higher basic salary may increase gratuity liability
  • Bonus calculation may change
  • Long-term employee benefit costs may rise

Employers must project the financial impact before restructuring.

 

15. Does OSH Code apply to IT/ITeS companies?

Yes.

The OSH Code applies to IT/ITeS companies if they meet:

  • Employee thresholds
  • Establishment criteria

IT companies must also comply with:

  • Health and safety provisions
  • Appointment letter mandates
  • Working hour regulations

State-wise labour rules may add further requirements.

 

16. What documents are required during a labour inspection?

During a labour inspection in India, authorities may request:

  • Wage registers
  • PF and ESIC records
  • Appointment letters
  • Attendance records
  • Health check-up records (if applicable)
  • Standing orders (if required)
  • Compliance training records

Maintaining digital records helps with inspection readiness.

 

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