S. Soundara Rajan
Chartered Accountant
Published on: Mar 27, 2026
The Industrial Relations Code 2020: Complete Section-Wise Guide, Key Provisions & Applicability
1. Introduction
The Industrial Relations Code, 2020 (IR Code) is one of the four major labour codes enacted by the Government of India to consolidate and modernise existing labour laws. The IR Code seeks to streamline industrial relations by combining the laws relating to:
- Trade Unions
- Conditions for employment
- Dispute resolution
The objective of the Code is to promote industrial harmony, ensure ease of doing business, and protect workers’ rights through a clear and simplified legal framework.
2. Repeal of existing legislations
The Industrial Relations Code has repealed the following three Central labour laws:
- The Trade Unions Act, 1926
- The Industrial Employment (Standing Orders) Act, 1946
- The Industrial Disputes Act, 1947
These laws which were previously separate are now unified under the IR Code.
3. Key Definitions
Important definitions introduced in Section 2 include:
3.1 Industrial Establishment — Section 2(r)
An establishment or undertaking in which any industry is carried on.
If an establishment runs multiple activities, only those units or parts of the establishment carrying on an “industry” qualify as separate industrial establishments.
Where the predominant activity in an establishment is an “industry” and other activities are incidental, the entire establishment is deemed an industrial establishment.
Thus, the Code does not restrict industrial establishments only to “factories, mines or plantations”. It extends to any establishment where the defined “industry” is carried out (subject to the exclusions under “industry”).
3.2 Worker — Section 2(zr)
Person employed in any industry to do manual, unskilled, skilled, technical, operational, or clerical or supervisory work but does not include any such person—
(i) who is employed mainly in a managerial or administrative capacity; or
(ii) who is employed in a supervisory capacity drawing wages exceeding eighteen thousand rupees per month or an amount as may be notified by the Central Government from time to time
3.3 Employee — Section 2(l)
Any person employed by an industrial establishment to do any skilled, semi-skilled or unskilled, manual, operational, supervisory, managerial, administrative, technical or clerical work
3.4 Employer — Section 2(m)
A person who employs one or more employee or worker in his establishment.
Includes owners, occupiers, manager or managing directors, contractors and legal representative of a deceased employer.
3.5 Industry — Section 2(p)
Under the Code, “industry” means:
Any systematic activity carried on by cooperation between employer and worker (whether employed directly or through any agency, including a contractor) for production, supply or distribution of goods or services — with a view to satisfy human wants or wishes (not merely spiritual or religious).
The definition of “industry” under the Code also excludes certain activities/undertakings, such as:
· activities carried out by institutions wholly or substantially engaged in charitable, social or philanthropic service;
· activities of the Government relating to sovereign functions (defence research, atomic energy, space, etc.);
· domestic services;
· any other activity notified by the Central Government as excluded.
4. Trade Unions
The Code simplifies registration, recognition, and governance of trade unions.
4.1 Registration of Trade Union
- No Trade Union can be registered unless atleast 10% of workers or 100 workers, whichever is less, are members of such Trade Union. Any 7 or more members can apply for registration (Section 6).
- Certificate of registration issued under Section 9.
4.2 Recognition of Negotiating Union or Negotiating Council — Section 14
If a single union has 51% or more workers as members → Recognised negotiating union.
Where no union meets 51%, a negotiating council is formed.
5. Standing Orders
5.1 Applicability — Section 28
"Standing Orders" means orders relating to matters set-out in the First Schedule.
Standing Orders apply to industrial establishments with 300 or more workers.
5.2 Model Standing Orders — Section 29
Central Government may issue Model Standing Orders, which apply unless modified by the employer and certified.
5.3 Certification — Sections 30 to 34
Procedures for submitting draft orders and certification by the Certifying Officer.
5.4 Subjects covered — Section 28
Standing orders must cover:
- Classification of workers
- Manner of informing workers about work hours
- Attendance and Late coming
- Holidays and Leave
- Conditions for termination, suspension or dismissal for misconduct
- Grievance redressal mechanism
6. Industrial Disputes
6.1 Works Committee — Section 3
Mandatory for establishments with 100 or more workers, promoting amicable employer-employee relations.
6.2 Grievance Redressal Committee — Section 4
- Required in establishments employing 20 or more workers.
- Ensures timely internal dispute resolution.
6.3 Conciliation, Tribunals, and Arbitration
Conciliation Officer — Section 45
Facilitates settlement of industrial disputes.
Industrial Tribunal — Sections 45
Worker may make an application to Tribunal after the expiry of forty-five days from the date he has made the application to the conciliation officer, for adjudicating disputes.
Voluntary Arbitration — Section 42
Parties may voluntarily refer disputes for arbitration.
7. Notice of Change — Section 40
Employers must give 21 days’ notice before changing service conditions related to:
- Wages
- Work hours
- Allowances
- Leave rules
- Disciplinary matters
Exception - Matters covered by Standing Orders.
8. Strikes and Lockouts
8.1 Prior Notice Requirement — Section 62
No person shall go on Strike:
- without giving to the employer notice of strike within sixty days before striking
- within fourteen days of giving such notice
- During conciliation proceedings
- During tribunal proceedings
8.2 Lockout Provisions — Section 62
Parallel restrictions apply to employers declaring lockouts.
9. Lay-Off, Retrenchment and Closure
9.1 Lay-Off — Sections 67
- Lay-off compensation = 50% of basic wages + dearness allowance
9.2 Retrenchment — Sections 70
- Requires one month’s notice or wages in lieu of the same
- Compensation = 15 days’ wages for every completed year of service
9.3 Closure — Sections 74 & 75
- 60 days prior notice on the appropriate government
- For establishments with ≥ 300 workers, prior government approval required.
- Notice and Compensation to employee as applicable to Retrenchment
9.4 Special provisions
Special provisions apply to industrial establishments with 300 or more workers were employed.
10. Provisions for Fixed Term Employees - Section 2(O)
Fixed Term Employees-
· Receive same benefits as permanent workers.
· Eligible for gratuity on pro-rata basis if he renders service under the contract for a period of one year.
·
11. Worker Re-skilling Fund — Section 83
A new Worker Re-skilling Fund shall be set up to support retrenched workers.
Funding source:
- Employer contribution: 15 days’ wages of each retrenched worker
- Other sources prescribed by the government
12. Offences and Penalties — Section 86
- Penalty for illegal strikes/lockouts
- Penalty for failure to maintain registers or provide information
- Enhanced penalties for repeat offences
13. Practical Implications
13.1 For Employers
- Higher threshold of 300 workers reduces need for prior approval for layoffs and closures.
- Mandatory Negotiating union simplifies collective bargaining.
- Standing Orders applicable only for establishments with 300+ workers.
13.2 For Employees
- Fixed-term workers receive more statutory protection.
- Mechanisms for grievance redressal strengthened.
- Clear rules on strikes, retrenchment, and compensation.
13.3 For Unions
- Recognition framework rationalised.
- Increased formalisation of negotiation procedures.
14. Conclusion
The Industrial Relations Code, 2020 marks a major structural reform in India’s labour regulatory framework. By merging three significant pieces of labour legislation and introducing clarity on standing orders, collective bargaining, dispute resolution, lay-offs, and fixed-term employment, the Code strengthens both industrial stability and ease of doing business.
The Code aims to bring predictability, transparency, and fairness to employer–worker relations and aligns India’s labour system with global best practices.
