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Understanding India’s New Labour Laws 2025-26: A Karnataka Employer’s Guide

India’s labour framework has undergone its most significant transformation in seven decades. Effective November 21, 2025, the Central Government consolidated 29 separate labour laws into four streamlined Labour Codes, fundamentally changing how businesses must manage their workforce. Six months in, enforcement is fully active across Karnataka – and penalties are being issued.

Here is what every Karnataka employer needs to know.

What Are the Four New Labour Codes?

Code

What It Covers

Code on Wages, 2019

Minimum wages, timely payment, equal remuneration, appointment letters

Industrial Relations Code, 2020

Trade unions, termination procedures, retrenchment threshold (raised to 300 workers)

Social Security Code, 2020

EPF, ESI, gratuity, maternity benefits – now extended to gig workers

Occupational Safety, Health & Working Conditions Code, 2020

Working hours, leave, safety standards, contract and migrant labour

Karnataka has additionally proposed amendments to the Shops & Commercial Establishments Act – including extended daily working hours (9 to 10 hours) and increased overtime caps (50 to 144 hours per quarter) – though these are not yet implemented as of May 2026.

Five Things Every Karnataka Employer Must Do Right Now

1. Issue Appointment Letters to All Workers

This is now a legal requirement – not optional. Every employee, whether permanent, contract, fixed-term, or daily wage, must receive a formal appointment letter. This is the single most common violation found during inspections today.

2. Restructure Your Payroll

The basic wage component must be a minimum of 50% of gross salary. Many businesses in Karnataka historically maintained 30-40% basic to reduce PF liability. This is no longer acceptable. Higher basic increases PF and gratuity – which benefits employees in the long run, even if take-home reduces slightly.

3. Pay the Correct Minimum Wage

Always pay whichever is higher – the Central floor wage or Karnataka’s scheduled wage for your specific industry. Schedules vary by sector and skill level. Review them quarterly.

4. Verify Your Contractors

Principal employers are jointly liable if their contractors fail to comply with PF, ESI, or wage payment rules. Audit your contractors every quarter and maintain compliance certificates.

5. Register Gig and Platform Workers

If you operate a digital platform using delivery, transport, or service workers, you now have statutory obligations – including worker registration, accident insurance, and welfare fund contributions. This applies to aggregators such as food delivery, logistics, and cab platforms.

Penalties: The Cost of Non-Compliance

Enforcement is active. Labour inspections in Karnataka have intensified significantly since January 2026. Penalties observed include:

The cost of compliance is a fraction of what non-compliance costs.

Need Help?

We assist Karnataka businesses of all sizes with compliance audits, payroll restructuring, documentation, contractor verification, and representation before Labour authorities.

CA Siddartha Javali | 99006 00119 | siddartha@javaliassociates.in CA Manoj P Desai | 98867 76811 | manoj@mpdassociates.com 📧 dishaconsultancyblr@gmail.com | 📞 +91 9885 81119 🏢 Cunningham Road, Bangalore | Hubballi

Frequently Asked Questions

General Questions

Do these laws apply to small businesses and startups?

Yes. The four Labour Codes apply to all employers in Karnataka, regardless of size, sector, or age of business. Even if you have just one employee, certain provisions apply (particularly Code on Wages). Registration thresholds exist (20+ for PF, 10+ for ESI), but many requirements are universal.

Absolutely yes. The Code on Wages makes appointment letters mandatory for ALL workers, regardless of when they joined. Issue letters immediately to avoid penalties. Back-date to actual joining date but issue NOW.

Check two sources:

Pay whichever is HIGHER. The applicable schedule depends on your industry classification and employee skill levels.

As of May 2026, these amendments are proposed but NOT yet implemented. They remain under stakeholder consultation with significant union opposition. Do NOT implement extended hours until officially notified. Current limits (9 hours/day, 50 hours OT/quarter) remain enforceable.

Payroll & Wages

While not explicitly stated as “50%” in the Code on Wages, enforcement interpretation and industry practice have established this as the practical compliance threshold. This is because:

Yes, slightly, because PF deduction increases. However:

Example on ₹50,000 gross:

Yes, but NOT recommended. Electronic payment (bank transfer, UPI, etc.) is strongly preferred because:

If paying cash, maintain detailed signed wage registers with employee acknowledgments.

Only these deductions are permitted:

Arbitrary fines, unexplained deductions, or excessive damage charges are prohibited and recoverable.

Employment & Termination

Yes, both are permitted. However:

Depends on your workforce size:

However, even without government permission requirement, you must still:

Fixed-term employees (FTE) are now eligible for gratuity even if their contract is less than 5 years. It’s calculated proportionally:

Formula: (Basic + DA) × (15/26) × (Number of months worked / 12)

Example: FTE on ₹25,000 basic, 18-month contract: Gratuity = ₹25,000 × (15/26) × (18/12) = ₹21,634

Must be paid within 30 days of contract completion.

Gig & Platform Workers

If you’re a platform aggregator (digital platform connecting workers with customers), YES, you have statutory obligations under the Social Security Code:

This is one of the biggest changes in the new codes.

The terms are often used interchangeably in the Social Security Code. Both refer to workers engaged through digital platforms (apps/websites) who don’t have traditional employment relationships. Examples: delivery partners, cab drivers, freelancers on platforms, urban service workers (electricians, plumbers via apps).

Under the new Social Security Code:

Implementation status (May 2026): Accident insurance is operational. Other benefits being rolled out in phases.

Compliance & Inspections

Frequency depends on:

Observed frequency (May 2026): Manufacturing quarterly-semi-annual, IT annual-biennial, Construction monthly.

Do this immediately:

Penalties vary by violation type:

See Penalties section for detailed case studies.

Use self-certification ONLY if you are absolutely confident of 100% compliance.

Pros:

Cons:

Recommendation: Conduct full compliance audit first. If clean, consider self-certification. If any doubts, fix violations first.

Take these steps immediately:

Do NOT ignore notices. This leads to ex-parte orders with maximum penalties.

Karnataka-Specific

Navigate to “Minimum Wages” section. Wages are listed by:

Updated periodically (annual or biennial). Check quarterly for revisions.

Yes. Labour is on the Concurrent List (both Central and State jurisdiction). While the four Central codes apply nationwide, each state issues its own:

Maintain separate compliance for each state of operations.

Workers can file complaints at the Karnataka Labour Department portal (labour.karnataka.gov.in), visit their District Labour Office, or call the Central Labour Ministry helpline at 1800-11-7555. Anonymous complaints are accepted and acted upon.

Disclaimer: This write-up is for general awareness and does not constitute legal advice. For specific compliance guidance, consult a qualified professional. Laws and notifications are subject to change.

© 2026 S S Javali & Associates, Chartered Accountants | Disha Consultancy Services, Bangalore

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