On 8 May 2026, the Ministry of Labour and Employment published the Code on Wages (Central) Rules, 2026 in the official gazette. In a single notification, 17 sets of legacy rules — some nearly a century old — are replaced by one unified, digitally-forward framework. This is the culmination of the broader labour code consolidation that began with the Code on Wages, 2019.
Out with the Old: What Rules Are Now Superseded?
The 2026 Rules formally supersede 17 sets of pre-existing rules spanning nearly nine decades of labour regulation:
| Superseded Rules | Year in Force |
|---|---|
| Payment of Wages (Procedure) Rules | 1937 |
| Payment of Wages (Railways) Rules | 1938 |
| Minimum Wages (Central) Rules | 1950 |
| Payment of Wages (Mines) Rules | 1956 |
| Payment of Bonus Rules | 1975 |
| Equal Remuneration Rules | 1976 |
| Payment of Wages (Nomination) Rules | 2009 |
| Minimum Wages (Central Advisory Board) Rules | 2011 |
| Various rules for Air Transport Services & Mine Workers | Multiple |
In with the New: Key Highlights of the 2026 Rules
The 2026 Rules are built around four core priorities — standardised working hours, transparent wage computation, full digitalisation of records, and faster dispute resolution.
1. Redefining the Work Day
- Standard Hours: A normal working day is fixed at 8 hours across all central-sphere establishments.
- Weekly Ceiling: Total weekly hours for those not on a daily wage period must not exceed 48 hours.
- Mandatory Rest: At least one rest day per week (ordinarily Sunday). No employee can work more than 10 consecutive days without a break.
- Overtime Rate: Overtime must be compensated at at least twice the normal wage — a statutory floor, not a negotiable benefit.
2. Transparent Wage Calculation
The rules codify standardised wage conversion formulae to eliminate ambiguity:
The Variable Dearness Allowance (VDA) will be revised twice a year — before April 1 and October 1 — anchoring minimum wages to the Consumer Price Index.
3. The Digital Leap
In alignment with Digital India, the 2026 Rules enable full electronic management of all labour records:
4. Streamlined Dispute Resolution
- Single Group Claim (Form II): A group of employees can file a joint application for unpaid wages or discrimination — replacing multiple individual filings.
- Composition of Offences: For minor infractions, employers may pay 50% of the maximum fine to settle without a tribunal proceeding.
- Universal Nomination: Nomination for dues and benefits is standardised across all employee categories.
Why This Matters for Employers
Organisations that previously cross-referenced multiple rule sets can now work from a single authoritative document. For payroll and HR teams, digital records reduce costs and create a defensible audit trail. Standardised wage formulae also remove one of the most common sources of litigation: ambiguity in computing overtime and daily wages.
Note: The 10-consecutive-day cap on work without rest particularly affects shift-based industries — hospitality, manufacturing, logistics — that previously operated under varying sector-specific interpretations.
Compliance Action Checklist
- ✓Audit your compliance matrices — remove all 17 superseded rule references.
- ✓Update payroll software for the daily-to-monthly multiplier (×26) and daily-to-hourly divisor (÷8).
- ✓Switch to digital wage slips (Form V) and electronic registers (Forms I & IX).
- ✓Review shift rosters — no employee to work more than 10 consecutive days without rest.
- ✓Calendar VDA revision dates — April 1 and October 1 — in your annual payroll plan.
- ✓Designate a portal or mobile app for displaying wage rates and rest day notices.
- ✓Train HR teams on dispute resolution Form II and the composition of offences option.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Code on Wages (Central) Rules 2026?
A unified regulatory framework notified by the Ministry of Labour and Employment on May 8, 2026, replacing 17 legacy sets of rules into a single document governing wages, working hours, allowances, and dispute resolution for central-sphere establishments.
Which old rules are replaced by the 2026 Rules?
The Payment of Wages (Procedure) Rules 1937, Payment of Wages (Railways) Rules 1938, Minimum Wages (Central) Rules 1950, Payment of Wages (Mines) Rules 1956, Payment of Bonus Rules 1975, Equal Remuneration Rules 1976, Payment of Wages (Nomination) Rules 2009, Minimum Wages (Central Advisory Board) Rules 2011, and sector-specific rules for Air Transport Services and Mine workers.
What are the standard working hours under the 2026 Rules?
The standard working day is 8 hours. The weekly ceiling for those not on a daily wage period is 48 hours. No employee can work more than 10 consecutive days without a mandated rest.
How is overtime calculated under the Code on Wages 2026?
Overtime must be paid at a rate of at least twice the normal wage rate — a statutory minimum floor.
When is the Variable Dearness Allowance (VDA) revised?
VDA is revised twice a year — before April 1 and October 1 — based on the Consumer Price Index (CPI).
Can employers maintain wage records digitally?
Yes. Registers can be maintained in Forms I and IX digitally, wage slips (Form V) issued electronically, and legal notices displayed on portals or mobile apps.