The Government of India has formally notified and brought into effect all four of the consolidated Labour Codes — Code on Wages (2019), Industrial Relations Code (2020), Code on Social Security (2020), and Occupational Safety, Health & Working Conditions Code (2020) — replacing 29 previous labour laws with a unified legal framework. These came into force effective 21 November 2025 and represent the most broad-ranging reform in Indian labour law since independence.
Why it matters:
- The new Codes simplify and modernise labour law compliance with single registration, single licence and single return systems, replacing fragmented law-by-law registrations.
- They introduce digital record-keeping and risk-based inspections, reduce bureaucratic burden, and shift toward a more predictable and structured compliance regime.
- Employers and practitioners must now interact with labour law through these consolidated Codes rather than older statutory silos — a paradigm shift affecting everything from wage payment to dispute resolution.
Key takeaway:
The effective implementation of the four Codes marks a watershed reform requiring legal teams and businesses to re-evaluate compliance architecture, workforce policies, and auditing systems under the new unified regime.